Victoria Cross holders honoured
A statue to Captain Noel Chavasse and 15 other Liverpool-born holders of the Victoria Cross, the highest military decoration, has been unveiled.
The bronze statue in Abercromby Square depicts Chavasse and a stretcher-bearer rescuing a wounded World War I soldier.
Chavasse was a surgeon at a Liverpool Hospital before going to France in 1914 as a medical officer.
He won the Military Cross in 1915, the Victoria Cross the next year and was awarded a second VC posthumously.
Belgian cemetery
When in Liverpool, where his father was bishop of the city, Chavasse was a member of the Territorial Army serving in the Royal Army Medical Corps.
He went to France with the Liverpool Scottish Battalion of The King's Liverpool Regiment.
While wounded in 1917 he went into open ground to retrieve survivors and was mortally injured.
He died on 4 August 1917 at the age of 32 and posthumously received the bar to his VC. He is buried at Brandhoek New Military Cemetery in Belgium.
His brother, Aidan, who was a Lieutenant in the 17th Battalion of The King's Liverpool Regiment was killed exactly a month before and is commemorated at the Ypres Menin Gate Memorial in Belgium.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/h...de/7566784.stm
Published: 2008/08/17
A statue to Captain Noel Chavasse and 15 other Liverpool-born holders of the Victoria Cross, the highest military decoration, has been unveiled.
The bronze statue in Abercromby Square depicts Chavasse and a stretcher-bearer rescuing a wounded World War I soldier.
Chavasse was a surgeon at a Liverpool Hospital before going to France in 1914 as a medical officer.
He won the Military Cross in 1915, the Victoria Cross the next year and was awarded a second VC posthumously.
Belgian cemetery
When in Liverpool, where his father was bishop of the city, Chavasse was a member of the Territorial Army serving in the Royal Army Medical Corps.
He went to France with the Liverpool Scottish Battalion of The King's Liverpool Regiment.
While wounded in 1917 he went into open ground to retrieve survivors and was mortally injured.
He died on 4 August 1917 at the age of 32 and posthumously received the bar to his VC. He is buried at Brandhoek New Military Cemetery in Belgium.
His brother, Aidan, who was a Lieutenant in the 17th Battalion of The King's Liverpool Regiment was killed exactly a month before and is commemorated at the Ypres Menin Gate Memorial in Belgium.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/h...de/7566784.stm
Published: 2008/08/17
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