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Tim Buescher, centre, at the grave of his great great uncle, L/Cpl Samuel Chapman, with the military party British soldiers who died in World War One and were buried in unnamed graves have finally ...
According to the National Army Museum, the Battle of Loos saw 50,000 British casualties, almost double the number of German losses, and was the first time the British Army used gas as a weapon.
In a ‘living memorial’ to the British soldiers killed in the Somme, young men dressed in WW1 uniforms appeared at stations and in city centres all over the country. In towns and cities ...
British soldiers who died in World War One and were buried in unnamed graves have finally been identified. The remains of L/Cpl James Ball Baron, 29, L/Cpl Samuel Chapman, 19, and 2nd Lt Hugh Barr, 28 ...
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