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Walking the Battle of Ypres with Mat McLachlan 

Mat McLachlan History
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5 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 655   
@dididee207
@dididee207 3 года назад
Seabrook brothers were my great great uncles.... such tragedy for everyone
@RB-lt8kt
@RB-lt8kt 4 года назад
Please remember we are not just England but Welsh, Scottish and Irish. My relations name is on the Menin gate. He died May 1915 the day before the end of the battle. Stood there proudly this summer and was so impressed by how beautiful Ypres is and the way the Belgium people remember all the soldiers. Thank you Belgium. Awesome video and will watch more of Living History. I am researching my relations life and its amazing what he did moving from London to Canada then joining up being wounded then returning to fight alongside his friends near Sanctuary Wood where I believe he was killed. God bless them all.
@paulcarolan2475
@paulcarolan2475 4 года назад
Hello from Royal hill Tara county Meath Ireland☺ Irish poet from slane county Meath Ireland died at Ypres his name was Francis ledwedige☺look up him and a song called black bird of slane☺
@leod-sigefast
@leod-sigefast 4 года назад
What are you talking about?! I am pretty sure he used the term British and British Commonwealth throughout the tour. Of course, you might get upset if you are Irish who does not consider oneself British but at the time the Irish were part of the United Kingdom and would have been called British. Of course, there has been eternal sad conflicts about that very nature. But that is another argument. The Welsh, Scottish, Ulstermen and English are well taken care of with the term British.
@jeremyharris4021
@jeremyharris4021 3 года назад
Australian sacrifice is embodied at Ypres. We were a Commonwealth of soldiers.
@ixlnxs
@ixlnxs 3 года назад
Well by the same token, please remember the town is called Ieper not Ypers. And Menen, and Passendale and Brugge and so on. When will the Brits learn to respect the spelling of those names instead of concocting their strange nonsense?
@RB-lt8kt
@RB-lt8kt 3 года назад
@@ixlnxs Hi. Its how its presented in our records and history. Yes I agree the correct name should be used but was it called Ypres in 1915? No offence meant as I loved Belgium, Holland and France when I visited and hope to return as soon as we can. Beautiful country Belgium.
@anthonycosgrave8539
@anthonycosgrave8539 2 года назад
My grandfather was wounded at Mons in 1914 and was taken prisoner so thankfully he missed the battles of Ypres. However a great uncle fell near Langemarck in Third Ypres. His name is on panel 144 at Tyne Cot. In 2021 it was my 5th trip to the Ypres salient. I tend to like visiting Tyne Cot in preference to the Menin Gate because I regard the Menin Gate as Triumphalist whereas Tyne Cot cemetery is rembrance. As a child I was taught Sigfried Sassoons poem "On passing The new Menin Gate" and I totally agreed with its sentiment. Ypres is a fine town now again and I hope it never sees such pain again in its existance. People in the Irish Republic are finally coming to terms with the casualties and involvement of Irish men from the "South" in that war. For my own part I had 9 family who served and three never came home and they lie In Passchedaele, Gallipoli and Vendhuile. All Irishmen and all volunteers.
@leod-sigefast
@leod-sigefast 4 года назад
I am English and I have been to Ieper (Ypres) twice, specifically to pay my respects to the fallen - it was a lifelong ambition since I was a teenager (some 20 years ago). The town has been beautifully restored to it former self and the Flemish people are wonderful and respectful hosts. Even if you are not into history, Ieper is a really nice town to visit with plenty to do and see (and plenty of good Belgian beer!). However, the landscape is something that blows your mind, the sheer scale of the destruction and death are visible through the headstones of the graves - dotted all over the town and surrounding villages and farmland. You see small cemeteries of 'just' 50 or so gravestones nestled away in the middle of a wheatfield and then grand cemeteries of thousands dominating the landscape in the form of beautifully kept parks. Tyne Cot is a place I will never forget. A sombre but moving tribute to the thousands of lost men.
@chrisp4170
@chrisp4170 3 года назад
Agreed - Well said Leode. Tyne Cot has a message for all of us. We should remember and appreciate how hard is was to preserve our freedom. Each generation should confront the reality of this and not take it for granted. "...At the going down of the sun and in the morning, WE WILL REMEMBER THEM..."
@mamavswild
@mamavswild 3 года назад
It was also a lifelong ambition for me, to pay my respects. I’m an American woman but many moons ago my great grandfather wore the pickelhaube and fought against my other great grandfather on those very fields, the German one wounded and barely surviving....but he did, and I’m here. Isn’t it amazing? I wonder how they would feel knowing their grandchildren would be born of men from both sides of the same field. ....(who would subsequently both immigrate to the New World, there their children would enter the same high school and meet at a football game, and later marry and have my father...). I met both great grandfathers and they both held me, I was very little and don’t remember as it was in the late 1970s. I wonder how they got along...very well from the stories my grandparents told.
