Packed with letters, photographs, original artefacts, documents and archival footage, the exhibition offers up a social history of the Somme, examining the men from Lisburn and district who fought and died in the battle (which lasted from July to November 1916), and how this impacted their families at home.
The Great War (1914-1918) affected all aspects of life in Ireland, and alongside the story of the local 11th and 13th battalions Royal Irish Rifles at the front, and the experience of those back home, the exhibition examines the local medical men and women who nursed the wounded and comforted the dying, and the role Ulster’s wartime industry, particularly its linen factories, had in winning the war.
The exhibition features special displays on:
Lisburn’s ‘Pals’: the story of how Linen men of the 11th battalion, Lisnagarvey Hockey and the town’s Orange lodges went to war together.
A concise overview of the 36th Ulster Division’s attack at the Somme on July 1st 1916
Archival footage of the Battle of the Somme
Nelson Russell, the town’s youngest winner of the Military Cross (M.C.)
The 16th (Irish) Division at the Somme: Ginchy and Guillemont
RAMC, VADS and Nurse: Medical men and women at the front.
The first home front: munitions, aerolinen and how the war in the air was won on ‘Ulster linen wings’
Suitable for
Any age
Website
http://www.lisburnmuseum.com/event/the-somme-our-story-1916-exhibiti/all/
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