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World War I was a railway war.
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I'm going to find out
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how the railways helped to precipitate a mechanised war...
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..defined how it was fought,
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conveyed millions to the trenches
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and bore witness to its end.
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I've taken to historic tracks
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to rediscover the locomotives and wagons of the war
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that was supposed to end all war...
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..and to hear the stories of the gallant men and women
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who used them in life and in death.
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I've been travelling through Britain and northern Europe,
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discovering how the railways shaped the First World War
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from start to finish.
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- One shell, 400 casualties.
- That's a good example
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of the destructive power these railway guns had.
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- Ready? Lift.
- Whoo!
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I've learnt that in total war,
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victory depended on logistics as much as on military might.
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The depot here was feeding 1.2 million men daily.
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The railway was absolutely critical.
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And that Britain's home network made big changes to meet the challenge.
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In that first 24 hours,
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only one train was late and only by 15 minutes.
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- We'd settle for that now, wouldn't we?
- We certainly would.
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Now, on the last leg of my war journey,
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I'm going to explore the aftermath of this horrendous conflict.
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For four years the railways had fed the front line
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with vast numbers of men and huge volumes of munitions and supplies.
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Despite sending men and equipment to France and Belgium,
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they'd also kept the trains running at home.
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Even when the armistice had been signed in a railway carriage,
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their work wasn't done.
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As Britain continued to mourn its dead,
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the railways played an important part in their remembrance.
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Today, I'll hear the stories of the railways' war heroes.
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What a privilege for the passengers
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to have two VCs working on the train. Extraordinary.
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Absolutely, but then they probably never knew.
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Encounter a historic railway wagon used to honour the fallen.
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It's a replica of the coffin of the Unknown Warrior.
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His remains were conveyed in this van.
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And hear how the railways helped to give birth
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to battlefield tourism.
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You've got the British Legion
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organising 11,000 people to come for a ceremony.
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I mean, that is in itself pretty much a military-scale operation.
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Today's remembrance journey begins in the heart of London
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and will take me to the rural home of the Kent and East Sussex Railway.
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Finally, I'll cross the Channel to Belgium
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tracing pilgrimages to Ypres,
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where thousands of British soldiers fought and died.
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LAST POST PLAYS
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Acts of remembrance are held in villages, towns and cities
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across the British Commonwealth.
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They were inaugurated by King George V in 1919,
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just a year after the slaughter of the Great War had ended.
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Even before the annual November ritual had commenced,
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a service was held at St Paul's Cathedral in London
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to the memory of those from railway companies
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whose service had cost them their lives.
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Britain's proud pre-war railway industry
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had employed more than half a million men.
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Over 180,000 of them answered the call to serve in the Great War
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and by its end more than 18,000 of them had died.
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The railways were in mourning
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and they organised a singular tribute on a lavish scale.
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Railway Director and Territorial Army volunteer, Jeremy Higgins,
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knows the history.
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On May the 14th, 1919,
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an extraordinary service is held here in St Paul's.
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What was the scene like on that day? Who was here?
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This place would have been packed, it would have been full
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of senior managers and dignitaries from the railway, families.
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- The king himself was here.
- So the service of railwaymen
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was well and truly recognised when the war had come to an end.
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Amazingly, yes. Yeah, it was huge.
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The music was provided by an orchestra
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made up of railway employees,
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including women who had filled men's shoes during the war.
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They played a programme
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including Handel's Largo in G to a congregation of 4,000,
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each of whom was presented with an extraordinary Order of Service.
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"St Paul's Cathedral. Divine Service in memory of those railwaymen
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"who laid down their lives for their country in the Great War 1914-1918."
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And what is striking about it is whereas an order of service today
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is normally quite a thin thing, this is huge, it's a book,
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because it's got 18,000 names in it.
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- Correct.
- It lists each man's railway grade and military rank.
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Jeremy has embarked on the daunting challenge
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of unearthing the personal histories of each and every one.
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What set you on this task of finding out about these people?
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I'd just come back from serving in Iraq, I spent six months in Iraq.
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My first day back at work, I was standing at Leamington Spa station,
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there's a really large memorial to the Great Western railwaymen who died.