@flemishrepublic2016
@flemishrepublic2016 3 года назад
I have been brought up around ypres and it has been a place of great value to me. I recommend, when this virus has ended, that you come see the last post, it is held every night. In belgium we remind ourself constantly of the war. My grandpa used to tell the story of what the last post was: he told me that the trumpetteers during the great war would make those sounds when all was clear, so the wounded and stranded could return to the trenches. Even today, our fields are full of reminders of how the brave english came to help us: I find un-ending amounts of brittish cartriges. It signifies to me that even though these lands were originally flemish, you brave britons deserve it as much. thank you brittain!
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 3 года назад
Well said. 👍🏼
@jeffsmith2022
@jeffsmith2022 2 года назад
Nice family story Mam...@@mamavswild
@morriganravenchild6613
@morriganravenchild6613 2 года назад
I went there on a bright warm summer's day but found it one of the most melancholic places I have ever visited. May those who perished there have found peace.
@bondiib4823
@bondiib4823 3 года назад
I live here. You payed a great honor to this city with this wonderful docu.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 3 года назад
Thank you!
@johnbollen1322
@johnbollen1322 2 года назад
Mat, this is a terrific video and it sums up my personal feelings about Ypres perfectly. I came to Ypres for the first time when I was at a very dark point in my life and visiting cemeteries, whilst tremendously moving, was not helping. On the evening of my first night in an Ypres hotel, it just happened to also be the main part of the town's triennial event, the Kattenstoet. Its a carnival that lasts all weekend celebrating cats and witches, but my point is that at the end you can join the carnival and walk the route. The townsfolk were waving and cheering me, a complete stranger as i followed the crowd. My faith in humanity was restored, the optimism and friendliness of the lovely people of Ypres, born from the devastation of WW1 was a joy to behold and remains with me to this day 15 years later.
@pippaul4279
@pippaul4279 11 месяцев назад
Granddad Paul. Was there for 2.1/2. An Irish man that came to nz an served in nz rifle brigade .only one of two left from his group .an return to nz . .I've been to the gates .it's a very humble place .to listen to last post .thanks to all those men who served in wars to make it a better place ❤
@nautifella
@nautifella Год назад
Mr. McLachlan, Thank you so very much for doing this. I regret it took me so long to find it. My great grandfather died in Ypres in April 1918. His name is on the wall at Tyne Cot. He was a gunner with British Artillery. His battery took a direct hit in their magazine. Nothing remains but the bomb crater.
@FromaTwistedMind
@FromaTwistedMind 3 года назад
I was fortunate enough to have played the last post @ the Menin Gate as a 13 year old army cadet in 1979. The people of Ypres were the loveliest warmest folk I've ever met. Happy memories of a hallowed historic place.
@nc5009
@nc5009 5 лет назад
Loved this. Met two Aussies (father and son) in the Ypres area some years ago. They were following the book "To the last ridge" by WH Downing. When I got back I read it. Hands down the greatest memoire ever.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 5 лет назад
My Daughter And Me Thank you!
@JazzMan76
@JazzMan76 4 года назад
A very moving and poignant story. Today in the U.S., we mourn the loss of two or three of our soldiers who are killed in Afghanistan or Iraq, and correctly so. I can't wrap my head around what it must have been like to try and comprehend the massive losses of life associated with World War 1. Everyone on Earth should watch this video.
@davidsigalow7349
@davidsigalow7349 3 года назад
I had that same feeling when I visited Verdun. We just cannot grasp the magnitude of the national sacrifice of so many millions or even the elan of the men who, for years, would climb out of their trenches and attack the enemy over these hellish landscapes. Yet, 100 years later, we still live in the world shaped by The Great War.
@andrewyarwood5625
@andrewyarwood5625 3 года назад
my great grandfather gave his life here on 14th May 1915 rifleman Frank burgess.i owe him so much. south Lancashire regiment.
@donnabuttons1
@donnabuttons1 5 лет назад
Truly excellent! I have been in Ypres many times and played the bagpipes solo at the Menin Gate on two occasions. This video captures the essence of the town and the information is trustworthy
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 5 лет назад
Donna EH Scott Thank you!
@MrButtonpresser
@MrButtonpresser 4 года назад
Another beautifully made piece. Thank you. We visited Ypres in 2007 to see my great grandfathers name on the Menin gate. A truly memorable experience.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 4 года назад
Thank you.
@rescuepetsrule6842
@rescuepetsrule6842 2 года назад
Thank you so much for letting me VISIT Ypres! I never took time off work to travel, and now I can't do it physically (disabled female Marine), this film is the closest thing to being there. Inside the Chapel, I froze the wall plaques to read them- so MANY men from units I had always heard about, like the Fusiiers. There is a movie about the paper they made in Ypres, The Wipers Times. Amazing men in a war new to them all- aircraft, tanks, etc.. Much RESPECT-SALUTE!
@seahawk528
@seahawk528 Год назад
My wife’s grandfather, Edward Banks, was with the CEF from Canada. He was hit with the gas and sent back to England to be hospitalized. We were fortunate to have him back.
