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L'Anneau de la Mémoire.

Posted: Sun May 01, 2016 8:21 pm
by Jenks
A friend sent me this link: http://www.centenarynews.com/article?id=3073 I hadn't heard of L'Anneau de la Mémoire. We have visited Notre-Dame-de Lorette we did so a few years ago on the 11 November, a very moving experience. I have already planned to visit Ypres in September and maybe Mons and Waterloo also in September. Perhaps next year we will visit Notre-Dame-de Lorette on the way down to the Somme. I have just read Siegfried Sassoon's Memoirs of a Fox Hunting Man and the Memoirs of an Infantry Officer and I'm keen to visit Mametz Wood, somewhere else We haven't yet visited.


Jenks

Re: L'Anneau de la Mémoire.

Posted: Mon May 02, 2016 9:55 am
by Chuck
Hi Jenks,

it's good to know that the fallen are still being remembered with new memorials....God forbid we lose sight of what happened and why. :good:

Re: L'Anneau de la Mémoire.

Posted: Mon May 02, 2016 10:54 am
by 25Pdr
Chuck wrote:Hi Jenks,

it's good to know that the fallen are still being remembered with new memorials....God forbid we lose sight of what happened and why. :good:
Here's a French War Memorial in my hometown of Greenock...

Image



The Free French
"They fought along with our soldiers and sailors." Greenock was the Free French Navy's largest home port. At one time there were over 1500 French sailors in the town. They had their base near Fort Matilda and their social club in the halls of Martyr's and North Church, from which Charles de Gaulle broadcast during his visit in 1941. The British gave the French 6 corvettes. During the Battle of the Atlantic the French lost two corvettes, two destroyers and one submarine, all had been based in Greenock. They also lost the Maillé Brézé in an accident at the Tail o' The Bank.