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And it struck me that they were just a list of names, so I took one,
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took it home with me, researched it and found a story.
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And seven years on, I've now located 12,500 of those that died
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and it's become something of a passion, I think.
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Jeremy's research has uncovered railwaymen
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working in every theatre of war
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and all the services including the Royal Navy.
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One was amongst the earliest naval casualties.
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If you look down here there's a guy, George Coleman,
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Dining Car Attendant, Steward.
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- Steward on a ship?
- He was a steward on a ship,
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he worked for the Midland Railway at St Pancras.
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He died on HMS Cressy on the 22nd of September 1914.
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So right at the start of the war.
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And Cressy was one of three ships,
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HMS Aboukir and Hogue were the other two,
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sunk within two hours in the North Sea by the same U-boat.
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- With what loss of life?
- Well, there were 1,457 who lost their lives
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and over 35 railwaymen.
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The sinking of three ships by a single U-boat
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was a sign of the deadly role that submarines would play throughout the conflict.
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Another military technology that came of age
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during the First World War was air power.
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And men trained in the language of tracks and steam
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were amongst the first to excel in the skies.
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The railway had many technical-minded people
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and I think that they were attractive to the Air Force.
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So over 30 railwaymen died in the air.
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- And were any of those distinguished pilots?
- Some of them, yes.
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One called Harold Day, he was a sub-lieutenant in the Navy.
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He was what we would describe today as an "ace".
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He shot down over 11 aircraft.
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Unfortunately, he was killed in an accident,
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his plane fell out of the sky and he was killed.
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The next day, he was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross.
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I mean, that is a revelation to me.
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I imagined railwaymen doing what they had trained to do in peace time,
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working with machinery and so on,
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but the idea that they were also in the air,
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the idea that they were "air aces"
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this is something completely new to me.
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And you've discovered these biographies. Fantastic.
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Harold Day was by no means
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the only railwayman to be honoured for his valour.
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The railways had their fair share of heroes,
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including at least six recipients
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of the highest award for gallantry the Victoria Cross.
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Did any of the Victoria Cross winners survive the war?
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Yes, at least two. And they worked for the London and North Western Railway.
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One was a train driver, the other one was a guard,
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and they worked together on the same train on at least one occasion.
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What a privilege for the passengers
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to have two VCs working on the train. Extraordinary.
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Absolutely, but then they probably never knew.
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The London and North Western Railway
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named locomotives after these heroes in honour of their homecoming.
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They were just two of around two million men
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who had to be brought back from the Western Front after the cease-fire,
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a daunting task that fell to the railways.
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By the middle of 1919, with demobilisation in full swing,
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those who had survived were starting to look to the future.
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With the end of the war at last joy could be mixed with sorrow
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and as millions of men returned from their postings
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the railway stations were witness to emotional reunions between survivors and their families.
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In July 1919, when the temporary armistice
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had been converted into a lasting peace,
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the trains brought thousands to the capital
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to give thanks and to celebrate.
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The trigger for the Peace Day celebrations in London
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was the signing of the Treaty of Versailles in June 1919.
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Its terms had been imposed on Germany by the victorious Allies,
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who hoped that it would prevent the cataclysm of the First World War
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ever being repeated.
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I'm hearing the story from historian, Heather Jones.
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Given that the war had begun
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with vast military mobilisations by railway,
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does the Treaty of Versailles touch upon the railways?
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It does indeed. After the armistice,
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Germany had already had to hand over 4,500 or so locomotives,
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117,000 freight trains.
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And after the Treaty of Versailles,
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it has to hand over almost two thirds of that again.
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So it really impacts on the German railway network.
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There had been doubts about whether Germany would sign up to this severe treaty,
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but on the 28th June it did.
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With peace now official, some wanted to revel in victory,
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while others believed that it was time to rise above wartime rivalries.
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Rather than a victory celebration
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a Peace Day was planned for the 19th of July, 1919.
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Did Peace Day attract crowds from around the country, presumably arriving by train?
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It did indeed. There are special trains laid on and people arrive into London very early in the morning.