@johntomlinson-j6x
@johntomlinson-j6x Год назад
I wonder if if he met my Grampa Robert Mc Gavin signed up in Winnipeg to the CEF , fought on the WESTERN FRONT. He also was Gassed and made it home. but of course was never quite the same
@LarsCarlsen-or6ky
@LarsCarlsen-or6ky Год назад
@@johntomlinson-j6x Mother's cousin CEF died here 1915. no doubt from gas. Roderick McIsaac. RIP
@johntomlinson-j6x
@johntomlinson-j6x Год назад
@@LarsCarlsen-or6ky I wish I could have met Grand Pa McGavin WW1 with CEF Volunteer from Winnipeg Shipped out from T.O . Survived the gas on the Western Front✝🌈☮🍁🌄 RIP
@billylewis319
@billylewis319 4 года назад
I went to Ypres last year, the town is so rich with history. You get the sense there that no matter what the first world war and the people that fought in it can never be forgotten.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 4 года назад
Well said.
@paulwalton7786
@paulwalton7786 3 года назад
I was fortunate enough to visit Ypres twenty years ago as part of a school trip. It was a very emotional and enriching experience not just for visiting Ypres, but also surrounding battlefields of Northern France and Belgium. Thank you very much for this very poignant video Living History.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 3 года назад
Cheers Paul. 👍🏼
@celestinclauw
@celestinclauw 5 лет назад
I'm from vlamertinge. That's like 5km from ypres. And it's amazing to see how people from all across the world are moved by ypres. I went to school in ypres so for me this is all normal. But I'm happy you enjoyed ypres.
@antonrudenham3259
@antonrudenham3259 4 года назад
Ypres is a beautiful town, we really enjoyed sitting out in the cloth market having a few beers on a nighttime.
@leod-sigefast
@leod-sigefast 4 года назад
Thank you! As an Englishman, I cannot thank you enough for your wonderful respect and care that you show to the lost men of WWI, of all nations. I visited twice and would go back again in a heartbeat. Even without all the history, Ieper is a beautiful town and lovingly restored. You should be proud.
@josephconti8287
@josephconti8287 4 года назад
Leode Siefast M
@roblarcher4625
@roblarcher4625 Год назад
my grandfather was in the second battle of Ypres.He was a lt His commanding officer and best friend was John Mcrae.My grandfather is memorialised in the famous painting by Richard Jack.He is the soldier wearing the white shirt.My grandfather was shot 3 times,gassed,captured and tortured by the germans.He managed to escape many times to see one of his friends in another p.o w camp.On his last escape he overpowered a sentry,took his uniform and somehow made his way back through no man's land to safety.He suffered for the rest of his life due to his wounds never healing properly.He never saw any of his best friends again.The cost of war carries through all eternity.The debt that is owed to those before us can never be repaid.I am always in awe of the bravery these people demonstrated in the most hellish circimstances.We enjoy the fruits of thier sacrifices and sometimes forget how we got to this life.I am so proud of my grandfather.His name is lt Darcy Latimer of the 1rst Canadian Expeditionary Force.R.I.P. 😢❤❤
@elcasho
@elcasho 3 года назад
Beautifully produced. Nice to see people still remembering those who gave their lives over a century ago
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 3 года назад
Thanks!
@marilyncoady4476
@marilyncoady4476 2 года назад
My Great Uncle Pte. John Lambert was recently laid to rest in The New Irish Farm Cemetery near Ypres. In 2016 his remains and those of three British soldiers were found on the last day of an archeological dig, which preceded the laying of a gas pipeline. My Uncle Jack as we all call him joined The Newfoundland Regiment at 16 yrs of age. When he tried to join he was told he was too young and to walk around the block and come back when he was 18. That he did and was killed at age 17. To have been there on that rainy day on June 30, 2022, 105 years after he was killed in battle, was one of the most amazing moments of my life. Tears were flowing as my cousin Bob Read “In Flanders Fields. “ I cannot even imagine what my uncle and his comrades went through. To say Thank you doesn’t seem to be enough. ❤️
@scoobsean
@scoobsean 2 года назад
I was an Army Cadet during the mid 1980s and the Regiment I was in a detachment of (King's Own Royal Border Regiment) had a cadet marching band - one of the few within the Army Cadets at the time. We were invited to attend some parades and march with the band through the Menin Gate one evening. We also attended many of the local cemeteries, memorials and museums. It left a huge impression on me and I visited again many years later as an adult to relive the experiences.
@chrisp4170
@chrisp4170 3 года назад
I am British, but I lived in Belgium for 2 1/2 years and it was a privilege. I have been to this place and it always moves me. It possesses a feeling of poignancy like few other locations. The obscene loss of life, the courage of those involved and the tragedy played out here that affected so many families. It is very difficult to visit the City Museum and not feel some kind of emotional contact with the lives of those involved. I always come back to those words of Bob Dylan in 'Blowin' in the Wind' - "How many times must those cannonballs fly, before they're forever banned?..."
@mike5d1
@mike5d1 2 года назад
Fun fact about the Cloth Hall in Ypres; the original architect blue prints had a clock in the tower, but the people paying for the build couldn't afford the clock so it was never installed. When it came time to rebuild, the Germans were paying for it so everything on the blue print was put into the building, including a brand new clock.
