Royal Anthem of Australia: God Save the Queen - Anzac Day Sydney Dawn Service 2018
The Royal Anthem of Australia sang in the Sydney Dawn Service at The Cenotaph, Martin Place 2018
National Anthem of Australia: Advance Australia Fair - Anzac Day Sydney Dawn Service 2018
The National Anthem of Australia sang in the Sydney Dawn Service at The Cenotaph, Martin Place 2018
MARTIN PLACE Sydney Australia Walking Tour - Spring In Sydney
Walking along Martin Place in Sydney Australia from George Street to Macquarie Street. Spring In Sydney.
Timestamps:
00:24 - Burberry
00:27 - George Street
01:00 - Martin Place, Sydney Australia
01:46 - Emporio Armani
02:16 - Sydney Cenotaph (Martin Place Memorial)
03:14 - Pitt Street
05:37 - Castlereagh Street
05:53 - Rolex
07:40 - 7 News Sydney
07:43 - Elizabeth Street
08:39 - Martin Place Station (underground)
09:43 - Phillip Street
09:46 - 7 News Sydney
11:41 - Parliament of New South Wales
11:46 - Macquarie Street
11:53 - Sydney Hospital and Sydney Eye Hospital
Filmed: Spring 2019
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Remembrance Day National Ceremony 2019
2019 Battle for Australia Commemoration Sydney
The 2019 Battle for Australia Commemoration at the Cenotaph Martin Place Sydney featuring the keynote address will be given by Mr Harry Allie BEM, Chair, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Veterans' Commemorations Committee in the presence of Her Excellency The Governor.
Cunard's Queen Elizabeth pays tribute to Anzacs in Auckland and Sydney
In the lead up to the Gallipoli centenary, New Zealanders and Australians paid their respects to the nation’s fallen Anzacs at special memorial services onboard Cunard’s Queen Elizabeth in Auckland on February 27 and Sydney on March 3, 2015
Reflecting Cunard’s long-standing association with Anzac wartime campaigns, including Gallipoli, the cruise line invited locals to pay tribute to their Anzac heroes by placing a poppy on a wall of remembrance beside Queen Elizabeth.
Onboard, two moving commemoration services were held with senior military personal, political leaders and community dignitaries attending.
Among the guests at the service were Herb Christophers and Mark Keys.
Herb Christophers family lost four of five brothers at Gallipoli and on the Western Front during the course of World War One - with the last of the sons, Mr Christophers’ grandfather, dying just a month before the end of the war.
Mark Keys is the great grandson of 2nd Lieutenant Francis Jensen who was killed on only his third day of battle at Gallipoli. Mr Keys' three sons are the same age as when his great grandfather went into battle.
Visitors to a two-metre poppy wall, formed in the shape of “100” to mark the upcoming centenary, were invited to honour their war heroes by writing a personal message in a remembrance book.
Both the poppy wall and remembrance book will form the centrepiece of a commemorative service on April 24, the eve of Anzac Day, when Queen Elizabeth reaches the waters off the Gallipoli Peninsula during her current world voyage. Messages from the book will be read out at the service and the book will then be placed in Queen Elizabeth’s library where it will remain in memory of the heroes of Gallipoli.
25th April 2014 ANZAC Dawn Service in Martin Place, Sydney
Have been privileged to be able to attend the 2014 ANZAC Dawn Service at the Cenotaph in Martin Place, Sydney. Here is a few minutes of footage. For a fair portion of this video the street lighting is turned off so there's not much that can be seen in the low light conditions but you can still hear the reading of the The Ode, the playing of the Last Post and the Reveille. The Last Post and Reveille were beautifully played and incredibly moving. Such a deeply solemn experience to be there with thousands of other Australians observing the one minute's silence to remember all those that didn't return from armed conflict. This year marks the 99th since Australian and New Zealand soldiers landed on the beaches at Gallipoli in Turkey at around 4:30am on the 25th April 1915.
SYDNEY - EARLY EVENING WALK - ST MARYS & MARTIN PLACE
Come along with me on a walk from St Mary's forecourt and onto Martin Place, Sydney. As you will note, Sydney continues to look like a construction site! continuous building works, roadworks etc!
Martin Place is a pedestrian mall in the central business district of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Martin Place has been described as the civic heart of Sydney. As home to the Reserve Bank of Australia, the Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Macquarie Bank, Westpac and other corporations, it is also a centre of business and finance.