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Some people arrive as early as half past four in the morning,
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and stake out their spots to get the best view of the parade.
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The crowds are six to ten people deep
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and they let children through to the front cos otherwise they would have no view of the parade at all.
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There's many troops from Allied countries in London at the time.
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The Belgians are camping in Kensington Gardens for example
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where over 50,000 meals are served to them over the course of the festivities.
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The celebrations included special events for children,
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musical entertainment and fireworks in Hyde Park.
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But the centrepiece was the Victory Parade,
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which passed along this very stretch of The Mall.
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They have a very long parade which takes in a large swathe of London,
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working class areas as well as middle class and upper class areas.
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And that's quite intentional, this is supposed to show a nation
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divided by class but united in relief and celebration at the end of the war.
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And it's a very sombre parade for part of it,
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because it passes by the Cenotaph,
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which was a temporary monument erected just for the Victory Parade,
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but which the public liked so much, this idea of the empty tomb,
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this very simple style, that it's created into a permanent memorial.
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We've got soldiers from the Allied forces marching up and down the Mall,
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but I suppose the sense of national bereavement
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must have been so intense that in some way the dead are present.
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Absolutely. There are very much mixed feelings among the crowd.
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Many people are jubilant and cheer,
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particularly when they see their own regiment passing.
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There are people dancing in Oxford Street.
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And it's very understandable, this is the generation who thought they wouldn't survive the war.
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They're young, they're suddenly free of this great burden of the war.
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But for those who've lost someone,
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they feel this is really dancing on the graves of their loved ones.
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A poem by Alfred Noyes really sums this up.
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He wrote, "Oh, how the dead grin by the wall
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"Watching the fun of the victory ball".
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Oh. Bitter stuff.
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Most of the thousands of war dead were buried where they fell,
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but a few celebrated figures were repatriated after the armistice.
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I'm now on my way to the East Sussex countryside,
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on the trail of a humble railway vehicle elevated to greatness
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by its role in their story.
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Here at the Kent and East Sussex Heritage Railway,
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Passenger Luggage Van 132 has recently been restored.
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- Good afternoon.
- ALL: Good afternoon, sir.
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- Brian, hello.
- Hello
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Brian Janes has researched the van's remarkable history.
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Now this is, what, the coffin of the Unknown Warrior?
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Yes, it's a replica of the coffin of the Unknown Warrior,
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who was conveyed in it, whose remains were conveyed in this van.
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The ironwork was produced by the grandson of the original maker.
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And the Unknown Warrior travelled in this vehicle when?
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How long after the end of the First World War was that?
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It was in November 1920.
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It was to coincide with the opening
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of the permanent Cenotaph in Whitehall.
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The Unknown Warrior was one of the war's many unidentified victims.
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His body was brought from France by boat
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then travelled by rail to London to be buried in Westminster Abbey.
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He wasn't the first hero to travel in this wagon.
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As a newly-built prototype in May 1919,
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it was selected to transport the remains of nurse Edith Cavell,
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shot by the Germans for helping British prisoners of war
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to escape from occupied Belgium.
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Then in July of that year,
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it brought home another civilian, Ship's Captain Charles Algernon Fryatt of the Great Eastern Railway.
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Now, explain to me, how could a railwayman be a ship's captain?
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Most of the railways ran connecting steamer services to the continent.
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And the Great Eastern Railway who employed Captain Fryatt
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ran a service from Harwich to Holland.
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And he was a captain of one of those cross-Channel steamers.
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When the First World War broke out Holland was still neutral,
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so the service was maintained from England to Holland.
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As Britain and Germany vied for command of the seas,
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Captain Fryatt found his ferry menaced from beneath the waves.
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He had several brushes with U-boats who were trying to intercept him.
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On the first occasion, he managed to outrun a U-boat at 16 knots,
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which was very fast for that boat.
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On the second occasion, a U-boat tried to stop him
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and he turned the boat towards the U-boat and attempted to ram it.
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The U-boat escaped
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In Britain Fryatt's courage was celebrated, but the Germans wanted revenge.
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About 15 months later,
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they actually ambushed the Brussels and captured Captain Fryatt.