@MrSimonw58
@MrSimonw58 Год назад
I was thinking they rebuilt it all really nicely
@goldenchild4835
@goldenchild4835 3 года назад
My great uncle Kenneth emigrated from Scotland in 1910, started a family in Sydney and joined the 1st Battalion 1st AIF in April 1915, was sent to Gallipoli as a replacement. He was wounded a number of times, first at Gallipoli and later when his unit left Gallipoli, and each time he was wounded he would return to his unit. The last time he wrote to his wife (my great Aunt), saying that he was going back to help his mates in the final push. In May 1918 he was moving into the trenches at Ypres when he was seriously wounded. He was sent back to England and hospitalised, but would eventually die of pneumonia in the hospital. He is buried in Campbell Town in Kintyre, in an Australian War Grave with other diggers. His eldest son died two months later (in Sydney) from illness and his youngest son would become an officer in the 2nd AIF in Sydney, but would also die as a young man leaving behind a wife and two small children in 1943. My great aunt never remarried. My great uncle's name is inscribed on the wall of remembrance at the AWM, Canberra. Our family honours his memory.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 3 года назад
What an amazing (and tragic) family story. Thanks for sharing.
@richardmason902
@richardmason902 Год назад
That is so sad my friend. We lost our great uncle at Ypres . He was just a boy.
@Dirtpoorhomesteader
@Dirtpoorhomesteader 3 года назад
One of the best historical docs I have seen. I was very moved. The sheer scale of death and loss of WW1 is enough to bring me to tears. This video deserves a millions views. Top notch videography and presentation. I felt as if I was walking with him on the tour.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 3 года назад
Thank you!
@dafalgan15
@dafalgan15 5 лет назад
This is very, very well done.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 5 лет назад
Deangelo Vickers thank you!
@stijnvandamme76
@stijnvandamme76 3 года назад
This is very nice presentation of our town.. My hat off to you, i'm showing this to friends abroad... It does Ypres justice.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 3 года назад
Thank you!
@Gitarzan66
@Gitarzan66 4 года назад
The pipes got me too mate. My grandfather was in the A.E.F. 32nd Inf. Div. 105th Engineers. He was wounded and had to wear metal leg braces for the rest of his life. I can still hear him clanking down the hall. I myself am in a wheelchair and will never be able to travel to places like this. I want you to know how much your videos mean to people like me. You bring these places to us. Thank you for all you do.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 4 года назад
Thank you for your comments, and respect for your grandfather’s service. He and his comrades are not forgotten.
@WobblyBootsDuke
@WobblyBootsDuke 4 года назад
Nicely done, Mat. I clicked Like for your work and not because of the misery. My g-grand uncle has his name at Menin. His wife died in 1914 at Toowoomba and perhaps through grief and/or duty, he left his 11 y/o daughter in the care of my g-grandfather. She was orphaned by 17. Samuel took a direct hit from a shell outside Zonnebeke church. I knew nothing of this man until a few years ago. My surviving family never spoke of him -- or were maybe told nothing. Your film has helped me understand a little more. Thank you so very much :-)
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 4 года назад
Thank you Mark. That’s a moving story.
@brakel8r
@brakel8r 4 года назад
So so important and really good to see the youth that attend the last post. Thanks from the U.S. for sharing this
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 4 года назад
My pleasure. Thanks for watching.
@markwebb8616
@markwebb8616 4 года назад
The children laying wreaths.............................brought a tear to my eye.
@michaelflanagan8265
@michaelflanagan8265 3 года назад
Thank you for such a lovely story and tribute to the fallen soldiers. My great uncle was killed in action at Mesen. Lest we forget. Fondly remembered by his family, William Vincent Flanagan.
@mikejones4240
@mikejones4240 3 года назад
i have been here numerous times and each time there is something different and each time it pulls on my heartstrings. i recommend a guided tour, not cheap. on the face of it, but well worth it.
@timaddison707
@timaddison707 2 дня назад
Fantastic, sensitively put together, poignant brilliant work Matt and team
@stevenweaver3386
@stevenweaver3386 3 года назад
The poem "In Flander's Fields" was written at Ypres in May 1915, when the author got word a dear friend had been killed. It was after the 2nd Battle that Canada, when 7,700 men of the 18,000 who entered the line became casualties, realized the war was not the gallant adventure they imagined the previous September.
@rescuepetsrule6842
@rescuepetsrule6842 2 года назад
Macrae I think- a doctor. Amazing imagery.
@philipcowlishaw2712
@philipcowlishaw2712 4 года назад
My great uncle Douglas belcher won the Victoria cross just outside ypres and the curator of the cloth hall museum drove me to the approximate site of his action it was a memorable day, and I shall always remember the hospitality I was given in this town
@tooyoungtobeold8756
@tooyoungtobeold8756 4 года назад
He was born where I lived for about 30 years. Surbiton, South East London Belcher was awarded the Victoria Cross for heroism in action with the London Rifle Brigade during the 2nd Battle of Ypres in April 1915, when he was 25 years of age. Citation On the early morning of 13th May, 1915, when in charge of a portion of an advanced breastwork south of the Wieltje-St. Julien Road during a very fierce and continuous bombardment by the enemy, which frequently blew in the breastwork, Lance-Serjeant Belcher with a mere handful of men elected to remain and endeavour to hold his position after the troops near him had been withdrawn. By his skill and great gallantry he maintained his position during the day, opening rapid fire on the enemy, who were only 150 to 200 yards distant, whenever he saw them collecting for an attack. There is little doubt that the bold front shown by Lance-Serjeant Belcher prevented the enemy breaking through on the Wieltje Road, and averted an attack on the flank of one of our Divisions.
