Remembering Fallen Royal Welchmen
I am sure that most of our forum members will be attending their local Armistice parades on Sunday 12th Nov 06
But I would like to give rememberance for those who can't not make their parades and for the Fallen Royal Welch Fusiliers.
"They shall grow not old, as we are left to grow old.
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the Sun, and in the Morning.
We will Remember Them"
We Will Remember Them!
"When you go home, tell them of us, and say:
For your Tommorrow, We gave our Today"
Re: Remembering Fallen Royal Welchmen
I will be parading in colwyn bay on sunday with D coy rwr, will try and get to the function afterwards and meet a few of you.
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the 1st battalion will be on parade with the garrison in happey valley for the service.
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I shall be in Swansea, first year as a commrade!!!:notworthy: Enlisting into the TA on Tuesday. Never ever thought I'd wear combats again!!!Wink
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No parade, no reunion (yet) just a quiet beer in the RSL in Sydney where at 19:30 every night every body stands for a minutes silence and then listens;
They shall grow not old, as we are left to grow old.
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the Sun, and in the Morning.
We will Remember Them"
Re: Remembering Fallen Royal Welchmen
Hi all, i would like you all to remember all our comrades and Friends whom have lost there lives on active duty, or accidents since World War 2.
In War or Peace they who have served and died shall never be forgotten.
Val.
Re: Remembering Fallen Royal Welchmen
<TABLE height=84 cellSpacing=4 width="98%" border=0><TBODY><TR vAlign=top align=left><TD width=124 height=106>http://www.reallyfreemusic.co.uk/images/poppy2.gif</TD><TD width=248 height=106>
a nice rendition of the 'Last Post', traditionally played at remembrance day services, memorials and military funerals. 'Last Post' has been incorporated into funeral and memorial services as a final farewell and symbolises that the duty of the dead is over and that they can rest in peace. Click on the Poppy to play it
DID you know.The Last Post was originally a bugle call used in British Army camps to signal the end of the day. The name derives from the practice of inspecting all the sentry posts around such a camp at the end of the day, and playing a bugle call at each of them. The "last post" was thus the last point of this inspection, and the bugle call signalling that this post had been inspected marked the end of the military day. This custom dates from at least the 17th century, and originated with British troops stationed in the Netherlands, where it drew on an older Dutch custom, called Taptoe
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Re: Remembering Fallen Royal Welchmen
WW2 British & Commonwealth Remembrance
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Re: Remembering Fallen Royal Welchmen
When You Go Home, Tell Them Of Us And Say, For Their Tomorrow, We Gave Our Today
Amen
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It is a long time ago but we always sounded first post at 2130 followed by last post at 2200, I remember it well, those were the days of good cold winter nights which seemed to make the bugle echo around the barracks.
Now it is increasingly difficult to get a bugler for remembrance and funerals which is a great pity, however that is progress and rationalisation or downsizing or even merging come to that.
That's my whinge for remembrance week, I will be on parade later this morning, I hope you all have a good parade where ever you are and think of all those less fortunate than ourselves.
Kind regards to all,
Joe.