Celebrity Antiques Road Trip - Herefordshire Light Infantry Museum - Nov 2016
Jules Hudson and Philip Serrell visit the Herefordshire Light Infantry Museum to hear about the Regiment's involvement at Gallipoli from Museum Curator, Colonel Andy Taylor OBE.
23rd April 1959 | The RAF are given the freedom of Hereford
St George's Day 1959. The RAF march through high town after being given the freedom of the city.
Ralph - Short WW1 Film
Ralph is a short World War One film, based on the true story of Producer Matthew Lightstone's Great Great Uncle; Ralph Howells, Signing up under aged as a pioneer he looked for an adventure, but what he finds is something far from that.
Description
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With your support we aim to not just make this a final year film, but a contender for festivals across the country, to bring awareness to what life in the trenches was really like and how it affected the communities the soldiers left behind.
We are a non profit film and without your support, what we have achieved so far would not have been possible!
Thank you for all your fantastic support so far!
Ralph is supported by Help for Heroes, The ABF Soldiers Charity, Cheshire Military Museum, Herefordshire Light Infantry, Hertfordshire Heritage Hub, London Fusiliers and The Rifles Living History Society.
Plot outline
The Great Great Uncle of Producer & Writer Matthew Lightstone.
A Brief History
Pte. Ralph Howells, born 20th November 1898, eldest son of Blanche and Thomas Howells came from a modest mining family in the Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire.
Attending school in their local village of Lydbrook, Ralph would have left at a young age to start work in one of the several coal mines that were dotted along the valley.
At the age of 16 on the 5th December 1914 Ralph enlisted at the Drill Hall in Hereford, volunteering for overseas action. Like many young men at the time Ralph would have been captivated with the heroic status he would gain fighting for his country and the chance to travel abroad, anything to escape the dangerous job of coal mining.
Due to Ralph's mining experience he spent the majority of his army career in Britain with the 2nd (Reserve) Battalion The Herefordshire Regiment, where he started in Aberystwyth, moving onto Billericay where he helped build North London defences and then ending up in Lowestoft in November 1915.
Ralph was then transferred to the 1st/5th Battalion The Cheshire Regiment on the 27th July 1916 and left from Southampton the same day.
As a Pioneer Ralph's job was to build and repair sections of trenches throughout the night. During his shift on the 8th September 1916 Ralph and four other men who were working in a communication trench were buried alive when a shell fell into it. Ralph's body was never found and he was reported missing presumed dead.
Ralph was only 17 when he was killed yet his memory lives on. He is commemorated on the Thiepval War Memorial in France and in his local town of Ruardean.
Ralph on BBC Midlands Today
Ralph is a short World War One film, based on the true story of Producer Matthew Lightstone's Great Great Uncle; Ralph Howells, Signing up under aged as a pioneer he looked for an adventure, but what he finds is something far from that.
Description
This was the interview of Matt Lightstone (Writer/Producer) and Adam Richardson (Ralph) for the BBC in July 2013.
Please follow us on Facebook at:
Please follow us on Twitter at:
Website:
With your support we aim to not just make this a final year film, but a contender for festivals across the country, to bring awareness to what life in the trenches was really like and how it affected the communities the soldiers left behind.
We are a non profit film and without your support, what we have achieved so far would not have been possible!
Thank you for all your fantastic support so far!
Ralph is supported by Help for Heroes, The ABF Soldiers Charity, Cheshire Military Museum, Herefordshire Light Infantry, Hertfordshire Heritage Hub, London Fusiliers and The Rifles Living History Society.
Plot outline
The Great Great Uncle of Producer & Writer Matthew Lightstone.
A Brief History
Pte. Ralph Howells, born 20th November 1898, eldest son of Blanche and Thomas Howells came from a modest mining family in the Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire.
Attending school in their local village of Lydbrook, Ralph would have left at a young age to start work in one of the several coal mines that were dotted along the valley.
At the age of 16 on the 5th December 1914 Ralph enlisted at the Drill Hall in Hereford, volunteering for overseas action. Like many young men at the time Ralph would have been captivated with the heroic status he would gain fighting for his country and the chance to travel abroad, anything to escape the dangerous job of coal mining.
Due to Ralph's mining experience he spent the majority of his army career in Britain with the 2nd (Reserve) Battalion The Herefordshire Regiment, where he started in Aberystwyth, moving onto Billericay where he helped build North London defences and then ending up in Lowestoft in November 1915.
Ralph was then transferred to the 1st/5th Battalion The Cheshire Regiment on the 27th July 1916 and left from Southampton the same day.
As a Pioneer Ralph's job was to build and repair sections of trenches throughout the night. During his shift on the 8th September 1916 Ralph and four other men who were working in a communication trench were buried alive when a shell fell into it. Ralph's body was never found and he was reported missing presumed dead.
Ralph was only 17 when he was killed yet his memory lives on. He is commemorated on the Thiepval War Memorial in France and in his local town of Ruardean.
Turncoats and Renegadoes
Dr Andrew Hopper, Lecturer in English Local History at the University of Leicester, discusses the practice of side changing and the role of treachery and traitors during the English Civil Wars.
Part of the Lunchtime Lectures series - a programme of free talks that takes place at the National Army Museum in London every Thursday at 12.30pm.
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