Sons Of Ulster Answering The Call

This entry provides close-ups of the WWI memorial display in Clarawood, east Belfast, and complements the images and text presented in 2023’s Spared To Testify To Their Glorious Deeds.

The three vertical panels with text read as follows:

“Ulster Division – a great military parade will take place on Saturday, May 8, 1915. The troops of the Ulster Division numbering 17,000 men will be on Parade. Cavalry, Infantry, Pioneers, Engineers, Signallers, Cyclists Cors, Army Service Corps and Army medical Corps. Men and Women of Ulster come and see the Greatest Military Display ever held in Ulster, and do honour to your own Division. God save the King.” (There is video of the May parade on Facebook and NI Screen. The photograph of George V inspecting the troops in Aldershot on September 30th, 1915, can be seen here.)

“The Battle Of Albert (1st – 13th July) 1916. The leading battalions of the 36th (Ulster) Division) [sic] had been ordered out from Thiepval Wood just before 7.30am and laid down near the German trenches … At zero hour the British barrage lifted. Bugles blew the “Advance”. Up sprang the Ulstermen and without forming up in the waves adopted by other divisions, they rushed the German front line … By a combination of sensible tactics and Ulster dash, the prize that eluded so many, the capture of a long section of the German front line, had been accomplished. During the Battle Of The Somme the (Ulster) [sic] Division was the only division of X Corps (British Army) to have achieved its objectives on the opening day of the battle. This came at a heavy price, with the division suffering in two days of fighting 5,500 officers and enlisted men killed, wounded or missing. Of nine Victoria Crosses given to British forces in the battle, 4 were awarded to 36th (Ulster) Division soldiers. ‘I am not an Ulsterman but yesterday, the 1st July, as I followed their amazing attack, I felt that I would rather be an Ulsterman than anything else in the world.’ – Captain Wilfred [sic Wilfrid] Spender, 2 July 1916.”

“36th (Ulster) Division 32,186 killed, wounded, missing. The tower is dedicated to the glory of God in grateful memory of the officers, non-commissioned officers and men of the 36th (Ulster) Division, and the sons of Ulster in other forces who laid down their lives in the Great War, and of all their comrades in arms who, by divine grace, were spared to testify to their glorious deeds.”

Knockwood Crescent, Clarawood, east Belfast

Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2025 Paddy Duffy
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