@monsterforge1763
@monsterforge1763 Год назад
My Paternal Great Grandfather Alfred Schoefield 12294 2nd Btn Cheshire Rgt died at Ypres on 10th May 1915 after being wounded on the 8th May in an action near Bailleul Wood
@philipcowlishaw2712
@philipcowlishaw2712 Год назад
@@monsterforge1763 so many deaths, it was a ghastly place to be, my great uncle wan the VC on the 12th May 1915 just two days after your grandfathers death, they might ave passed each other one never knows.
@Goffas_and_gumpys
@Goffas_and_gumpys 4 года назад
@ 13:11, "He's not missing, he's here" choked me right up. Damn. Great presentation. It is a bucket list item for me to do a Western Front battlefielld tour. One day I'll get there. RIP, Lest We Forget.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 4 года назад
Thank you.
@wallymcguire2033
@wallymcguire2033 2 года назад
That was so beautiful. ❤️
@ripp4775
@ripp4775 3 года назад
I live in the States and have visited Ypres 3x, with the last being over Nov 11 in 2018. Had the privilege of meeting many Former British soldiers. It was evident the special place Ypres holds in their collective hearts and history. This video has pushed me to return.
@bobstride6838
@bobstride6838 3 года назад
Very, very moving documentary. RIP all the brave men who fought, I have utmost respect for what you endured and achieved, I just am so thankful that I did not have to repeat your sacrifice thanks to what you did.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 3 года назад
Thanks for the comments.
@seppehens8459
@seppehens8459 4 года назад
i shead a tear and had goostbumps... its so sad
@chriscoleman6411
@chriscoleman6411 4 года назад
This guy is amazing at what he does..his knowledge is 2nd to none..he could easily do this professionally
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 4 года назад
Thanks!
@thedanielgholmes
@thedanielgholmes 4 года назад
Great Doco Mat. My wife and I visited Ypres in October 2017, 100 years after my Great Grandfather George Smith was killed in the third battle of Ypres. It was a very emotional experience, we visited Aeroplane cemetery where he is buried. The Commonwealth War Graves Commission do a fantastic job. We missed the Menin Gate ceremony so it was great to see it on your video, thank you.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 4 года назад
Thanks for the comments Daniel. That would have been an emotional trip.
@thedanielgholmes
@thedanielgholmes 4 года назад
Living History Yes Mat it was, especially visiting the grave. But we had a great time in Belgium. Especially Bruges where we stayed.
@travisryanseager9627
@travisryanseager9627 5 лет назад
Excellent Documentary. I'd just like to say that I've being doing research of my families past and as of only 3 days ago, I found my Great Great Grandfathers name on the Monument. I knew he was in the war but to finally find out his fate is just so incredible. So thank you for the great history lessons!
@celestinclauw
@celestinclauw 5 лет назад
Dear travis I'd like to say that I live in Vlamertinge. My small town is 5 kilometers from Ypres. So I'd like to say you should really take a look on the website from the museum 'Flanders Fields' it's the big building before they showed the Saint Pieters Cathedral. I hope this is any useful to you.
@travisryanseager9627
@travisryanseager9627 4 года назад
@@celestinclauw Thank you for this! The website is great...I see they have records there as well. Thank you!!
@timlaporte5231
@timlaporte5231 3 года назад
Thank you for lending your voice and sentiment to the heroes of the past. My grandfather survived the fighting in the Argonne Forest. His stories still give me a chill.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 3 года назад
Thanks. 👍🏼
@RogueBrit
@RogueBrit Год назад
The gratitude of the Belgium people really touched me, the sacrifices are appreciated and remembered.
@jameskavanagh4315
@jameskavanagh4315 2 года назад
Powerfully moving. May they never be forgotten. Thank you 🙏.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 2 года назад
Thanks for the comment.
@jameskavanagh4315
@jameskavanagh4315 2 года назад
@@MatMcLachlanHistory No, thank you.
@derekstocker6661
@derekstocker6661 Год назад
Yet another great salute to these brave souls, and the ones on the enemy side who were lost in this ghastly war, and who are now all equal. Thanks Mat, what a wonderful video and RIP all the fallen.
@elmerfudd
@elmerfudd 3 года назад
My Grandfather served and was gassed by the Germans in Ypres. He was saved by an Australian regiment and went on to live a long and prosperous life thanks to the care he received by the Australian Doctors and medical corp. My God bless the fallen and may we all continue to remember and thank ALL the solders who served so we may live free.
@alansalazar9543
@alansalazar9543 4 года назад
Thank you for a moving tribute - and helping many of us see a place we may never get to visit in person. Beautifully done.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 4 года назад
Thank you!
