I am fortunate to be involved in Flixton ex servicemen's association at the John Alker memorial hall in Flixton, as you can imagine this weekend is a major event in our year. We will all be at the cenotaph at the Nagshead circle Urmston and then back to the club for a fantastic free brass band concert with a hot pot lunch and plenty of drink flowing.
This year we are also holding a charity auction with some fantastic lots to raise money to improve our kitchens.
The hall is used for multiple events and social gatherings throughout the year but perhaps my personal favourites are the breakfast club meetings we have for Trafford veterans. We have at least 3 old boys in their 90s who tell some very humbling stories.
There is a very famous photograph that maybe someone a bit cleverer than me will post, which shows a group of heavily bearded and rather scuffy looking guys sat in a jeep, guns ready to go into battle, these lads are SAS and are about to drive down a desert runway under heavy fire and destroy all the German aircraft. One of those blokes comes to our breakfast club and till you sit and talk to him he's just old Tommy who sits in the corner. Amazing ordinary people who had the courage to do extraordinary things.
Please feel free to come along.

If @alkerblue won't mind, that photo, I believe, is the very first incarnation of the SAS, featuring its founder, Major Sterling.
The final, edited version of our amateur trubute. 2 amateur blokes with a drone, phones and free editing software. Footage from The Somme last week. Their name liveth forever more. Incredible place, I'm drawn back to it time and time again.
Sound source essential...
Poland lost around 6m of their population in WW2 which included a huge Civilian number murdered for being Jewish. Their services and resistance fighters were amongst the bravest of the conflict, big respect to all the fallen this weekend, including the conflicts that have happened since WW2.The Polish were outstanding in WW2. My grandfather was a newsagent and when he died (stomach cancer) we realised that no Polish customers had ever been charged a penny for newspapers (over many years). Just because he served with them.
The final, edited version of our amateur trubute. 2 amateur blokes with a drone, phones and free editing software. Footage from The Somme last week. Their name liveth forever more. Incredible place, I'm drawn back to it time and time again.
Sound source essential...
My Grandad fought from the start to the end of WW2 as a Royal Marine Commando. He was an anti-aircraft gunner in the Battle of Britain, fought in the desert in North Africa, and in Italy and France.
My Dad found out decades later that my Grandad’s best mate from the war who’d been with him everywhere they weren’t from 1939 right though to 1945 was killed early in 1945. That must have been soul destroying!
When my Dad was a kid he used to ask my Grandad things about the war and he never gave him any sort of answer, just used to ignore that he asked anything.
My Grandad also went right through from 39-45 with the Lancashire Fusiliers and barely spoke to anyone afterwards about what he had witnessed. He also fought in France, North Africa and Italy.
It was only after his death that my Mum told me that he lost so many mates and that for the first few years post war was a shell of a man and that it drove him to try and commit suicide on several occasions that thankfully where not successful.
As a family we now have his medals proudly placed in presentation case and he is forever in our thoughts, as will my old man, John whose ashes are buried at the Fusiliers memorial garden in Bury.
RIP Grandad and Dad x.
Small video of us proudly laying my old man to rest.
Very moving, my great Uncle James who was KIA at the Somme on 1July 1916 is buried in the Connaghut Cemetery at Thiepval. We established he was buried three times, the first where he fell, then after a lull in the fighting his body was removed to a temporary gravesite and then he was dug up and moved to his final resting place. I dont honestly think we can fathom to horror of the those days and seeing the drone fly over the graves was very humbling. Stunning piece of work and congratulations to all involved.