Rededication of the Liverpool Scottish War Memorials
June 9th 2002 at the Regimental Museum
The
regimental war memorials of the Liverpool Scottish have now been successfully
relocated from the barracks at Forbes House, Score Lane to the new Forbes
House near Edge Lane, home of the regimental museum. This has been the
result of three years work and has undertaken with the help of many people.
The
Liverpool Scottish owe a considerable debt to Peter Spinks and Graham Dowling of the National Museums and Galleries on Merseyside and to David Cato, a very
good friend of the Museum and the Liverpool Scottish. Following the death of
Major David Evans TD it is possible that some names have not been acknowledged;
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The rededication took place on Sunday 9th June 2002. It took the form of a
short service conducted by the Rev John Williams RD CF, Padre to the Liverpool
Scottish Regimental Association in the presence of the
Lord
Mayor of Liverpool, Councillor Jack Spriggs. Members of the Liverpool Scottish
element of the King's and Cheshire Regiment were present (forming a guard under
the command of Captain Gordon McConnell) together with about 50 members of the
Regimental Association and other friends of the Liverpool Scottish.
The
standard of the Liverpool Scottish Regimental Association was carried by Mr
Frank Pirie, lately Secretary of the Association, and the Museum was saddened to
learn of his death in August 2002. The ceremony took place immediately after the
AGM of the LSRA which would normally have taken place on Hooge Day, the
anniversary of the 1915 battle, but was brought forward because of the
regimental visit to Ypres/Ieper in Belgium in the following week.
The
Chairman of the Liverpool Scottish Regimental Museum Trust, Professor Donald
Ritchie FRSE DL, welcomed visitors to the new museum (in the process of refurbishment)
during his address. In the picture of Prof Ritchie (left) can be seen the scroll
presented to the Liverpool Scottish by the City in 1950 on the 50th Anniversary
of the founding and above is the white Liverpool
Scottish civic pipe banner with the arms of the city.
Also
present at the ceremony were relatives of Sjt Charles W Ormesher, killed at
Hooge in June 1915 with the 1/10th (Scottish) Battalion, The King's (Liverpool
Regiment) TF, i.e. the Liverpool Scottish. Sjt. Ormesher had been reported missing
and his mother refused to accept the news of his death, believing that he might
be a prisoner of the Germans. It appears that the result of her prolonged search
was that his name was omitted from the Commonwealth War Graves Commission's list
of the missing and was not inscribed on the Menin Gate, the memorial in
Ypres/Ieper to the missing of the Ypres Salient for the first three years of the
Great War. Through the research of Major David Evans and Mr. Rob O'Brien this omission
was rectified in 2002 and Ormesher's name was featured in the Last Post Ceremony
at the Menin Gate on Sunday 16th June
2002, the reason for the regimental visit on that week end.
More information about the war memorials (including the wooden memorial from St. Andrew's Church, Rodney Street, and the illuminated Roll of Honour contained within the bronze memorial can be can be found within the Liverpool Scottish Museum Website Click here for more