World War One history comes to life for local teen
History came starkly to life for Adam (16) as, in the company of cadets from across the region, he visited landmarks along what was once The Western Front, the principal theatre of war from 1914-18, and learned about the unprecedented loss of life in ‘the war to end all wars’.
There were more than 17 million deaths and 20 million wounded, making this one of the deadliest conflicts in human history – and, as the cadets discovered, many of those who sacrificed their lives were themselves little more than teenagers.
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Hide AdIt was an intensely moving learning experience, as Colonel David McCleery from the Army Cadet Force Association explains. He said: “Many of our cadets have studied World War I at school so they were already quite knowledgeable, but it’s one thing reading about World War I in a history book but quite another to make the Battlefield Tour pilgrimage.
“I think we were all rather overwhelmed as we visited the trenches where so many men fought and died, then saw the sombre rows of headstones in the region’s many military cemeteries. Our cadets were genuinely affected by all that they saw and heard during our visit and I know they were particularly moved when our Padre, Rev Jack Moore, officiated at brief acts of remembrance. The visit was an enriching experience and I know it will stay with them for years to come.”