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He was taken as a prisoner.
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They decided then that he was a guerrilla,
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somebody who was fighting war outside uniform,
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and they took him to Ostend and he was tried and summarily shot.
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That seems absolutely outrageous,
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cos as I understand it when they were trying to apprehend his ship,
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he simply used the ship to try and resist,
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- to attack the U-boat with his civilian unarmed vessel.
- Yes.
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That's indeed the case, yes.
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But the rules of war at that time were confused
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and U-boats in particular caused many problems.
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At home, Fryatt's killing caused outrage,
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00:17:10,640 --> 00:17:13,560
and after the war his body was repatriated
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and his heroism honoured at a special ceremony at St Paul's.
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His remains were taken by special train to Antwerp
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where they were loaded on to a British destroyer.
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And at Dover the remains were transferred to this van
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and came to Charing Cross in London
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where the formal ceremony to St Paul's commenced.
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What a way of marking him out
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to bring him in this van and then to St Paul's Cathedral.
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Oh, indeed, yes. It was a real mark of respect
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and he was extremely well thought of.
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One of the tragedies of Captain Fryatt
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is that he was slowly forgotten.
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By the Second World War, probably very few people knew of him,
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but we hope to keep his memory alive with this exhibit.
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When van number 132
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made its solemn journey from Dover to London carrying Captain Fryatt,
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it travelled on the lines of the South Eastern and Chatham Railway,
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among the hardest-working tracks of the war.
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Today the quickest route from the capital to the continent is via the Eurostar,
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but a century ago the Folkestone sea crossing
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was the preferred way to reach the front.
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00:18:33,800 --> 00:18:37,200
Over the course of the war, the South Eastern and Chatham
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carried some ten million servicemen and civilian volunteers
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to and from the port.
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I'm now following in their footsteps,
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en route to Belgium where the well-worn rail routes to the front
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lived on after the end of the fighting.
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When the guns had fallen silent the bereaved set forth
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to visit the places where their loved ones had died.
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Early pilgrims were people of means,
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who could pick their way through the shattered landscape.
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But as the vast cemeteries were constructed,
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the trains carried grieving masses to corners of foreign fields.
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These early railway tours
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set the tone for the battlefield visits that continue to this day.
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To unearth the story, I've come to Ypres,
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described in a 1922 Bradshaw's Guide
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00:19:28,400 --> 00:19:33,200
as "a melancholy monument to the terrible havoc of war."
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Under British control for the duration of the conflict,
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Ypres had witnessed five major battles.
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After the troops left the locals began to restore their city brick by brick,
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but it would take until the 1960s
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to finish rebuilding the iconic medieval cloth hall.
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A decade after the armistice,
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this battle-ravaged town played host to a railway pilgrimage on an epic scale.
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I'm hearing the story from Pam and Ken Linge,
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a couple with a shared passion for the social history of the war.
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00:20:08,600 --> 00:20:11,480
- Hello, Pam.
- Hi.
- Hello, Ken.
- How you doing?
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Very good I'm most interested in these post-war pilgrimages.
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- When do they get going?
- For the masses, I think in the early '20s.
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In 1923, the St Barnabas hostels started,
333
00:20:25,960 --> 00:20:28,760
and that was a charitable organisation
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where the poor could actually come and visit
335
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the graves of their relatives.
336
00:20:34,640 --> 00:20:38,120
And that continued up to 1927,
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00:20:38,120 --> 00:20:41,840
which was the final one which brought 700 people.
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00:20:41,840 --> 00:20:45,040
- And after 1927 it all moved up a gear?
- It did.
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By 1928 you've got the British Legion
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organising 11,000 people to come here for a ceremony.
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00:20:54,760 --> 00:20:59,920
- 11,000 people. This was an operation on a military scale in itself.
- Yes.
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00:20:59,920 --> 00:21:03,680
Who were these people? Some of them, I guess, were ex-servicemen, others were bereaved?
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Yeah, old soldiers enjoyed the camaraderie,
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cos it was back to the time when they'd been with all their friends.
345
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The wives and mothers had a sense of closure
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to be able to visit the graves.
