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Belgian military cemetery: Houthulst; Belgian military cemetery: Oeren; Canadian national monument: The Brooding Soldier; Commonwealth military cemetery: 1st D.C.L.I. Cemetery, The Bluff; Commonwealth military cemetery: Bedford House Cemetery; Commonwealth military cemetery: Buff’s Road Cemetery; Commonwealth military cemetery: Buttes New ...
List of memorials and monuments at Arlington National Cemetery; Camp Merritt Memorial Monument; Carmel-by-the-Sea World War I Memorial Arch; Century Tower (University of Florida) The Dalles Civic Auditorium; District of Columbia War Memorial; Dover Patrol Monument; Elks National Veterans Memorial; Equestrian statue of Joan of Arc (Portland, Oregon)
Victoria Barracks – Brisbane; Borneo Barracks – Darling Downs Military Area, Cabarlah; Kokoda Barracks – Canungra (near Brisbane) Gallipoli Barracks – Brisbane; Lavarack Barracks – Townsville; Army Aviation Centre – Darling Downs Military Area, Oakey; Shoalwater Bay Military Training Area – Shoalwater Bay; Porton Barracks – Cairns
It is thought that the name Cabarlah derived from an Aboriginal expression describing the ring-tailed possum. [7] However, a 1930 newspaper article claims it is a "Native name of the mountains in the neighbourhood". [8] The Queensland Government set aside land for the Geham Cemetery (now the Cabarlah Cemetery) on 11 September 1878. Trustees ...
The classically inspired Menin Gate in Ypres. World War I is remembered and commemorated by various war memorials, including civic memorials, larger national monuments, war cemeteries, private memorials and a range of utilitarian designs such as halls and parks, dedicated to remembering those involved in the conflict.
Lucknow Barracks and Mooltan Barracks were completed in 1905, Tidworth Military Hospital was finished in 1907. Aliwal Barracks, Assaye Barracks, Bhurtpore Barracks, Candahar Barracks, Delhi Barracks and Jellalabad Barracks were added later, [ 4 ] and a Royal Ordnance depot was established during the First World War .
The Oise-Aisne American Cemetery and Memorial (French pronunciation: [waz ɛːn]) is an American military cemetery in northern France.Plots A through D contain the graves of 6,013 American soldiers who died while fighting in this vicinity during World War I, 597 of which were not identified, as well as a monument for 241 Americans who were missing in action during battles in the same area and ...
Jefferson Barracks was the recruiting center for outfitting and training most of the regiments organized for the Mexican War in 1846, and upon the return of the triumphant U.S. forces in 1848, many were deployed to Jefferson Barracks due to its strategic location and healthful situation. [4]