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War Memorials in Crewe and Nantwich
 

Crewe War Memorial
Crewe War Memorial (Above)
General Sir Ian Hamilton unveiled the Crewe War Memorial on 14th June 1924. The memorial was designed by Mr W Gilbert of Birmingham at a cost of £1,600 which was raised by public subscription and a generous donation form the railway company. Around 15,000 people attended the unveiling ceremony.
Nantwich War Memorial (Below)
The Nantwich war memorial as unveiled by General Sir Beauvoir de Lisle on 25th September 1921 at a cost of £925, which was raised by public subscription.
Nantwich War Memorial

BRITANNIA REFURBISHMENT
Representatives from Crewe and Nantwich Borough Council and The War Memorial Veterans Working Group visited Britannia in September 2006, whist she was being restored at the Liverpool Conservation Centre.

Work to date revealed a highly impressive and interesting restoration procedure. The cleaning process has been based upon laser technology, developed from the removal of tattoos, which demonstrates just how gently the process is.  Over time the original brown exterior has worn away and so she has been re-coated with an inhibitor which will prevent future green corrosion.  Then finally she has been waxed, so that water cannot rest onto her surface.  Originally, she is thought to have been cast in about twenty pieces, although she will be restored in one piece reducing possibilities of damage from future corrosion.

Restoration completion is planned for end of September 2006.  The difference between the before and after work is quite staggering, you soon forget just how the green corrosion had affected her.

The process has been an interesting one, as earlier cleaning involved use with abrasive chemicals. With this process there are no liquids, no chemicals and no scrubbing or abrasive substances used to sanitise Britannia, returning her to her former glory for many years ahead.  We must ensure that she receives suitable future professional care, maintaining and preserving her respectfully for generations to come.

The group visiting Liverpool included -  representatives from the Veterans Working Party, Mrs E Francis Women's Royal Army Corp, Miss Williams Royal British Legion, Mr D Skitt Royal British Legion, Bob Wright Royal Naval Assoc, R Percival Cheshire Regiment, Mr G Thomas Royal Naval Assoc, Mrs E Smith RAF Assoc.

Plus members, Councillors - Jacquie Weatherill, Les Wood, Steven Roberts, Penny Butterill, Joyce Bratherton, Michael Roberts, Tony Crawford and Officers, Elaine Dodd - Town Centre Manager - Sue Togay Assistant Town Centre Manager and Amanda Sherratt - Safety Officer.

Some pictures of the refurbishment process:
 Restoration Nearly Complete  Dove before Restoration  Dove after Restoration
 

Research
Local historian Mark Potts has and continues to undertake a great deal of research into appropriate tributes to commemorate the men and women, from Crewe and Nantwich, who lost their lives during the Great War of 1914-18 and the Second War of 1939-45. This has resulted in Mark publishing two books containing nearly 1,750 names with over 250 photographs.
Dear Mrs Jones Book 1
"Dear Mrs Jones - The Great War Dead of Crewe and Nantwich"
written by Mark Potts and Joy Bratherton published 2001.
 
 
"Dear Mrs Jones - The Next Generation"
Written by Mark Potts and Tony Marks published 2003.
Dear Mrs Jones Book 2
The latest book also contains many rare and previously unpublished photographs.
If you are able to assist with any research concerning our own local heroes
please contact Mark Potts tel: 01270 560015 or email mark@markpotts.wanadoo.co.uk


Wanted
Local photos, taken during the war years 1914 to 1919 and 1939 to 1945
to be included in the forthcoming book "Crewe & Nantwich at War in Photos".

People who served, casualties, reserved occupation, bomb damage, VE day, school days, weddings, social events, fund raising, etc.

To compliment the photos gathered for the "Dear Mrs Jones" books and the compiling of "The Crewe & Nantwich Roll of Honour", we are publishing these photos plus many others acquired over the years to commemorate the people, events and places that helped maintain the great military heritage of our area.

If you can help please have them copied and send them to either of the following addresses with as much information as you can. If you have difficulty in copying your photos then please telephone us and we will collect, copy and safely return them.

This is possibly the last opportunity we all have to preserve the memories of the two great wars of the 20th Century.
 
