2nd City of London Regiment (Royal Fusiliers) Easter Tour to Ypres. THE YPRES TIMES 201 battlefield, and a visit is strongly recommended to those who have not already been there. An excellent account was given of the situation, as it appeared to the enemy, prior to the battle. It would be clear to anyone standing now at this point how nearly the Germans achieved success. For had they been able to press forward their attack on the important railway junction of Hazebrouck, the evacua tion of the Salient would have become inevitable. Vieux Berquin was the next stop, and from here the detailed story of the famous stand by the 4th Guards Brigade was described. This completed the tour, and the party then entrained at Hazebrouck en route for England. Battlefield tours are now frequently carried out by officers, and form an important part in their annual training. Many valuable lessons may be learnt from these tours, and, above all, those who carry away with them the lesson that human nature plays the most important part in war, will not have attended in vain. A PARTY of fifty-one officers, non-com- missioned officers, men and past members of the Regiment visited Ypres for the express purpose of unveiling a Memorial Tablet in the British Church at Ypres, to the memory of the 1,345 officers and men who lost their lives in the war; also to commemorate the part played by the four Battalions of the Regi ment in the Great War, 1914-1918. The party left London on the Good Fri day morning, and after a most pleasant journey reached ores at y p m r> m 1 j Photo] [Sy kind permission of Central Press Photos. On the Saturday we made an early start by charabanc UNVEILING OF MEMORIAL TABLET, to visit the many places of interest in and around Ypres. I have, in the past, described the many places well worth visiting, but for those who contemplate visiting Ypres I would recommend their going to the Tyne Cot Cemetery (the largest British Cemetery), Sanctuary Wood, the Canadian Memorial nearby and Hill 60. For the members of the 2nd London Regiment the most interesting spot was Glencorse Wood, where, on August 16th, 1917, the Regiment of some 500 strong made an attack through this wood to

HISTORISCHE KRANTEN

The Ypres Times (1921-1936) | 1931 | | pagina 11