@theoglenister7740
@theoglenister7740 2 года назад
My great-granduncle Corporal Arthur Toms was killed in the first battle of Ypres. I was lucky enough to visit Ieper around 10 years ago during a school trip and pay my respects to him and lay a wreath at his grave. There really are no words to describe how powerful and emotional the last post at Menin Gate is in person. Really great video that captures the town perfectly, I am always amazed at your knowledge
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 2 года назад
Thank you Theo. 👍🏼
@if6was985
@if6was985 2 года назад
I went to The Menine Gate last October, a damp and miserable night...yet a couple hundred people at The Gate at 8 PM, the last salute has never meant that much to me...yet it brought tears to my eyes and it still does nowadays whenever I hear it.
@tooyoungtobeold8756
@tooyoungtobeold8756 4 года назад
Excellent video, as usual. Knowlegeable and sympathetic. How the parents of the Seabrook brothers coped, I will never know. Every day of their life after the war, they would think of their sons. My grandfather fought just north of the Menin Gate and won the Military Medal, aged just 19. Using maps I found the almost exact spot in a cornfeild where he won that medal, on the night of April 16th, 1916, where he faced wave upon wave of advancing Germans and manned his Lewis gun even though two of his crew had been wounded. He went on to be wounded on the Somme, six months later.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 4 года назад
Amazing story. Lest we forget.
@kevinvanvianen5638
@kevinvanvianen5638 Год назад
Just curious if you could share the coordinates of that cornfield?
@rjgonzalez6322
@rjgonzalez6322 Месяц назад
We must never forget them! Big hug from Gibraltar 🇬🇮
@kensimdall705
@kensimdall705 3 года назад
Great work. I have been to Ypres a few times and am always impressed by the love and respect shown by the people of this town to all the British & Commonwealth soldiers who made the ultimate sacrifice. So sad to see the names of so many young men from across the world who never returned home to their loved ones.
@darrenwalsh6965
@darrenwalsh6965 5 лет назад
Awesome, great to see history like this told in a modern way - Thanks Mat.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 5 лет назад
Darren Walsh thanks!
@deano6912
@deano6912 3 года назад
Fascinating and very moving. Thanks for posting Mat. I highly recommend his podcast. Brilliant.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 3 года назад
Cheers mate.
@josephpodohertysaleh4912
@josephpodohertysaleh4912 5 лет назад
Having just returned recently, and having taken part in the Last Post ceremony, with the Royal British Legion ROI.It is a truly moving experience. A debt we can never repay, Lest we forget 🇬🇧🌺🇮🇪
@superbia75es
@superbia75es 5 лет назад
Outstanding again. Yes, we went to the Menin Gate 8pm ceremony last August. The pipes, as you say, it's the pipes. They shall not grow old.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 5 лет назад
superbia75es Thank you!
@chris6559
@chris6559 3 года назад
I was there on the centenary in 2018, powerful experience, we cycled up from Calais actually and rode through Flanders and visited various cemeteries, its a lovely part of the world despite it's history.
@paulcarney3433
@paulcarney3433 2 года назад
In 2019 I did an Australian WW1 Battlefields Tour with Matt's company and spent three days in Ieper. Thank you for the rekindling of memories. I was asked to lay a wreath for our group at the Menin Gate ceremony. It was a highlight for me as was finding eight graves and memorials of family men who died in 1916-1917. It was hugely emotional for me and unforgettable. Lest We Forget.
@Johann559
@Johann559 4 года назад
Brilliant clip. Thank you. The Remembracve that pounces on you from this presentation is a valuable reminder of my own family members who were fed into this crucible, on both sides of the war. Rest in piece, every soldier still on duty....
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 4 года назад
Thank you!
@jeremyharris4021
@jeremyharris4021 3 года назад
I can't believe how lovingly it was all restored, what a gorgeous town
@si4632
@si4632 3 года назад
yes and yet it still looks so old extremely well done
@flitsertheo
@flitsertheo Год назад
Apparently today the restored town looks older, more medieval, than it did right before WW1. As the Germans were paying I guess no expenses were spared.
@geertdecoster5301
@geertdecoster5301 3 года назад
Dear Mat, how did I miss this lovely clip of yours till now? It's the most correct and informative piece on Ieper and the Great War that I've seen in ten years. Honest, elegant, and respectful. Of course, the Belgian Army and the French Marine Fusiliers, Spahi, etc. also held the line from Ieper to the coast. I don't like to correct but I'm sure that you can understand that Saint Georges is now half a church and half a chapel. There are indeed no pilgrims anymore but just visitors, and we always try to welcome them to our weekly church services. There's a small but dapper congregation at Saint Georges, and at Easter, we like to restart services there. You're always welcome to come over and pray with us.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 3 года назад
Thanks for the comments, and the invitation!
@howardburnette9169
@howardburnette9169 Год назад
I have taken my two son to Ypres. And erected a plaque in St George’s church in memory of NZ William Staub , both my sons said dad we will keep memories alive when you pass. We will bring our sons here ,when old enough to understand, that means a lot.
