Did you manage to get to any of the battlefields/cemeteries in Belgium and France Fingy?100% respect from me. Lest we forget.
Did you manage to get to any of the battlefields/cemeteries in Belgium and France Fingy?100% respect from me. Lest we forget.
I saw a few as we passed on the motorway Stan but our journeys between cities were quite long (738km's one day alone) and the other lads were losing beer time so in short, no. I will make a point of visiting them the next time I am in that area. The Le Mans 24 hour was just over and that made traffic quite heavy as we headed towards Lille and Ghent.Did you manage to get to any of the battlefields/cemeteries in Belgium and France Fingy?
It's worth a dedicated trip mate. I'm sure the opportunity will arise. Let me know if you are thinking of it, I did it a few years ago with a very good friend of mine (despite being Scottish) who is a real expert on this stuff, knows his way round the battlefields and monuments, has the stories hard wired in. And knows where all the bars are too. I would quite like to do it again, and I'm sure he'd be up for it.I saw a few as we passed on the motorway Stan but our journeys between cities were quite long (738km's one day alone) and the other lads were losing beer time so in short, no. I will make a point of visiting them the next time I am in that area. The Le Mans 24 hour was just over and that made traffic quite heavy as we headed towards Lille and Ghent.
Sadly it is clear that we have not learned any of the lessons at allA horrific and tragic blot in history. Such a waster of human life, human potential and dreams. RIP.
I hope that Europe and the World has learned the harsh lessons of both WW1 and WW2, but I am not convinced.
I hope that my we, our children and grandchildren never witness such events ever again.
100 years ago on 1st July 20,000 British soldiers were killed in a few hours on the first day of the Battle of the Somme. Over the next few months there were over a million casualties on both sides.
No point to make, no desire to debate the rights or wrongs, no reasons to be sought.
Simple remembrance and respect.
It's worth a dedicated trip mate. I'm sure the opportunity will arise. Let me know if you are thinking of it, I did it a few years ago with a very good friend of mine (despite being Scottish) who is a real expert on this stuff, knows his way round the battlefields and monuments, has the stories hard wired in. And knows where all the bars are too. I would quite like to do it again, and I'm sure he'd be up for it.
?Sadly it is clear that we have not learned any of the lessons at all
Fair point Nuts, I have amended the OP to reflect all the nations which lost men in this terrible event. It's a bit less elegant now but more inclusive, as it wasn't meant just to be about us. I think I am right in saying that it was the British and Irish who suffered most in the first few dreadful hours. Many of them had never seen action before.Stan
Apologies for being slightly pedantic but I'd like to acknowledge the thousands of Irishmen who also died that day fighting under the British flag. It's a tragic event that's close to my heart and I'm delighted with your post.
My country, previously so caught up in its nationalistic views is only starting to properly acknowledge these fine soldiers who died heroically for a better cause.
Ar dheis dé go raibh a n-anamnacha
Very moving stuff on Radio 5 this morning from the Battle of the Somme commemoration in Thiepval, France.
The old recordings of memories from a few of the survivors were particularly poignant.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p04030g8