How to get to the dawn service
THERE will be free public transport in Perth for Anzac Day as 100,000 people are expected to be in the city for the Kings Park dawn service and other events. | ANZAC DAY GUIDE
THERE will be free public transport in Perth for Anzac Day as 100,000 people are expected to be in the city for the Kings Park dawn service and other events. | ANZAC DAY GUIDE
EMILY Ballantyne is a nervous wreck before she puts her bugle to her lips and plays the first sombre, stirring notes of The Last Post. | ANZAC DAY IN WA | GETTING TO KINGS PARK
CLASSROOM teachers will ditch the computers and technology for children to learn about the Anzac centenary. Watch the video and share your thoughts. Are you happy with your child learning this?
ONE in 12 Tasmanians enlisted to fight in World War I, and the toll was enormous, writes ANNE MATHER. INCLUDES TASMANIAN ANZAC SERVICES GUIDE
A NEWSPAPER clipping gave a family a shred of hope as they tried to track down their missing son in WWI. Now their story is finally being told in Missing Anzac.
A South Brighton man has uncovered the heroic details about his father’s war efforts as part of the fierce 10th Battalion during World War I.
CLINTON Dowdell was fighting on the Western Front when he was told his mother was dead.
ANZAC James Cameron braved WWI with the church medals of his second cousin, Saint Mary MacKillop, close to his heart.
THE war years made up only a fraction of their 100 years of life – but the memories loom large.
ALMOST 100 years ago a young milk cream tester entered a battlefield raked by German machine gun fire and pounded by their artillery.
A SMALL faded diary which was almost burnt 50 years ago during a clean-up of an old house captures the Carne family’s connection with World War I.
PRIME Minister Tony Abbott is set to launch the flagship display of the Anzac Centenary — a $35 million travelling exhibition from the Australian War Memorial.
AUSTRALIAN playwright Alan Seymour, whose most famous work was a searing indictment of the ANZAC legend, has died in Sydney aged 87.
JOHN Thompson may only have an index finger and a thumb on his left hand and no right hand, but this didn’t stop him writing about his war experiences.
Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/anzac-centenary/page/24