@paulbeer404
@paulbeer404 2 года назад
Thank you...was very good information
@jimspink2922
@jimspink2922 3 года назад
Just a note concerning playing the Last Post at Menin Gate during the German occupation the ceremony was conducted at Brookwood Military Cemetery in Surrey. The day the town was liberated the ceremony commenced again despite heavy fighting just out of town. Have attended the ceremony and found it very emotional.
@hordboy
@hordboy 3 года назад
Thank you for this look at Ypres. My g-grandfather fought there. 37th Buckeye Division, AEF.
@janlewis9160
@janlewis9160 3 года назад
What a wonderful view of the past, tears for all those lost. I’ve added this beautiful town to my bucket list. Thank you for this poignant history lesson.
@stevphenrose7820
@stevphenrose7820 2 года назад
A great place to visit, welcoming to visitors. Highly recommend. The nightly ceremony at the Menin Gate is amazing. Great museum and tours. Anyone interested in history will benefit from the visit.
@Moghwacy723
@Moghwacy723 4 года назад
This Historian really is very professional. I like listening to him. Does he have his own TV program?
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 4 года назад
Thank you! You’ll see me on the BBC, Channel 4, ABC, History Channel from time to time.
@Moghwacy723
@Moghwacy723 4 года назад
@@MatMcLachlanHistory oke nice! I'll check it out! Thanks you!
@jarnepysson3093
@jarnepysson3093 4 года назад
I live close by ypres in a village called wijtschate in English whitesheet and go to school there and dayly I paas trough the gate of lille and other things but I passed so many hystorically thinks without knowing what they were and this really explained everything thanks
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 4 года назад
My pleasure. I know Wijtschate well!
@jarnepysson3093
@jarnepysson3093 3 года назад
@@MatMcLachlanHistory oh! That's a supprise, a lot of tourist know ypres and other famous cities like Bruges. If I may ask how do you know wijtschate?
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 3 года назад
It was the scene of many famous battles. The soldiers knew it well, so I know it well too!
@garymcpheat1139
@garymcpheat1139 3 года назад
My Great Grandad's name is on the Menin Gate. Thank you for paying your respects. I was there in 2017 exactly 100 years to the day that he was killed in the battle for Messines Ridge.
@rogerwhittle2078
@rogerwhittle2078 4 года назад
I am a Scout Leader in south London and (normally) our Group Scout Leader and I take our five oldest Scouts to the Last Post Ceremony. We missed this year because they were just too young, but we will come next year. We leave very early, (usually a Saturday in October) come through the tunnel and then visit several WWI sites during the day - Sanctuary Wood (Hill 62) the Paschendaele Museum, Tyne Cott and the German Cemetery at Langemarck. We show the kids the Menin gate in daylight, have dinner in Ypres and then go back to the gate for the ceremony. They lay a wreath on behalf our Scout Group during the ceremony and they have always, always made us so proud of them. It is rare that bystanders, both British and other European (even American) members of the public, don't compliment them and us. Boys and girls in Scout uniform. One of the things that seems to leave a strong memory for them over the years, is how lovely Ieper is, but how 'young' it is. In the Sanctuary Wood museum, there are many photographs of the Lakenhalle area in 1914, 1916 and at the end in 1918. There is nothing left, just piles of rubble and yet the people of Ieper wanted their town back, so they rebuilt it exactly as it was. That always makes them think and wonder. We love Ieper and have visited many, many times - once by boat from Nieuwpoort! - and if I had to live somewhere other than 'England', I would live in the area around Ieper.
@muntjunk-plk3171
@muntjunk-plk3171 3 года назад
Mate terrific video. It’s truly horrendous what went on in those fields and towns. I would love to visit these battlefields one day myself, but until then I’ll follow your channel. I could watch these all day. Thanks for sharing this with us. Lest We Forget.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 3 года назад
Cheers mate. 👍🏼
@robo0205
@robo0205 2 года назад
Thank you for your film..I have a personal connection with Ypres/leper.. My Great Grandfather was awarded the VC there.His name was Joseph Lister and he was a Sargent in the Lancashire fusiliers. We all owe these brave men our gratitude but I literally would not be here without one of them. He was lucky enough to survive the war but i never got to meet him but just a glimpse of the place where he fought with valour Makes me very proud.
@Loiyaboy
@Loiyaboy 4 года назад
Excellent. Informative, respectful and emotional.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 4 года назад
Thank you!
@javasrevenge7121
@javasrevenge7121 Год назад
Since today I subscribed to your channel. You are telling and showing us the horror of WW1 in a great way.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory Год назад
Thanks!
@tysonator5433
@tysonator5433 3 года назад
Just discovered this channel and what a humble and moving content from ww1. I have been to Ypres many years ago while passing through to channel tunnel, and the memhien gate is emotional visit.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 3 года назад
Thank you!
@firecracker367
@firecracker367 4 года назад
I promise myself that one day, I will visit various battlefields of the Western front in WW1, my top priorities are The Somme, Verdun, Ypres, Loos and Gallipoli!
@GrumpyOldMan9
@GrumpyOldMan9 3 года назад
That would be "Ieper"
@bristolmod
@bristolmod 2 года назад
"He's not missing- he's here" That brought tears to my eyes.
