Milton view Young people did us proud
Regretfully many of you (including myself ) have had their attention drawn repeatedly to the negative side of our younger generation.
We despair when we read reports of knife crimes, drugs, theft and assaults, drunken and immoral behaviour etc, but if you had been at Hamilton Town House at the Festival of Remembrance you would have seen quite a different side; one of positivity and hope.
Pupils from St John Ogilve High School, Holy Cross High School, performed a vocal ensemble formed from a combination of North Lanarkshire Council schools, the wonderful young champion pipers and the pupils who sang solos, gave poetry recitals and remembrance speeches all displayed enormous talent.
Their sincerity and conscientiousness came shining through for the whole audience to see and which, at times, made me feel very emotional.
No one could fail to be impressed with these young people who completely restored my faith that the young soldiers (many of them similar in age to the pupils themselves), who lost their lives so tragically in both the first and second world wars, did not die in vain.
Their spirits live on in these remarkable young people.
I would also like to acknowledge the teachers and tutors who train them and draw out their pupils’ talent, giving them the confidence to perform in the way that they did. You should all be extremely proud of yourselves.
I’m sure I speak for everyone when I say ‘very well done’ and please accept a massive ‘thank you’.
We salute you all.
Fiona Kay Hamilton Via email Dear Editor On Sunday, November 11, the people of the UK commemorated the centenary of the end of the First World War.
The British Red Cross has a near 150-year history of supporting people in the UK during times of crisis and, between 1914 and 1918, more than 90,000 people volunteered for the organisation, working as Voluntary Aid Detachments (VADS) in auxiliary hospitals at home and overseas.
Most of these volunteers were women and included such notable figures as the author Agatha Christie, campaigner Vera Brittain, Wimbledon champion Lottie Dod and suffragist Sophia Duleep Singh.
However, the vast majority of First World War volunteers were ordinary women, and men, who cared for the wounded and sick, drove ambulances and acted as clerks, cooks and storekeepers. They gave dedicated, compassionate and skilled humanitarian service at a time of national crisis and the role of women during the war, in particular, led to significant social change with women, driven by their war experiences, seeking greater opportunities in the workplace and securing the same voting rights as men in 1928.
Given the sheer number of people who volunteered as VADS during the First World War, it seems likely that many of your readers will have ancestors who gave service during the conflict.
And, today, thanks to the popularity of genealogical websites and TV programmes like Who Do You Think You Are? many are keen to trace their family trees and better understand the lives and war-time roles of their ancestors.
Traditionally, much of that focus has been on the men who served, and in hundreds of thousands of cases, lost their lives on the front line.
Now, however, your readers can use our new online VAD database to find out if their ancestors, especially women relatives, performed a civilian role during the war.
Searchable by name, location and occupation, the database includes service records and, in some cases, photographs.
Anyone can access the website at www.vad.redcross.org.uk and potentially discover new and illuminating facets to their family history.
Dr Alasdair Brooks British Red Cross Heritage Manager