Taranaki Daily News

‘Roaring chorus’ at war’s end

- Dominic Harris dominic.harris@stuff.co.nz

It is almost a century since the signing of the armistice in a French forest banished the shattering sounds of World War I and replaced them with the crescendo of peace.

That moment, on November 11, 1918, triggered a cacophony of joy around the world, though news of the ceasefire only reached New Zealand the following day.

School was abandoned for the day and factories came to a standstill as thousands of people filled streets in towns and cities across the country to celebrate.

The Evening Post in Wellington described a scene of ‘‘songs and cheers, miscellane­ous pipings and blastings, and tootings and rattlings – a roaring chorus of gladsome sounds’’.

That ‘‘roaring chorus’’ will be recreated at 11.02am this November 11 to mark the event’s centenary, a joyful noise to signal the end of a nationwide twominute silence and the beginning of the fresh hope the end of the war brought. A fanfare played by the bells of the National War Memorial Carillon during a ceremony in Wellington will strike the first notes, before celebratio­ns ring out across New Zealand.

Church and cathedral bells will toll for up to 45 minutes, linking with similar campaigns in Britain, Germany and the United States. The public are also invited to be involved, with vintage cars honking their horns, singing and drumming at community events and even a mine’s siren being used to mark the moment.

Tens of thousands of people are expected to bring horns, bells and hooters to a service at the Auckland War Memorial Museum, while in Hokitika cannon and period rifles will be fired.

Ships and boats around the coast will sound their horns to commemorat­e the troop ships, warships, merchant vessels and hospital ships involved in the war, with ferries, tugboats and HMS Canterbury in Wellington taking part.

Fire trucks and police cars will sound their sirens where they can, the TSS Earnslaw on Lake Wakatipu will recreate the tooting of its predecesso­r, steamship Ben Lomond, and KiwiRail’s train and ferry services will also take part.

When news of the armistice reached Otago, it was reported that ‘‘all the steam whistles and church bells in the district were going, and each railway engine in passing added its quote to the general rejoicing’’.

Sarah Davies, director of ww100, the World War I centenary programme, said the roaring chorus would allow communitie­s to break the silence in a way relevant to them. ‘‘After four years of remembranc­e, we can now reconnect with the sense of joy and relief that swept the country when news of the end of fighting came through. The thanksgivi­ng and jubilation overwhelme­d the New Zealanders who had endured so much hardship and loss since 1914.’’

For more informatio­n, visit ww100.govt.nz/armistice.

 ?? DUNEDIN CITY COUNCIL ARCHIVES ?? Armistice Day celebratio­ns at the Dunedin Town Hall.
DUNEDIN CITY COUNCIL ARCHIVES Armistice Day celebratio­ns at the Dunedin Town Hall.
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