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Littlecote House war memorial unveiled | Littlecote House war memorial unveiled |
(about 7 hours later) | |
A memorial to British and US soldiers stationed at a Berkshire Elizabethan country house during World War II has been unveiled. | |
Servicemen from the US 101st Airborne Division, known as "The Band of Brothers", were based at Littlecote House near Hungerford. | Servicemen from the US 101st Airborne Division, known as "The Band of Brothers", were based at Littlecote House near Hungerford. |
A memorial plaque was unveiled in the grounds of the house which is now a hotel. | |
Members of the Royal British Legion raised £2,500 for the memorial. | Members of the Royal British Legion raised £2,500 for the memorial. |
Among the seven British units which were also based at Littlecote House was 48 South Midlands Division - a Territorial Army unit in the British Expeditionary Force which had been forced to retreat from Dunkirk in 1940. | Among the seven British units which were also based at Littlecote House was 48 South Midlands Division - a Territorial Army unit in the British Expeditionary Force which had been forced to retreat from Dunkirk in 1940. |
The memorial plaque is on a 6ft (1.8m) high memorial stone which is placed on the house's lawn. | |
The house, alongside the River Kennet, dates from the late 15th Century and was requisitioned for military use in 1943. | The house, alongside the River Kennet, dates from the late 15th Century and was requisitioned for military use in 1943. |
Military training was carried out around nearby Ramsbury village ahead of the June 1944 D-day invasion of Normandy. | Military training was carried out around nearby Ramsbury village ahead of the June 1944 D-day invasion of Normandy. |
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