Page 19 - AGC Journal 2018
P. 19

AGC JOURNAL 2018



 100th Anniversary



 of the end of the


 First World War





 By Major (Retired) Joseph Bright MBE


 The 11th of November 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of
 the First World War and the signing of the Armistice. It coincided with
 Remembrance Sunday.




 Commemoration Services   unable or unwilling to do anything to improve the lives of
 ex-servicemen, he would do something about it himself. This
 The main Remembrance Service was at the Cenotaph in   eventually led to the formation of The British Legion.
 London where the nation remembered. Members of the
 Corps were on parade and a number of our retired members   In 1971, The British Legion was granted ‘Royal’ status and in
 marched past the Cenotaph to pay their respects to the fallen   1981 extended the membership to serving members of Her

 of many conflicts. Other members of the Corps attended   Majesty’s Armed Forces, as well as ex-service personnel. Now,
 services throughout the country and overseas. The service   anyone can become a member of The Royal British Legion.
 at Winchester Cathedral was attended by the Corps Colonel,

 Colonel Frances Castle, and other officers and soldiers from   Remembrance 2018  Members of the Corps who were

 Worthy Down.     invited to take part in the Service at
 In 2018 The Royal British Legion led the nation in saying   the Thiepval Memorial in France
 A number of our members attended the Remembrance   Thank You to the First World War generation, all who served,
 Service at the Thiepval Memorial in the Somme, France at the   sacrificed and changed our world. The Military played a huge

 invitation of Captain Terry Twining MBE who is chairman of the   part in this year’s Remembrance service as it was also 100th
 Somme Branch of The Royal British Legion.  year of Armistice. As the Chairman of the Somme Branch of The
 Royal British Legion, I invited members of the Corps to attend
 Somme Branch of The Royal British Legion  the service in France, as I have done so over many years. The
 Service was both moving and poignant as the Somme was the


 By Captain Terry Twining MBE  scene of some of the fiercest fighting of World War One.
 The British Legion was formed on 15 May 1921, bringing   Battle of the Somme
 together four national organisations of ex-servicemen

 that had established themselves after the First World War.   The first day of the Battle of the Somme, in northern France,
 The main purpose of the Legion was straightforward, to   was the bloodiest day in the history of the British Army and one
 care for those who had suffered as a result of service in   of the most infamous days of World War One. On 1 July 1916,


 the Armed Forces during the war, whether through their   the British forces suffered 57,470 casualties, including 19,240
 own service or through that of a husband, father or son.   fatalities. They gained just three square miles of territory. One   Veterans assembling on Horse Guards


 The suffering took many forms, such as the effect of a war   of the deadliest battles in history, the Somme came to embody   before the Cenotaph march past
 wound on a man’s ability to earn a living and support his   all the horror of the First World War. The Somme became a
 byword for senseless slaughter as the Allies gained just six
 family, or a war widow’s struggle to give her children an   miles over 141 days of bloodshed.
 education. Even those who had come through the war
 relatively unscathed struggled with employment. As a
 result of the war, Britain’s economy plummeted and in 1921
 there were two million unemployed.
 EDITOR’S NOTE:
 Formation of The Royal British Legion
 Captain Terry Twining has organised the
 Over six million men had served in the war of which 725,000   Remembrance Services on the Somme on the
 never returned. Of those who came back, 1.75 million had   11th of November and the 1st of July for the past
 suffered some kind of disability and half of these were   15 years. Seeing in the 85th, 90th, 95th and 100th


 permanently disabled. Added to this figure were the families   Anniversaries.  As well as this he also assists with
 who depended on those who had gone to war - the wives and   the organisation of the D-Day commemorations
 children, widows and orphans as well as the parents who had   in Bayeur, France. Another milestone will be
 lost sons in the war, who often contributed to the household   in 2019 as it will be the 75th Anniversary of the   The Corps Wreath is laid alongside
 income.  D-Day landings.  the wreath of the President of the   Captain Laurence Hall and twelve members of the Corps
                  Republic of France                           at the rehearsal for the Cenotaph Parade
 The situation so moved Lancastrian Lance Bombardier Tom
 Lister, that he decided that if the government was either
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