Anzac Day Parade New Zealand 2014
AUCKLAND NEW ZEALAND April 25, 2014. The last Anzac Day Service for the Takapuna RSA was conducted at the City Council Offices by Takapuna Beach today. After 78 years the Club has struck financial problems caused by reducing membership and falling returns.
Invercargill Cadet Unit [ICU] Recruitment Video
ANZAC Day, Auckland, New Zealand, 2017
ANZAC DAY, Civic Service, New Zealand
The 25th of April is Anzac day. It is a public holiday celebrated in New Zealand and Australia to remember the lost lives that fought in Gallipoli in WW1. At 4:30 there was the dawn service, but since it was very early in the morning we couldn't make it. So we attended the civic service at noon. You may see in our videos that a lot of people have a red flower on their cloth's. This is the red poppy and is a icon for Anzac day to remember the casualties as the poppy grew at the battlefield the ANZAC soldiers fought in. ANZAC stands for Australian and New Zealand Army Corps. Apart from attending the civic service we also went to the Chinese in Aotearoa exhibition and the VOLUME NZ music exhibition. We also went to the library in the Museum. At the end of this video, it is the Museum library.
The Background music at the end of this video
Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution licence (
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Peter & Phillip
Auckland New Zealand
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ANZAC Day 2016 : Gisborne
ANZAC Day 2016 : Gisborne
Kawhia Anzac parade 2017
Anzac civic parade in Kawhia 2017
Ritchies fined $750,000 after fatal Gisborne bus crash
The Ritchies bus company has been fined and ordered to pay $750,000 in reparations to the families of those killed and injured in the 2016 Christmas Eve bus crash. The bus was carrying 53 people from a Tongan college brass band when it plunged 30 metres down a bank near Gisborne. Ritchies had earlier pleaded guilty to a charge laid by Worksafe of failing to ensure people's health and safety was not put at risk. RNZ reporter Sarah Robson was at the sentencing in Waitakere District Court on Friday morning.
James' Guide to the ANZAC Day dawn ceremony
This is me at 6am on 25 April (ANZAC Day in New Zealand) at the Wellington Cenotaph. It was followed by the Last Post, then some guns firing then by a march past (my mummy is in the army band). Some nasty people decided to cut the band from the army which is sad (she still plays in it, but it doesn't seem the same).
Dawn Service at Gallipoli
On the Gallipoli peninsula in Turkey, Anzac Day 2012 started with a solemn Dawn Service at the Anzac Commemorative Site attended by Prime Minister Julia Gillard and a crowd of over 6000 who kept a dedicated vigil through the cool night. Ninety-seven years ago today, soldiers from across the then young nation of Australia first started landing on these nondescript beaches in the hours before dawn. Before long they were clawing and clambering their way up the steep, sandy slopes of the Gallipoli peninsula to establish a tenuous foothold against the Turkish defenders. Ultimately, that foothold was extended and, later, surrendered, but not before the men of Anzac built a legacy of courage and sacrifice that has helped shape Australia ever since. Representing that Anzac spirit this morning in Gallipoli were the uniformed men and women of Australia's Federation Guard, who formed a catafalque party alongside members of the New Zealand Defence Force.
Great fun at Gisborne Christmas Parade
THOUSANDS lined the streets for Gisborne’s annual Christmas Parade. The parade featured floats from various organisations and went from Reads Quay to Palmerston Road, then up Grey Street before travelling along Gladstone Road and back to Reads Quay. The parade was followed by the Heart of Gisborne Childrens’ Christmas Street Festival.
Filmed and Edited by
Ben Cowper
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With Courage and Honour (Scene 2) performance at the City Recital Hall 10 July 2011
This performance was recorded during the Flagship Recital at the City Recital Hall, Angel Place, Sydney, on 10 July 2011 celebrating the Centenary of the Royal Australian Navy. The conductor is Lieutenant Commander Paul Cottier. A Flag Party comprising cadets from Training Ship Sirius signalled by semaphore 'Navy 100' during the trio of the march.
With Courage and Honour was composed by Commander Phillip Anderson to commemorate the 50th Anniversary of the Battle of the Coral Sea. The march features the bugle, which is a traditional instrument used for communicating messages onboard ships. Various bugle calls are used throughout this march including General Salute and The Alert. The march was first performed at the Cenotaph, Sydney, on 8 May 1992 in the presence of veterans of the Battle of the Coral Sea.
The Battle of the Coral Sea was fought between the Japanese and Allied navies from 4 May through to 8 May, 1942 in the Coral Sea, about 500 miles northeast of Australia. In the spring of 1942, Japanese forces planned to invade southern New Guinea, a move designed to knock Australia and New Zealand out of the war. The Allies, including the U.S., Australia, and Great Britain, gathered a large fleet to thwart the invasion. After several days of searching and skirmishing, the Japanese and Allied fleets found each other on May 8 and each sent aircraft to attack the other. Both air attacks occurred at about the same time approximately 200 miles apart with both sides suffering losses. The Battle of the Coral Sea was an important turning point in the war in the Pacific because, for the first time, the Allies had stopped the Japanese advance. Many Australian's still refer to it as, The battle that saved Australia.