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“The Legion means everything to me, that I can be there to help Service men and women.”
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This year we're remembering the impact that absence and coming home have on Service men and women, and their loved ones.
Download our resources, designed to help children understand Remembrance and it's relevance to our lives today, exploring the extraordinary contributions made during WWII and 2020.
Remembrance honours the service and sacrifice of our Armed Forces, veterans, and their families. They protect our way of life.
Belfast Field of Remembrance Tributes have been planted at the National Memorial Arboretum (NMA) Field of Remembrance and our Virtual Field of Remembrance due to local lockdown.
Due to the covid-19 lockdown, we have planted all Tributes intended for the Cardiff Field of Remembrance at the National Memorial Arboretum Field of Remembrance and our Virtual Field of Remembrance.
All Tributes intended for the Gateshead Field of Remembrance, have been planted at the National Memorial Arboretum (NMA) Field of Remembrance and Virtual Field of Remembrance due to local restrictions.
The Field of Remembrance at Lydiard Park (Swindon) remains closed to the public, whilst additional processes are put in place to ensure that visitors continue to remain safe in light of the current lockdown.
The opening of the annual Garden of Remembrance at St Paul's Cathedral, London, took place on Monday 4 November, 2019.
The Legion hosts the annual Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall to commemorate all those who have lost their lives in conflict.
Letters brought comfort to many. For some soldiers communication was easy but for soldiers from India it was not straightforward.
By the end of 1945 troops were back home in the UK. But a UK that looked very different from the one they’d left when at the outbreak of war.
The Fourteenth Army not only faced the dangers of the Japanese forces in WW2 but also the danger of tropical disease. Their first line of defence was prevention from wearing long trousers and sterilizing water to the use of insect repellents and insecticides.
When Paul Glazebrook lost his comrades in Iraq and Afghanistan, he wanted to honour their memory with a special tribute.
As champions of Remembrance, Remembrance Travel invite you to explore and remember the bravery and sacrifice of our Armed Forces.
We encourage everyone to embrace the traditions of Remembrance but also make it their own. Use these resources to create your own act of Remembrance.
Visit Tribute Ink at the National Memorial Arboretum from 13 September until 1 December 2019. Free entry, donations appreciated.