Died: 649 Argentinians, 255 British, 3 civilian Falkland Islanders.
This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Falklands War
Commemorated ati
Falklands War memorial
The memorial was dedicated on Merchant Navy Day 2005 by the First Sea Lord, A...
Fleet Air Arm
This bronze figure represents Daedalus, the Greek guy who crafted wings for h...
Gurkha soldier
Unveiled by the Queen. Modelled by Jackson on the 1929 statue by Goulden in t...
Queen's Gate WW1 memorial
To the glory of God and in undying memory of these sons of Britain who fell i...
St Mary's Primrose Hill war memorial - 2018
On the Just Giving page: "The names on the beautiful but fading current memor...
Other Subjects
Thos. F. Baldwin
Resident of the Central Ward, Hendon who served and died in WW1.
G. H. Pearce
Co-partner or employee of the South Suburban Gas Company. Served but did not die in WW1.
P. L. Toms
Co-partner or employee of the South Suburban Gas Company. Served but did not die in WW1.
Lieutenant Bernard Henry Gilbert Shaw
Bernard Henry Gilbert Shaw was born on 11 October 1893 in Bishop's Stortford, Hertfordshire, the second of the ten children of the Reverend Edward Domett Shaw (1860-1937) and Agnes Shaw née Gilbey ...
Previously viewed
Herbert O. Ellis
Architect active in 1898. Did other work for Rev. Sanders. We believe we found our man at Geni: Herbert Owen Ellis, Born Wakefield, Yorkshire, Died Gosport, Hampshire.
HMS Victory
HMS Victory was built in the Old Single Dock in Chatham's Royal Dockyard. From her website "she would gain renown leading fleets in the American War of Independence, the French Revolutionary War a...
Hampstead fire station
Tetramesh has a 1906 photo of this building showing that there used to be more to the tower.
Sailors' Home - Ensign Street & Dock Street
A group of philanthropists, led by Rev. George Charles ‘Boatswain’ Smith (1782–1863) founded the Destitute Sailors' Asylum in 1827, based in a converted warehouse in Dock Street and providing shelt...
The Black Cap
Public House. It was originally called the Mother Black Cap after a local legend concerning a witch, and had that name, according to licensing records, as early as 1751. In the mid 1960s it became ...
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