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Even at the time this was dubbed "An Epic Pilgrimage"
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00:21:21,280 --> 00:21:23,760
and to organise it the staff of the Legion
349
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put their faith in the railways.
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00:21:27,240 --> 00:21:30,200
Mobilising the pilgrims posed similar challenges
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00:21:30,200 --> 00:21:32,920
to those faced 14 years before,
352
00:21:32,920 --> 00:21:36,960
when the British Expeditionary Force had been brought to the battlefield.
353
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They had first of all to get everybody ticketed, everybody organised
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from all of the areas within the UK,
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from Ireland, from Scotland,
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putting on special trains in the UK to get them down to the ports.
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And then once they're in France and in Belgium,
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they then organised 21 special trains
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and roughly parties of 500 people.
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Each were given a train,
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that train went with them throughout their visit.
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Over three days, the touring trains
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carried the pilgrims around the battlefields,
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where they visited reconstructed trenches and newly-built cemeteries.
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Arranging food and accommodation for such huge numbers was no mean feat.
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You've got all those 11,000 people billeted,
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either with local families or in schools or colleges.
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Each of the people that was coming got this book beforehand
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and it explained about the instructions
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and where they were going and all of the things they had to have with them.
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The book offered advice on everything
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from foreign currency to suitable footwear,
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even warning British pilgrims not to be disappointed
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if their continental hosts offered coffee instead of tea.
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The grand finale of the event was a ceremony at Ypres,
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the toughest challenge for the local railways.
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You've got 11,000 people being trained into the station
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and then you had to marshal them around Ypres.
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There was a service at the Menin Gate
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and then each of the groups processed through the town.
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So from the material that you've got here,
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what do you know about people's reactions to being on the pilgrimage?
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After the pilgrimage, they produced a souvenir book
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called The Story of an Epic Pilgrimage. It had anecdotes
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and sort of stories from each of the groups.
386
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One of the pilgrims from the northwest wrote,
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00:23:34,560 --> 00:23:38,720
"I couldn't help thinking of the days when you had to cross this same place
388
00:23:38,720 --> 00:23:42,960
"on your hands and knees with shells dropping continually,
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"when Ypres was surely worse than Hell itself.
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00:23:45,920 --> 00:23:50,400
"What a change that day with the bands playing, flags flying
391
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"and all the houses rebuilt.
392
00:23:52,760 --> 00:23:54,400
"I could see in my mind's eye
393
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"the phantom army that had marched that way never to return."
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Very poignant.
395
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The early post-war pilgrimages by railway
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brought first the old comrades of those who'd been slain and their mothers and their widows,
397
00:24:17,760 --> 00:24:20,400
and then their sons and daughters.
398
00:24:20,400 --> 00:24:23,960
And today, by an almost uninterrupted continuum,
399
00:24:23,960 --> 00:24:27,280
those graves are visited by the great-grandchildren.
400
00:24:31,080 --> 00:24:34,160
Even while the fighting still raged on the Western Front,
401
00:24:34,160 --> 00:24:38,360
the task of collecting and commemorating the fallen had begun.
402
00:24:38,360 --> 00:24:41,280
The first cemeteries opened in 1921,
403
00:24:41,280 --> 00:24:44,680
and a decade later there were over 900,
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00:24:44,680 --> 00:24:48,200
all characterized by the distinctively simple headstones
405
00:24:48,200 --> 00:24:51,640
chosen by the Imperial War Graves Commission.
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00:24:52,680 --> 00:24:55,400
Every year, hundreds of thousands of tourists
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00:24:55,400 --> 00:24:57,360
come to pay their respects,
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00:24:57,360 --> 00:25:00,280
including many British schoolchildren.
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00:25:00,280 --> 00:25:02,360
Is there anyone here today
410
00:25:02,360 --> 00:25:06,000
who's come to visit the grave of an ancestor or a relative?
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00:25:07,200 --> 00:25:12,080
- What's your name?
- Georgie Sells.
- And who is it who's buried here?
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00:25:12,080 --> 00:25:16,400
- Rifleman Frank Madley.
