REMEMBERING “THE LOST SONS OF RASTRICK"

ONE HUNDRED AND THIRTY MEN

CONSISTING OF:-

ONE HUNDRED & TWENTY FOUR SOLDIERS, FIVE SAILORS AND ONE AIRMAN

WHO ARE COMMEMORATED ON

RASTRICK’S WAR MEMORIAL

WRITTEN BY ALAN FLUX – AUTHOR OF:  THE LOST SONS OF RASTRICK

Thirteen feet of Elland Edge stone

The memorial stands proud in poppies red

Three sides of the four their names are found

Carved by the stone mason for the world to see

Remember them we will.

One hundred and thirty of the many who left us here

Failed to return, their duty done, their battles fought

To lie in countless fields or seas across the world

France, Belgium, Egypt or the Dardanelles

Remember them we will.

Wellington’s Dukes, there many were

Fusiliers too, plus Royal Engineers and Yorkshire Dragoons

Army Service Corps, stokers and seaman too

Plus a single pilot of the Royal Flying Corps

Remember them we will.

Burlers, slubbers, warpers, boot makers and decorators

So many different backgrounds from they came

Mills, dyeworks, quarries, offices and shops

Answering Kitchener’s call to arms for King and country

Remember them we will.

Tyne Cot, Arras, Thiepval, the Menin Gate for grave-less heroes

The soil at Lone Pine, Forceville, Estaires, Pozieries and Iraq’s Basra

Their bodies lie far distant but a few are to be found close to home

Rastrick Cemetery and the grave yard St. Matthew’s

Remember them we will.

The one hundred and thirty Rastrick men who went to war

Found eternal peace, not home for Christmas as was said

Families left behind their peace shattered for their lifetimes

We live on today reflects their deeds and sacrifice

Remember them we will.

Red poppy flower isolated on a white background