Please send to:
Mark Potts
2 Barons Road
Shavington
Crewe
Cheshire
CW2 5EH
Tel: 01270 560015 
Tony Marks
50 Hulme Street
Crewe
Cheshire
CW1 3PB
Tel: 01270 216108 

Memories Album
 
ARNOLD PALIN
12 Singleton Avenue, Crewe
 
Arnold volunteered for the Royal Air Force in 1943 and after his initial training, he was posted to Blackpool to train as a wireless operator.  He passed the course, but must to his disappointment; he failed the medical for the air crew.  He was then posted to Combined Operations.
 
Arnold Palin           Arnold Palin
 
Early in 1944, Arnold found himself attached to the American 1st Division (The Big Red One), his job being Ground to Air Communications.  It was in that role that he landed on 'D' Day on Omaha Beach in Normandy.  He was in one of the first waves of landing craft but as we now know the Americans were not able to get forward from the beach for some hours.  All that Arnold and his American colleagues could do at this time was to get under whatever cover was available to them.  This happened to be their own truck which contained all their radio equipment.  It was soon clear that it would be safer to be further along the beach, so they made a dash for the next vehicle a few yards away.  Arnold was the first to scramble under the truck with the Americans crowding behind him, but almost instantly, a mortar round hit the truck that they had just left and the explosion killed the American lads and wounded Arnold in the left knee.  At the time and in the circumstances, he did not think much of it, his only thought being to get off the beach as there was no way back.  When the American's eventually began to force their way off the beach he decided to go with them, even though he had lost his radio equipment and as a result would not be of much use.  It was clearly safer than remaining on the beach.  His knee was not troubling him at the time.
 
He attached himself to a group of Americans and moved inland with them for a few days, but in the end his leg gave out and he could no longer walk on it.  An American Parson found him laying by the side of a road and he stopped a truck so that Arnold could be transported back to the beach. 
 
He was eventually put aboard the Royal Navy landing craft that was taking the wounded back to England and he said that when the crew found that he was English, they made a fuss of him because he was the first British Serviceman that they had taken off the beach in the three days that they had been operating there.
 
After he had been in hospital in Blackpool for about eight weeks, he got his first leave.  He looked quite a hero.  He still wore the RAF battle dress that he had worn when he landed in France.  It had been washed and the hole in the knee of the trousers had been darned.  He had not been able to get a new uniform because the stores at the hospital had no RAF uniforms.  On the sleeve of his blouse he wore the RAF Albatross, the Wireless Operators' trade badges and a brass wound badge on his cuff.  He walked with a stiff leg and had to use a walking stick.  He was still in a lot of pain and had been told that he would have to have more operations, but even so, he had a good leave.  He got into the dances and the cinemas free, the usherettes made sure that he always had an end seat and that the seat in front was kept empty to enable him to stretch out his long legs.
 
After his leave, he was off back to Blackpool for more operations.  Like a lot more young men in war time, he fell in love with one of the nurses.  On his next leave, he brought her home with him.  He was so proud of her as she was his first girlfriend.
 
Early in 1945, he was discharged from hospital as fit for service.  He was posted to an American Airfield in Belgium and he kept on the move with them through France, and then into Germany where he was on V.E. Day.  I received a letter from him posted on that day telling of his hopes for the future and saying how much he hoped that he would be home for his 21st birthday.  Some days later, his mother received a telegram to say that he had been killed on 11th May 1945.
 
Arnold's American Commanding Officer wrote to his mother and told her that he had gone to see a dentist some miles away.  When he arrived back at the camp, he had jumped out of the cab of the lorry that he was travelling in and had stumbled and fell.  The but of the Sten gun that he had been carrying had hit the ground and had fired, hitting him in the head.  He died instantly and was buried in a temporary American Cemetery.  Later, he was transferred to a British Military Cemetery just over the border in France.
 
I am proud to say that I have Arnold's medals in my collection, the 1939-45 Star, France and Germany star, Victory medal and also the badges that he wore on his battledress on D-Day.  I have often wondered, if there were any other British Servicemen on Omaha Beach?  Arnold never spoke of any, and in his letters after he went back to the continent he wrote only of 'his American Friends'.
 
Information provided by Mr P Kirkland, Haslington.
 

V.E. & V.J Day
 
VE & VJ Day 1945
Street Party Celebration in Chamber Street, Crewe
V.E. Day
Photograph presented by Vera M Cowdale when she was 9½ years old
(the girl wearing headband on the bottom-right-hand side of the photograph
now Mrs Smart from Brook Close).
 
To see more photographs follow this link.>> and take a trip down memory lane