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#1
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we are a little town in northern B.C. with Snow. At our Cenotaphwe started with a horn band until it was time for the bugler. The honour guard and parade were piped in. The Prayer was said by a ex-military Padre. A prayer in Wet'suwet'em and also translated into English by a elderly Native lady. 42 wreaths were laid. Our 204th Babine Sea Cadets are stellar in their duties. Most of the townfolk were in attendance. I had display's all down Main St. and thru my display at the MLA office had the privilege of having 2 sergeants of the 4th Canadian Ranger Patrol Group drive my M37 with out chains straight up on my proving grounds . We Shall Never Forget Picture on my Face book.
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#2
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At Ford Australia we stop every year for a minutes silence. Production comes to a halt.
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#3
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The Rememberance Day ceremony in Gympie was a shambles. I was very upset about it and still am.
3610590-3x2-340x227.jpg This year was sadly to be an EXTRA special occasion because one of our local servicemen had been killed/murdered in Afghanistan and his family were present and came up to lay a wreath at the ANZAC flame, after those laid by the official party. Now amongst their heartbreak and grief, the family of Corporal Ashley Birt will have memories of a very average ceremony. The whole thing was running ahead of time, then either the bugler didn't front or CD wouldn't work. Ode was recited, no Last Post and No Reveille to follow. The ceremony ended roughly FIVE MINUTES BEFORE 1100hrs. Then there was something that put a lump in my throat, a great number of the crowd stood still and waited for the town hall bells to ring at 11AM, then dispursed silently. To add insult to injury, the memorial plaques of recently deceased ex-servicemen/women that were to be attached to the wall in our memorial lane were LOST in transit between Melbourne & Gympie, and had not been found by Rememberance Day. These were ordered by Gympie locals to honor their family members. Corporal Birt's plaque has a seperate and special place on the main entrance to the Memorial Lane, and this plaque was not among those lost, thank God! P4240088.jpg P4250022.jpg P4250021.jpg Anyone passing through Gympie, make sure you come see our Memorial Lane. It is lined with large murals made of individual pieces of hand painted & fired mosaic. From memory, I believe there are currently 12 of these, and plans are in place for future additions. We are extremely proud of this beautiful tribute! Lessons will be learnt from this year and we will do better in 2012. Lest We Forget
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Ford CMP, 115" WB,1942 (Under Restoration...still) Medium sized, half fake, artillery piece project. (The 1/4 Pounder) |
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#4
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Nice and sunny and warm at the Remembrance Service here in the Middle East. No sign of snow and no chance of clam chowder or beer at the Legion afterwards.
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#5
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That's very poor form, Tony - I hope the organisers do learn from the experience, and what a terrible thing to add to the grief of the family.
In our case I was at work and at 11 I could hear a bugle from the school over the river so we (people from my business) gathered on the balcony for the minute of silence, broken only by birdcalls and the juggling of throttles of the unseen formation of what sounded like the RAAF Museum's Winjeel and CT4 doing a pass over the shrine on the other side of the city. By the time reveille sounded I realised we had been joined by a couple of other people from businesses which sub-let space from us.
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Film maker 42 FGT No8 (Aust) remains 42 FGT No9 (Aust) 42 F15 Keith Webb Macleod, Victoria Australia Also Canadian Military Pattern Vehicles group on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/groups/canadianmilitarypattern |
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#6
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The new principal at the state school the boys atend had a remberance assembly with a minutes silance, something the last two principals didn't do. Unfortunatly I was driving a semi on a narrow road so I couldn't stop.
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Robert Pearce. |
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#7
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In the minutes leading up to 11:00 at work things went bezerk and absolute chaos rained down. Much to my own embarrassment all of this activity caused me to forget what time of day it was.... Until my work colleague heard the bugles sounding the last post on the radio (which I could not hear from my position)...
We all immediately stopped our activity (six of us in the office) until the minute was over. This sort of surprised me because the colleague who called for the silence has never outwardly expressed reverence for our servicemen/women. As each Remberance Day & ANZAC day passes, there are fewer & fewer veterans within our small community. It is good to see that it is not only a select group who are determined to keep their memory alive. I have noticed an increasing number of people gain a deeper respect for those who serve compared to when I was a young bloke 20/30 years ago. Lest we forget. My son Sid has just told me their school paused for a minutes silence, too. Excellent.
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Howard Holgate F15 #12 F15A #13 (stretched) F60S #13 C15A #13 Wireless (incomplete) |
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