poppies

Moving tribute as 888,246 poppies are scattered around Millionaire Mansion

Authored by Marc Astley
Posted: Mon, 11/12/2018 - 6:26am

The owners of a £2.3m Devon mansion being offered as a competition prize have scattered 888,246 poppies around their home as part of a Remembrance Day tribute.

Silhouettes of World War I soldiers have also been placed in the grounds of the property.

The number of poppies is equivalent to the number of British and Commonwealth servicemen killed in the conflict, most of them in the mud and horror of the fields in Flanders.

And a huge Remembrance drape now adorns the house which is the star attraction of the competition.

Many weeks have been spent planning the...

Poppies at the Cathedral

The High Altar at Exeter's Cathedral has been decorated by the sea of poppies which were first seen at Devon County Show 2017, and created by so many wonderful people from Devon.

35,000 poppies are displayed, representing those that lost their lives in the First World War from Devon, Cornwall, Somerset and Dorset.

Also included in the display is the original Devon Yeomanry uniform and a horse, kindly lent by Bicton College. The horse and the purple poppies represent all the animals lost - over 1 million horses, many pigeons, dogs and cats.

The display is in the...

Devon County Show’s handmade poppies go on show at Exeter Cathedral

More than 30,000 handcrafted red poppies made to mark the centenary of the First World War at the Devon County Show will go on display at Exeter Cathedral.

The exhibition opens on Monday (October 30) and runs until Tuesday, November 14.

Thousands of local people supported the ‘people’s tribute’ to the 11,500 Devon men and women who died in the Great War by creating 34,000 poppies.

The commemoration was the idea of Deborah Custance Baker, Chief Steward of the Crafts and Gardens Show feature.

“I’d like to say a huge thank you to everyone, young and old, who...

Devon County Show ‘People’s tribute’ made up of 32,000 hand-made poppies

Authored by News Desk
Posted: Mon, 05/08/2017 - 4:14pm

Private Bill Herd was a 25-year-old father-of- two from Exeter when he left his job as a Carter to join the Devonshire Regiment in 1914. He was killed in action four years later at Bapaume, France.

Bill was one of 11,500 Devon men and women who died in the First World War and will be remembered as part of an extraordinary ‘people’s tribute’ staged at the Devon County Show on May 18, 19 and 20 at Westpoint, Exeter.

Six months ago the Show appealed to local people to make a poppy in memory of those who had lost their lives and was stunned to receive just under 31,000 poppies...

Festival of Remembrance

Event Date: 
08/11/2013 - 7:30pm
Venue: 
Exmouth Pavilion

Another fantastic night of entertainment brought to you by the Royal British Legion.

Acts include:

The Exmouth Shanty Men: surely one of the most exciting, colourful and entertaining acts to appear on the traditional folk scene in years.

Mark Nelson: an acoustic guitarist and singer/songwriter with a difference - in that he does it all with one arm!

Blitz and Peaces: their aim is provide quality, experiential entertainment tailored to the needs of WWII living history events.

Exmouth Sea Cadets Hornpipe: The Hornpipe is any of several dance forms...

Devon Festival of Remembrance

Event Date: 
07/11/2013 - 7:00pm
Venue: 
The Great Hall, Exeter University

The ever popular band of Her Majesty’s Royal Marines of the Commando Training Centre, Lympstone will again provide the musical accompaniment for this event which has a well established place on the Devon calendar.

The Military Wives’ Choir from Chivenor will also be performing.

This annual tribute to Britain’s Armed Forces will include the Traditional Muster of Standards of Devon’s Royal British Legion and Service Associations, as well as representatives of the Armed Forces, cadet forces, youth groups and emergency services. It will end with a short Service of Remembrance,...

Exeter remembers our lost service men and women

Remembrance Day is a time to pause, to reflect on the conflicts that have led to so many fine young men and women losing their lives, and to those still fighting to maintain a world order for the good of others.

But it is also to highlight to those who did not live throught the First and Second World Wars the sacrifices that were made to ensure we live in the free society that we enjoy today. Yesterday the great and the good of Exeter gathered around Cathedral Green and process through the city to pay their respects to lost and service men and women of the armed forces.

Devon & Somerset Fire Service to attend Armistice Day parade

Devon & Somerset Fire & Rescue Service will once again be crossing the Channel this weekend to lead the memorial services that commemorate the Annual Armistice Day Parades at the Menin Gate in Ypres, Belgium.

This is the 28th year that the Devon & Somerset Fire & Rescue Service Ceremonial Pipes & Drums have taken part in this most important international event which not only commemorates the lives lost in the conflict of 1914–1918 but also in present day conflicts across the world that our armed forces are engaged in. Many of those taking part have...

Thousand poppies created from wartime love letters

A thousand paper poppies made from copies of love letters written during World War II have been used in an art installation at Exeter Northcott.

The 2.7m high installation has been created specially for the theatre foyer for the month of November by paper artist Gillian Taylor who has used copies of letters loaned by local people following a request in the media.

Gillian’s work is influenced by her interest in how we communicate and how that has changed over the years. She said: “The letters were all written at a time of great uncertainty and heightened emotions. Sometimes...