Way too many names on that list of service men and women killed since last Remembrance Sunday.
very much, i hate the videos of the families though choke me up so much.
I was in the RAF for 30 years and along with every other serving or ex serving member of the forces it is great to see the support of the public, luckily idiots like Gilmore are in the minority.
It makes me think, could I do what they did?
I don't think so...
I don't think I could have done either.
Lest we forget.
ive just come back from the one in newhaven, there was a young chap wearing his grandads medals as a sign of respect as his grandad passed away this yearTalking of medals, went along to the War Memorial in Worthing on Friday and saw a very smart old fellow wearing blue Blazer with a load of medals on left hand side and 2 iron crosses hanging on his right.
Wasn't old enough to have served in WW2 so me wonders where he got them and why he wore them?
Talking of medals, went along to the War Memorial in Worthing on Friday and saw a very smart old fellow wearing blue Blazer with a load of medals on left hand side and 2 iron crosses hanging on his right.
Wasn't old enough to have served in WW2 so me wonders where he got them and why he wore them?
Usually the medals of a family member. They're entitled to show them I believe.
quite correct,family members are entitled to wear medals on the right.
Usually the medals of a family member. They're entitled to show them I believe.
We have our Pops medals and uniform and hat but its hard to bring them out. He served with the Australian 7th Division for some years, mostly in the Pacific War. Just prior to the end of the war in 1945 he was involved in the battle of Morotai in Indonesia and some time in Borneo in the Battle of Balikpapan. We don't know much other than medical and discharge records, but what he was involved in appeared to have been too much for him to mentally bear. He returned home to become a violent alcoholic. My Dad's doesn't talk alot about it but his childhood from then on was remarkably different, he was banned from mentioning and remembering the war. We never went into the house when we visited for fear of his rage and throwing things, and my Nan (was was a nurse on the boats) was the only person he saw for many years before his death. His contribution was immense but the impact of war on those who remain must always be remembered too. Sadly Nanna received a pension after his death only because Pop served - not because she served as well. I'm glad we're starting to understand the impact war has on the rest of the families these days, in order to help those affected by it long after it is finished.