The initial Martin Place was the section between George Street and Pitt Street, officially opened 1892, and was named in honour of Sir James Martin, the three time Premier of New South Wales and Chief Justice of Supreme Court of New South Wales. Closed to traffic in stages from 1971, Martin Place is surrounded by many heritage buildings and features the 1927 World War I ANZAC Cenotaph, water fountain, entertainment area, railway access and pedestrian seating.
#Sydney_Australia #Martin_Place_Sydney #Winter_Sydney
Sydney Remembrance Day service 2016
The Newsroom attended the Remembrance Day service held in Martin Place Sydney to show respects and acknowledge our fallen Anzacs. Reported and produced by CJ Cowen. Filmed by Phil Logan.
New Zealand & Australia 25th of April Anzac Day, Martin Place Sydney Australia Dawn Service
Anzac Day 2017 cenotaph
(The New Zealand National Anthem).❤️
(Maori Version)
(The New Zealand National Anthem).❤️ (English Version)
Elhowa Atua God of nations at thy feet
O ngā iwi mātou rā, In the bond of love we meet.
āta whakarongona; Hear our voices,
Me aroha noa. We entreat God defend our free land.
Kia Hua ko te pai; Guard Pacific triple star
Kia tau tō atawhai; From the shafts of strife and war,
Manaakitia mai Make her praises heard
Aotearoa. God defend New Zealand
(The Australian National Anthem).????
Australians all let us rejoice,
For we are young and free;
We've golden soil and wealth for toil;
Our home is girt by sea;
Our land abounds in nature's gifts of beauty rich and rare;
In history's page, let every stage
Advance Australia Fair.
The case for changing the flag has been led by the organisation known as Ausflag. The organisation has not consistently supported one design but is opposed to the Eureka Flagand has sponsored a number of design competitions to develop alternative flag candidates.
Supporters of changing the flag have made the following arguments:
The flag is not distinctive because it contains the national flag of another country in a position of prominence. In particular, the flag is difficult to distinguish from a variety of flags based on the British Blue Ensign, most notably the national flag of New Zealand and the state flag of Victoria. For example, when Australian prime minister Bob Hawke visited Canada in 1984, Ottawa was decked out with New Zealand flags in his honour. The Australian Monarchist League, during their No campaign for the Australian republic referendum in 1999, displayed the New Zealand flag instead of the Australian flag in one of their pamphlets. Again in 2013, the Australian Monarchist League mistakenly captioned the New Zealand flag as being the Australian flag on their website.
* It does not accurately connote Australia's status as an independent nation. The Union Jack at the canton suggests Australia is a British colony or dependency. New Zealand, Fiji and Tuvalu are the only other independent nations in the world to feature the Union Jack on their national flags. Other Commonwealth countries whose flags originally depicted the Union Jack have since changed them without becoming republics, while Canada, whose official pre-1965 national flag was the Union Jack, also adopted a new flag design without becoming a republic. The Australian flag's colours of red, white and blue are neither Australia's official national colours (green and gold) nor its traditional heraldic colours (blue and gold).
* In representing only Australia's British heritage, the flag is anachronistic and does not reflect the change to a multicultural, pluralist society. In particular, the flag makes no mention of indigenous Australians, many of whom regard the Union Jack as a symbol of colonial oppression and dispossession.
* The existing flag is historically not the prime national symbol. For most of the time since Federation, it was flown alongside the British Union Jack which took precedence as the national flag from 1924 to 1954. Until the late 1920s the Federation Flag remained more popular than the Australian flag for public and even some official events. For example, the Federation Flag was flown during the 1927 visit to Australia of the Duke and Duchess of York, the future King George VI and Queen Elizabeth. The number of points of the stars have varied since 1901 and the present blue version was not adopted as the national flag until 1954. Before then, the Union Jack took precedence and confusion reigned between whether the red or blue version of the Australian flag was to be preferred, with the red often winning out.
* It is spurious to claim that Australians have fought and died under the flag, given that during most of the wars Australians have been involved in, they have usually fought under various British flags or the Australian Red Ensign. Prior to 1941 only 10 per cent of military ensigns were Blue and in 1945 Red ensigns were flown along the route of the official end of war parades. The flag made in secret by the Changi prisoners-of-war was a red ensign. The coffins of Australia's war dead.
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Martin Place The Cenotaph Display @ The Sydney Vivid Festival 2014
Martin Place The Cenotaph Display @ The Sydney Vivid Festival 2014
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Copy Right 2014
Remembrance Day, Sydney Australia. 2019
ANZAC memorial service and wreath laying at war memorial
SHOTLIST
1. Tilt down Menin Gate monument, dedicated to the missing British and Commonwealth soldiers who were killed on battlefields in western Flanders during World War One
2. Statue of lion on top of Menin Gate monument and text underneath reading (English): To the armies of the British Empire who stood here from 1914 to 1918 and to those of their dead who have no known grave.
3. Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (Anzac ) Day procession led by serviceman carrying Australian flag arriving at Menin Gate
4. People at Menin Gate, Australian flag in the foreground
5. Australian and New Zealand Defence Ministry representatives attending Anzac Day commemoration service
6. Wide of people gathered at Menin Gate
7. Close of names of soldiers fallen in Ypres Salient, engraved on Menin Gate wall
8. Australian visitor standing in front of wall
9. Mid of people at commemoration service, a New Zealander holding up photo of fallen relative
10. Wide of people at ceremony
11. Australian and New Zealand Defence Ministry representatives laying wreaths at the monument
12. Top shot of other representatives laying wreaths at monument
13. Close of wreath from New Zealand Government
14. Close of wreath from Australian Government
15. Set-up of Delise Storey, whose grandfather died in Belgium during World War One, from Te Awamutu, New Zealand
16. SOUNDBITE (English) Delise Storey, granddaughter of dead soldier:
Especially from New Zealand just to pay tribute to all these wonderful men whose blood was spilled in this area and to us its very moving.
17. Australian student wearing jacket decorated with Belgian and Australian flags
18. Set up of Kevin Kirk (right of screen), whose father died in Belgium during World War One, from Sydney, Australia attending service
19. Close of badge showing Kirk's father, on lapel above his medals
20. SOUNDBITE (English) Kevin Kirk, son of dead soldier:
Well my father fought at Passchendaele, it was very important for me to walk in his footsteps. And particularly the footsteps of his mates who perished at Passchendaele. When he returned to Australia he named his orchard Passchendaele, so I grew up in Passchendaele and it has always meant something special to me. And it was special to be here on Anzac Day.
21. Tilt down from Monument text to crowd gathered to watch parade, text engraved on wall reading: (English) Here are recorded names of officers and men who fell in Ypres Salient, but to whom the fortune of war denied the known and honoured burial given to their comrades in death.
22. Buglers playing the Last Post, the traditional salute to a fallen soldier
23. Wide of participants observing silence to pay their respects to the fallen servicemen
STORYLINE:
Scores of Australians and New Zealanders gathered for a solemn ceremony in Brussels on Friday to mark the anniversary of Anzac Day, named for those who lost their lives fighting for the Australian New Zealand Army Corps.
The Anzac Day commemoration in Brussels, was held at the Menin Gate, a monument dedicated to the missing British and Commonwealth soldiers killed in battlefields in western Flanders during World War One.
Friday's service in the Belgian capital marked the bloody campaign for the village of Passchendaele in Belgium, during the first world war.
The Battle of Passchendaele, ended with the capture of the small village church and left 500-thousand soldiers from Britain, Australia, Canada and New Zealand dead, wounded or missing.
Anzac ambassadors laid wreaths at the war memorial while relatives of the soldiers who died paid their respects and homage during the ceremony.
This year marks the 93rd Anzac Day.
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CityOfSydney.Tv Martin Place Cenotaph Dawn Service Ode 25042013
CityOfSydney.Tv Martin Place Cenotaph Dawn Service Ode 25042013
Duke and Duchess of Sussex attend reopening of Anzac Memorial in Sydney
(20 Oct 2018)
RESTRICTION SUMMARY: NO ACCESS AUSTRALIA
POOL - NO ACCESS AUSTRALIA
Sydney - 20 October 2018
1. Aerial of Prince Harry and his wife, Meghan, leave Admiralty House for the Central Business District
2. Royal couple meet the governor general of New South Wales, David Hurley, and his wife, Linda
3. Royal couple meet the premier of NSW, Gladys Berejiklian, and Australia Prime Minister Scott Morrison inside Anzac Memorial
4. Royal couple walk through memorial
5. Royal couple meet Aboriginal performers
6. Various of royal couple inside memorial
7. Royal couple lay wreath outside memorial
8. Australian flag lowered to half staff
9. The Last Post is played
10. Wide shot of Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park
11. Various of Prince Harry revealing plaque to mark reopening of memorial
12. Royal couple stand to attention in front of memorial
13. Royal couple meet people attending reopening
14. Royal couple leave
STORYLINE:
DUKE AND DUCHESS OF SUSSEX ATTEND REOPENING OF ANZAC MEMORIAL IN SYDNEY
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex, Prince Harry and his wife, Meghan, laid a wreath at the opening of the newly renovated Anzac Memorial in Sydney's Hyde Park on Saturday (20 OCTOBER 2018).