- And what's his relation to you?
413
00:25:16,400 --> 00:25:20,000
- He's my great-great-uncle.
- What do you know about his story?
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00:25:20,000 --> 00:25:22,680
He was killed near Mousetrap Farm.
415
00:25:22,680 --> 00:25:27,440
And his best friend was hurt in the same shell that hit him.
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00:25:27,440 --> 00:25:30,240
And his best friend went home to tell his family.
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00:25:30,240 --> 00:25:32,240
And his only sister answered the door
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00:25:32,240 --> 00:25:35,160
and they got married after they met.
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00:25:35,160 --> 00:25:37,440
That's an extraordinary story, isn't it?
420
00:25:37,440 --> 00:25:40,320
Have you honoured an ancestor while you've been here?
421
00:25:40,320 --> 00:25:45,040
Well, I saw his grave, the Earl of Faversham, yesterday.
422
00:25:45,040 --> 00:25:49,840
- And what do you know about him?
- He was my great-grandfather, on my mum's side.
423
00:25:49,840 --> 00:25:51,880
There's a story that he was buried with his dog,
424
00:25:51,880 --> 00:25:56,160
but he wasn't, actually, his dog was looked after by the Prime Minister
425
00:25:56,160 --> 00:26:00,720
who was a good friend of his and the dog was very sad apparently.
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00:26:00,720 --> 00:26:06,680
So what was it like for you when you came along to pay tribute to the Earl of Faversham?
427
00:26:06,680 --> 00:26:08,760
It was nice, very touching.
428
00:26:08,760 --> 00:26:12,760
I liked feeling that he was right in front of me.
429
00:26:14,600 --> 00:26:18,560
These children are lucky to be able to visit their ancestors' graves,
430
00:26:18,560 --> 00:26:22,600
more than 180,000 British and Commonwealth servicemen
431
00:26:22,600 --> 00:26:25,400
lie in unnamed graves.
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00:26:25,400 --> 00:26:28,680
The bodies of thousands more were never found.
433
00:26:28,680 --> 00:26:30,480
To mark their sacrifice,
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00:26:30,480 --> 00:26:34,520
the Imperial War Graves Commission built memorials to the missing,
435
00:26:34,520 --> 00:26:39,240
and the first was the Menin Gate, unveiled in Ypres in 1927.
436
00:26:39,240 --> 00:26:41,560
LAST POST PLAYS
437
00:26:48,800 --> 00:26:51,520
Designed by Sir Reginald Blomfield,
438
00:26:51,520 --> 00:26:56,240
it's inscribed with the names of more than 55,000 men.
439
00:27:02,400 --> 00:27:08,160
And every evening at eight, the Last Post is sounded in their honour.
440
00:27:22,840 --> 00:27:26,760
World War I was marked by terrible tragedy,
441
00:27:26,760 --> 00:27:30,320
but also witnessed acts of extraordinary heroism.
442
00:27:30,320 --> 00:27:32,400
Disasters on the battlefield
443
00:27:32,400 --> 00:27:36,440
were matched by almost inconceivable feats of organisation.
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00:27:37,440 --> 00:27:41,000
Through it all ran the tracks of the railways,
445
00:27:41,000 --> 00:27:46,200
which defined the wartime experiences of servicemen and civilians alike.
446
00:27:50,240 --> 00:27:53,200
The youngsters who visit war monuments today
447
00:27:53,200 --> 00:27:57,960
have joined a line of pilgrims that stretches back nearly a century.
448
00:27:57,960 --> 00:28:02,200
My whole journey has focused on railwaymen and women,
449
00:28:02,200 --> 00:28:05,440
perhaps forgotten, whose routines at home
450
00:28:05,440 --> 00:28:09,480
and whose gallantry abroad were vital to the war effort.
451
00:28:09,480 --> 00:28:14,120
But to me as a train enthusiast, it's distasteful that the railways
452
00:28:14,120 --> 00:28:19,800
were the conveyor belt that carried men by the thousand to the slaughter.
453
00:28:19,800 --> 00:28:25,920
By some perversion the train became an essential component of mechanized war.
40660
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