September Last Post

Today, our ceremony in the late summer sunshine was a special one concentrating on Brookwood Military Cemetery’s Memorial to the Missing 1939-1945.

We remembered three individuals; Ensign Madeleine Damerment – First Aid Nursing Yeomanry (FANY) / French Section Special Operations Executive (SOE), Major Richard Edwards – Royal Army Medical Corps and Volunteer Amiram Shohet – Palmach / SOE.

Ensign Damerment, whose family was part of the French Resistance, voluntarily joined the French Section of the SOE. Appointed to the FANY, she was parachuted into France on the night of 28/29 February 1944. Quickly captured, and held in a number of prisons, she was transferred to Dachau Concentration camp and was executed there on 13 September 1944.

Present at the ceremony today, and acting as Standard Bearer of a three person colour party from the present day FANY (PRVC), was Zoe Brooke, great-niece of Madeleine.

Major Edwards spent a great deal of his wartime service on troop ships in and around the Mediterranean, during the North Africa campaign and the landings in Italy. On 25th November 1943, HMT Rohna on which he was Senior Medical Officer and carrying around 2000 US troops, joined a convoy at Oran, Algeria bound for the Far East. The convoy was attacked by German aircraft on the following day off Tunis and HMT Rohna was sunk after being struck by a new type of guided bomb, the Henschel 293. The resulting loss of 1015 GI’s was the greatest loss of life at sea ever suffered by the US forces and in addition, 134 British and Indian officers and men perished.

Major Edwards’ son, Jonathan, and his grand-daughter Fenella Bootle-Wilbraham were present at the ceremony today.

Volunteer Shohet was the mate of the Sea Lion boat used during Operation Boatswain (known in Hebrew as kaf-gimel yordei ha-sira, “the twenty-three who went down with the ship”), the first of the operational missions carried out by the Palmach as part of the cooperation between the Jewish community in Mandatory Palestine (now Israel) and the British, during WW2. The mission, to sabotage Vichy French oil refineries in Tripoli, Lebanon was unsuccessful, ending with the disappearance of 23 Palmach commandos/SOE volunteers and British SOE officer Major Sir Anthony Palmer after the Sea Lion (borrowed from the British Palestine Police) was lost at sea on May 18, 1941. Several theories have been put forward for the boat’s loss including rough weather and the possible explosion of the explosives being carried.

Amiram Shohet’s second cousin, (former) Ambassador Gershon Gan was present at the ceremony today.

We read out the poem The Life That I Have, written by Alfred Marks and used as her coding poem by Violette Szabo GC of French Section, Special Operations Executive, commemorated on the Memorial to the Missing and subject to the film Carve Her Name With Pride. Paul McCue read the poem and the biographies.

Paul McCue reading the poem The Life That I Have
Paul McCue reading the poem The Life That I Have

Our ceremony was conducted by our Padre, Mr Bert Steed and we also had a representative from the Jewish Community lead with the Kaddish prayer.

Israeli Ambassador, Mark Regev laid a wreath and at the end of the Ceremony at the invitation of our Parade Marshal, inspected the seven Standards on parade.

Ambassador Mark Regev inspecting the Standards - Photo Credit: Mr Justin Dix
Ambassador Mark Regev inspecting the Standards – Photo Credit: Mr Justin Dix

BLP Member John Kingsbury laid a wreath remembering our former Chairman, Mr Malcolm Head.

Afterwards, we retired round to the Trench Experience for some refreshments.

August Last Post

We started our ceremony today with the sad news that our previous Chairman, Mr Malcolm Head had passed away this morning. Malcolm was Chair of the BLP during its most challenging period. The most recent ceremony that he attended was the July Last Post last month. Without his vision and drive, the Brookwood Last Post would not have survived and would now be consigned to history. We will miss him terribly.

Mr David Plattern, Chairman of Surrey County RBL, Mr Tom Milne and Mr Malcolm Head at the September 2017 Brookwood Last Post.
Mr David Plattern, Chairman of Surrey County RBL, Mr Tom Milne and Mr Malcolm Head at the September 2017 Brookwood Last Post.

Today we held a multi faith ceremony remembering those Commonwealth soldiers killed in all wars from across the faith spectrum.

We had representatives from the Bahá’í, Christian, Hindu, Muslim and Sikh faiths all of whom held a prayer.

We remembered Private James Henry Sitch, service number G/45373 who is buried in plot XIII, grave C.8A at Brookwood Military Cemetery.

Private Sitch died 100 years ago on Monday, 5th August 1918, his age isn’t listed, nor his address, but the fact that he was in the Royal West Surreys suggests that he was a local man, albeit he had transferred to the Labour Corps by the time of his death.

We read out the poem ‘The Crosses’ by Bill Mitton.

At the end of the ceremony, our Chairman, Kevin Davis and Woking Mayor, Cllr Will Forster inspected the Standards on parade.

We had four Standards on parade, and our Standard Bearer today was Mrs Sue Stallard. We had fewer Standards today as some members are attending the Great Pilgrimage 90 Parade in Belgium.

Our bugler was Mrs Ruth Moore, our Reverend was Mr Rob Bennett, and additional speakers were John Kingsbury and Paul McCue. Afterwards we went round to the Trench Experience for refreshments.

July Last Post

The hot temperatures today didn’t stop Beavers, Cubs and Scouts turning out from Woking District for the July edition of the Brookwood Last Post.

Sounding of The Last Post
Sounding of The Last Post

We had nine Standards on parade, five from the Scouts with Mrs Sue Stallard parading the BLP Standard.

Silence
Silence

We remembered Brookwood resident Wilfred Bolingbroke. Wilfred was the son of Alfred. He lived at The Homestead – now 142 Connaught Road. He enlisted in Bisley, joining the third battalion of the Tank Corps (formerly the Machine Gun Corps). He served as a private in Flanders and France. It is highly likely that he was part of the Battle of Cambrai-St. Quentin (27th September – 9th October 1918). This was the main British contribution to the attack on the Hindenburg line and succeeded in pushing back the Germans to the River Selle.

The war was to last just one month more, but sadly Wilfred was killed in action on 8th October 1918, aged just 22 years. He is buried in the Busigny Cemetery in Northern France.

Although we performed the long ceremony, we substituted the second hymn with the poem ‘The Life of a Soldier’ by Jodi M. Kucera.

Our bugler was Mrs Ruth Moore and our Padre was Bert Steed.

Afterwards we had some refreshments round at The Trench Experience.