The attached two page article appeared in one of the 1936 issues of The American Legion Monthly, a magazine intended for U.S. veterans of the First World War. The article is about the Remembrance Day ceremony at the Cenotaph in London and was written by a journalist who was deeply impressed by the collective sense of gratitude and respect that marked that occasion.

“This chill November morning the Cenotaph is surrounded by serried masses of men. Up and down Whitehall as far as one can see are thousands and thousands packed in so tightly they cannot move…Suddenly from St. James Park comes the sound of a gun. They used to say it was impossible for a British crowd to be quiet. That was before Armistice Day. For the hum of London dies at the sound of the gun…Somewhere in the distance a horse paws the ground and neighs. A flag flaps in the breeze. Never such a silence as this. A King and his people pause sixty seconds in solemn celebration for the dead. It is the Great Hush.”

Read Remembrance Day at the Cenotaph<br>(American Legion Monthly, 1936) for Free

Remembrance Day and the Great Hush at the Cenotaph 1936THE GREAT SILENCE 1936Remembrance Day and the Great Silence at the Cenotaph 1936THE GLORIOUS DEAD and the tradition of the Great Silence 1936 Remembrance Day ceremony 1936 mourning at Cenotaph monument 1936Cenotaph Remembrance Day Ceremony 1936Remembrance Day wreath-laying ceremony Whitehall 1936Remembrance Day wreath-laying ceremony Cenotaph 1936UK Remembrance Day traditions 1936British Remembrance Day traditions 1936THE GREAT HUSH 1936
Scroll to Top