The memorial includes a new education and interpretation facility and a new sculpture named 'Sacrifice'.
The artwork features about 1,700 soil samples from locations around New South Wales where Australians enlisted for World War One.
The royal couple will attend a number of events throughout Saturday in preparation for the Invictus Games.
They will then attend the opening ceremony of the games at the Sydney Opera House later on in the day.
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Anzac Day In Australia (1962)
Sydney, Australia.
Australian commentary, transcript on file.
VS. Anzacs (Australian and New Zealand Army Corps) march in Australia, the heroes of two world wars march along crowd lined streets in their annual parade. VS. Anzac day parade in 1935, flash-back, the massed crowd join in and sing. VS. Present day parade and the youngsters stand with their wreaths and sing. CU. and LS. Former General and former Governor of New South Wales, Sir John Northcott. CU. Young children's faces in crowd. VS. Inside a hospital of old folks who remember Anzac day too well, some good C.Us. of old folks' faces. VS. Children laying wreaths. MS. At the Australian Cenotaph buglers of the Australian Army sound the Last Post.
(Comb.F.G.)
FILM ID:3044.2
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Royal Australian Air force C-17A Globemaster over Martin Place Sydney
the 76th anniversary of the Battle of Britain, and the Royal Australian Air Force Association (NSW Division) will hold its annual memorial for the anniversary at the Martin Place Cenotaph on Thursday, September 15.
In support of this memorial service, a C-17A Globemaster will conduct a flypast over the Martin Place Cenotaph
National Anthem of New Zealand: God Defend New Zealand - Anzac Day Sydney Dawn Service 2018
The National Anthem of New Zealand sang in the Sydney Dawn Service at The Cenotaph, Martin Place 2018
ANZAC Day Dawn Service 2019
Martin Place Cenotaph Sydney.
Australia and New Zealand remember their war dead in western Belgium
AP TELEVISION
Zonnebeke
1. Mid woman in military uniform singing at ceremony at Tyne Cot (Commonwealth War Graves Cemetery and Memorial to the Missing) in Flanders Fields, back view of people watching in foreground
2. Wide of ceremony with the 'Cross of Sacrifice' in the background
3. Mid of two Australian girls praying
4. Wide of white grave stones
5. Mid of woman draped in an Australian flag standing with another woman amongst the grave stones
6. SOUNDBITE: (English) Duncan Lewis, Australian Ambassador to Belgium, Luxembourg, NATO and the EU:
This morning we pay our respects to those young soldiers. Those who died, to those who were wounded and scarred physically for the rest of their lives and for those whose scars were even deeper still in the mind. Their scars would haunt them for the rest of their days.
7. Mid of man placing a small cross in front of an Australian grave stone
8. Close of small cross in front of a head stone reading (English) 'Known Unto God'
9. Close of Australian Michael Jacob watching the ANZAC service
10. Mid of military members standing on the Cross of Sacrifice monument UPSOUND: Music
11. SOUNDBITE: (English) Michael Jacob, 64-year-old from Sydney, Australia:
My grandfather never said much about it. But in his last days, when he was not far from passing away, he obviously wasn't really still with us in the normal time but he seemed to be somewhere here as far as I could understand. He seemed to be in the mud and the trenches from things he was saying and the way he was.
Ypres
12. Wide of buglers playing 'The Last Post' underneath the Menin Gate memorial
13. Mid of crowd watching the ANZAC day service
14. Ambassadors from Australia and New Zealand placing a wreath at the Menin Gate memorial
15. Wide of the Menin Gate
STORYLINE:
Australia and New Zealand remembered their war dead on Thursday in western Belgium, at the heart of the First World War's battle-lines.
ANZAC (Australia and New Zealand Army Corps) Day is a world wide day of remembrance for the war dead of both countries.
One of the ceremonies took place in Zonnebeke where over 1,300 of the war graves at Tyne Cot cemetery are of Australians.
Many of the ceremonies were attended by relatives of those who died in battle.
Sixty-four-year-old Michael Jacob travelled from Sydney to mark the experience and see where his grandfather fought - and survived - in the First World War.
When he was not far from passing away, he obviously wasn't really still with us in the normal time but he seemed to be somewhere here as far as I could understand. He seemed to be in the mud and the trenches from things he was saying and the way he was, he said.
The remembrance service at Tyne Cot included the signing of national anthems, prayers and wreath layings.
Meanwhile in Ypres, Australian and New Zealand delegations marched to the Menin Gate memorial for an ANZAC Day service and laid wreathes.
The memorial is dedicated to the British and Commonwealth soldiers who were killed in the area during the First World War and whose graves are unknown.
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