Today is Anzac Day in New Zealand, the day New Zealanders and Australians remember, acknowledge and honour all those who have served and died in wars, conflicts, and peacekeeping operations around the world, the Antipodean equivalent of Britain's Remembrance Sunday and the USA's Veterans Day.
I was a little surprised when I noticed this memorial to the ANZAC (Australia and New Zealand Army Corps) forces on the front in Weymouth but I should have realised that troops from all participating nations would have passed through many of the seaside towns and ports along the south coast of England, and so it was in Weymouth. As the inscriptions on the pillar explain:
'A. I. F. [Australian Imperial Force]
In memory of the ANZAC volunteer troops who after action at Gallipoli in 1915 passed through hospitals and training camps in Dorset'
And
'N. Z. E. F. [New Zealand Expeditionary Force]
These ANZAC troops later moved from Dorset to action in Palestine and the
Western Front'
And, not shown here, the road side of the pillar reads:
'ANZAC memorial
We will remember them'
Plus, on a lower step of the platform
'They came from afar
in the cause of freedom'
Sponsored by members of the Weymouth and Portland Residents' Association, Weymouth and Portland Borough Council, individuals and local businesses, the memorial was dedicated on 1 June 2005 and commemorates the involvement of ANZAC soldiers in World War One and the presence of those troops in camps in the local area during that time.
The Virtual War Memorial Australia website provides additional information:Weymouth was the
depot for the Anzacs Gallipoli casualties sent to UK hospitals for
treatment
and then discharged as convalescent. The depot opened in May 1915 and was the
joint Australian and New Zealand depot until the NZ depot opened at Hornchurch
in Essex in April 1916. Weymouth then became AIF Command Depot No.2 which
accommodated those men not expected to be fit for duty within six months,
therefore, most of the Diggers repatriated as a result of wounds or sickness
passed through Weymouth. During the years 1915-1919 over 120,000 Australian and
New Zealand troops passed through Weymouth.
The Hotel Prince Regent opposite the ANZAC Memorial was previously known as
Hotel Burdon and was one of nine military hospitals in Weymouth during World
war One.
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