@humbleguy4726
@humbleguy4726 2 года назад
My grandfather fought in this war with the British machine gun corps. Thankfully he made it back home. He only spoke of the war toward the end of his life after much prompting by us. His saddest tale was leaving home after enlistment ( he had never been further than 10 miles from his village until then) he said his mother was at the gate near the house waving goodbye, he made the mistake of glancing back to see his mother with her arms resting on the gate and sobbing. He said he felt haunted by this event and all the bravado of this 17 year old left him.
@PaulRudd1941
@PaulRudd1941 Год назад
This video is exceptional. I've watched thousands of hours of ww1 and historical documentaries, this one has to be near the top. Subscribed!
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory Год назад
Thanks Matthew!
@montanamountainmen6104
@montanamountainmen6104 4 года назад
My Great Grandfather fought at Ypres in 1918 in the US Army in the 27th Div. He survived but was scared forever. To mollify Haig somewhat, Pershing agree to leave two National Guard divisions -- New York's 27th Division and the 30th Division, whose troops came from North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia and Tennessee--under British command. The 50,000 men of the two divisions were organized as II Corps--the smallest American Army Corps--although they sometimes fought in separate British Corps and not as a unified American Corps.
@chrishinton970
@chrishinton970 3 года назад
My great grandfather was in the south Staffordshire regiment, mustard gassed at the third battle of Ypres. Nice to see a plaque to his regiment.
@pitballmc6568
@pitballmc6568 3 месяца назад
My son is there today paying his respects to the fallen fortunately his great grandad survived the great war.
@jwalton4778
@jwalton4778 5 лет назад
Absolutely mind blowing, amazing knowledge. We are looking forward to your tours next year (and thanks to your video have planned a road trip in between the 2 tours we are going on).
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 5 лет назад
J Walton my pleasure! Enjoy the tours!
@simonashworth2820
@simonashworth2820 3 года назад
My Great grandfather Arthur Hudson Ashworth of the 2nd/5th battalion East Lancs Regiment was lost and never found at Passchendeal on 9th October 1917 and I was at the last post with my Dad his grandson on the 9th October 2017 after visiting the battlefield and Tyne Cot where his name is on the memorial wall. A very special moment for both of us. Lest we forget.
@brucebowman9087
@brucebowman9087 Год назад
I'm headed to Ypres and Verdun next Fall. I'm adding this to my prep video list. Thanks.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory Год назад
Excellent!
@gainsboroughpara
@gainsboroughpara 4 года назад
Fantastic short documentary, thank you ❤️
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 4 года назад
My pleasure Richard!
@malcolmherbert5779
@malcolmherbert5779 4 года назад
Great Doco Matt, you're right the pipes do get you every time they got me ! Thanks From Melbourne.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 4 года назад
Cheers mate.
@battleparkwest2463
@battleparkwest2463 4 года назад
Very well done this is top quality documentary work. Much respect to you and your work
@math2222322
@math2222322 3 года назад
I remember my ex telling me that she hated the sound of the bagpipes. she was a musicia, so it made me stop and wonder why i loved them so much: It's a lament. the cries of those who lost loved ones, the last breath of air leaving those poor men and the sound of sacrifice.
@puppooseman2118
@puppooseman2118 5 лет назад
Very well put together such a great Documentary
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 5 лет назад
Puppoose Man Thank you!
@kernowwing
@kernowwing Год назад
A very interesting and useful walk through Ypres. I wish I'd watched it before my most recent visit to Ypres (early December '22) as I would have allowed more time to see some of the things highlighted in the video. Thank you for this.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory Год назад
Glad you enjoyed it!
@ahappysaurus.5491
@ahappysaurus.5491 3 года назад
I went there a few years back. Easily one of the most calm places with a horrific backstory.
@Hecate2011
@Hecate2011 5 лет назад
Excellent. Yep, me too. The pipes! The pipes! Looking good there, Steve Douglas!
@colineaston6305
@colineaston6305 2 года назад
My grandfather lost a cousin in Flanders in 1918. I lost m father in 1944.
@anthonynestor9336
@anthonynestor9336 3 года назад
Returning to some of your past episodes Mat, I really enjoyed this episode. Outstanding work, that is so thoughtful and well presented. I have praised your work before, but I don't mind saying it again. The way you bring the history to life with stories and accounts from individuals experiences, brings the battles and locations to life. Obviously the location of Ypres with all of its history and natural beauty speaks for itself. To think this area and its inhabitants were so devastated by war during the years of 1914-1918 and for many years afterward. Such rich history and poignant remembrance are powerful magnets drawing this amateur historian to these incredible locations. Can't wait until we travel! Thoughts to all of these people in these locations still coming to terms with Covid 19. Wishing them well, as well as you and your team Mat.
@MatMcLachlanHistory
@MatMcLachlanHistory 3 года назад
Thank you!
@tandemcompound2
@tandemcompound2 4 года назад
The Princess Patricias Canadian Light Infantry stopped the German gas attack in April, 1915 at great loss to themselves. Five battles at Bloody Wipers during the war.
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