Fallen Heroes Topical Budget 339-1
From the collection of
From the collection of
A war shrine is unveiled in Hillingdon by one of Britain's leading wartime politicians
With the First World War still raging, Foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour, a former Prime Minister, leads a sombre throng at Hillingdon Parish Church, where he opens the doors for a shrine to the war dead in the churchyard.
With the First World War still raging, Foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour, a former Prime Minister, leads a sombre throng at Hillingdon Parish Church, where he opens the doors for a shrine to the war dead in the churchyard.
The First World War came to an end at 11am on 11 November 1918 - the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month - a day that was immediately commemorated as Armistice Day (Remembrance Sunday was an innovation of the Second World War). The annual parades and wreath laying became a staple of the newsreels, and subsequently television.
But the act of remembrance began long before the guns stopped firing. During the war, cinemas across the country regularly screened 'Roll of Honour' films, paying tribute to members of the local community who had been killed, captured or wounded in the conflict. And of course, while the war itself faded into history, filmmakers would revisit those world-shattering years for generations after.