You may have noticed, above the large panels on each of the four sides of this Eleanor Cross memorial, four empty niches such as the one above. You will also notice that all four are broken at the top. Were there once figures here, presumably soldiers and presumably bronze, that have long since been ‘removed’. Ok, stolen. Anyone know?
Categories
- 1918 – The Advance East (9)
- 1919 (1)
- Along the River Lys: Comines, Wervik, Geluwe & Menen (11)
- Arras (9)
- Australia (3)
- Belgian Military Cemeteries (3)
- Belgian War Memorials (27)
- Boesinghe (24)
- Books, Documents, Maps & Artwork (29)
- Brandhoek (4)
- Brookwood Cemetery & Brookwood Military Cemetery (11)
- Bunkers (35)
- Chinese Labour Corps (2)
- Conscription (3)
- Demarcation Stones (15)
- Diksmuide (3)
- Dranouter (3)
- Dunkirk WW II (3)
- Elverdinge (6)
- Etaples (1)
- French Flanders (70)
- Armentières to La Gorgue (15)
- Armentières to Steenwerck (11)
- Fromelles (11)
- Laventie (10)
- Neuve Chapelle (8)
- The Nursery: Bois Grenier to Houplines (15)
- French War Memorials (18)
- Generals (6)
- German Military Cemeteries (10)
- Headstones (20)
- Hill 60 (5)
- Ireland (34)
- Kemmel (24)
- Langemark (18)
- Lizerne (4)
- Loker (6)
- Memorabilia (6)
- Messines (33)
- Miscellaneous (77)
- Museums (10)
- Nieuwpoort (7)
- Ploegsteert (32)
- Ploegsteert Wood (20)
- South of Ploegsteert (8)
- Poelkapelle (2)
- Polygon Wood (4)
- Poperinge (11)
- Postcards (76)
- Potijze (5)
- Prisoners-of-War (2)
- Ramscappelle & Pervijze (5)
- Sanctuary Wood & Hill 62 (5)
- Shell Shock (1)
- Shot at Dawn (27)
- Soldiers (21)
- Spain (1)
- St. Eloi (2)
- St. Jean (15)
- St. Julien (4)
- Switzerland – Defending the Borders (1)
- The Belgian Sector (16)
- The Menin Road (18)
- The Road to Passchendaele – Third Ypres 1917 (20)
- The Somme (58)
- Albert (2)
- Amiens (3)
- Thiepval (7)
- Villers-Bretonneux (4)
- U.K. Churches, Memorials & Cemeteries – Back in Blighty (513)
- An Introduction (1)
- Cornwall (123)
- Derbyshire (6)
- Devonshire (74)
- Dorset (1)
- Essex (4)
- Gloucestershire (12)
- Hampshire (10)
- London (9)
- North Wales & Anglesey (6)
- Northumberland (21)
- Oxfordshire (4)
- Scotland (28)
- Somerset (34)
- Suffolk (11)
- Surrey (132)
- Sussex East (15)
- Sussex West (3)
- Warwickshire (3)
- Wiltshire (10)
- Vlamertinge (10)
- Voormezele (7)
- Weaponry & Relics (46)
- Austro-Hungarian Grenades (15)
- British Grenades (1)
- French Grenades (4)
- German & Austro-Hungarian Wirecutters (1)
- German Grenades (9)
- German Helmets (1)
- Italian Grenades (6)
- Wervik & Wervicq-Sud (9)
- World War II (11)
- Wulvergem (7)
- Ypres (Ieper) (29)
- The Menin Gate (6)
- Zandvoorde (5)
- Zillebeke (23)
- Zonnebeke (5)
-
Recent Posts
- Aldershot Military Cemetery Part One April 21, 2024
- French Flanders: Richebourg Part Two – Rue-des-Berceaux Military Cemetery April 13, 2024
- French Flanders: Richebourg Part One – Richebourg War Memorial March 25, 2024
- Wytschaete War Memorial, the London Scottish Memorial & the First Battle of Messines (1914) March 16, 2024
- Brookwood Military Cemetery – The American Memorial Chapel February 24, 2024
- Brookwood Military Cemetery – The Royal Hospital Burial Ground February 12, 2024
- Brookwood Military Cemetery – The Canadian Second World War Plot February 8, 2024
- Brookwood Cemetery – The Nurses of Brookwood February 3, 2024
- Brookwood Cemetery – The Victoria Cross Holders January 28, 2024
- Brookwood Cemetery – The Turkish Air Cemetery January 22, 2024
Recent Comments
- Magicfingers on Guildford Cemetery
- Magicfingers on Aldershot Military Cemetery Part One
- Nikolaus v. der Decken on Guildford Cemetery
- Debbie Thomassen on Aldershot Military Cemetery Part One
- Magicfingers on La Plaine Au Bois – The Wormhoudt Massacre
- Magicfingers on A Tour of Langemark Part Seven – Ruisseau Farm Cemetery
- Trevor Dutton on La Plaine Au Bois – The Wormhoudt Massacre
Archives
Meta
-
Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
Hello, I have just stumbled upon your site whilst staying in Paschendaele. My husband and I have been coming here and cycling the area for a few years now and each time we learn something new.
I was interested to see this part of your site as in the eighth picture you can see my Grandfathers name, Lloyd DR. Dennis was killed on the first night of battle at El Alamein, October 1942, he was in the Military Police and was mine clearing for the Desert Rats, one of the first snipers to come over killed him. My father was 6 and his brother was 4 at the time.
My father is 82 now and still lives in Warwick, as does his brother.
Thank you for this site I will continue to follow with interest
Hello Wendy. I am very pleased you stumbled, which is not my usual reaction to stumblers, I assure you. I knew a man once, a long time ago, who fought and survived Alamein; he was a working class man, and his poetry about his experiences was thought-provoking, to say the least.
Glad you have ‘signed up’. Good timing, in my opinion – I have just published a post on Hill 60 you might find of interest. You should have received an email by now. A mere 13 mile round trip from Passchendaele……well, as the crow flies.
Thanks for taking the trouble to comment – twice – too. This site is always being updated – check out the Interactive Googe Maps (link beneath banner heading) to see what’s what. You have a lot to look through should you so choose. And thanks for drawing my attention, inadvertantly, to the missing photos in these two Warwickshire memorial posts – I have fixed the problem.