The Last Tommy - Harry Patch DiesHarry Patch, known as the Last Tommy, died peacefully just before 9am on Saturday at Fletcher House nursing home in Wells, Somerset. |
Visitors





| Our History |
|
|
|
| Written by Administrator |
| Monday, 08 June 2009 12:48 |
History of the Poppy Appeal
How the Poppy Appeal beganSome of the bloodiest fighting of World War One took place in the Flanders and Picardy regions of Belgium and Northern France. The poppy was the only thing which grew in the aftermath of the complete devastation. McCrae, a doctor serving there with the Canadian Armed Forces, deeply inspired and moved by what he saw, wrote these verses: In Flanders' Fields In Flanders' fields the poppies blow We are the dead. Short days ago Take up our quarrel with the foe; On the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month in 1918, the First World War ended. Civilians wanted to remember the people who had given their lives for peace and freedom. An American War Secretary, Moina Michael, inspired by John McCrae's poem, began selling poppies to friends to raise money for the ex-Service community. And so the tradition began. The Poppy Factory
|
| Last Updated on Saturday, 25 July 2009 17:17 |

History of the Legion


The first official Legion Poppy Day was held in Britain on 11 November 1921, inspired by the poem In Flanders' Fields written by John McCrae. Since then the Poppy Appeal
In 1922, Major George Howson, a young infantry officer, formed the Disabled Society, to help disabled ex-Service men and women from the First World War. Howson suggested to the Legion that members of the Disabled Society could make poppies and the Poppy Factory was subsequently founded in Richmond in 1922. The original poppy was designed so that workers with a disability could easily assemble it and this principle remains today. Visit their website