Fields of Remembrance open to the public this weekend
19 October 2018
A month-long commemoration
programme to mark the 100th anniversary of the Armistice
that ended fighting on the Western Front during World War
One will be open to the public from Saturday,
October 20.
New Zealand will be the first country in the world to mark Armistice Day, with Auckland hosting a major commemorative service at The Cenotaph on Sunday, 11 November, at 11am – acknowledging the time and date the guns finally fell silent.
Key information/dates:
• There are
18,277 named crosses representing every New Zealander who
died. They are installed on the northern slopes of the
Auckland War Memorial Museum Tāmaki Paenga Hira
and in front of the Cenotaph.
• The crosses
are arranged in blocks by the year that the soldiers and
nurses died, with a separate block of 1432 crosses to honour
the 693 families who lost more than one child, including a
dozen families who loss a pair brothers on the same day, and
six families that loss four members during the
war.
• The fields will be lit with a combination of
spotlights from light fittings located on the Cenotaph
grounds, with additional up-lighting to each of the trees
around the perimeter of the northern field.
• The North
West field which is dedicated to the families that lost 2 or
more, features a lone pine tree which will also have feature
lighting.
• The Fields of Remembrance also includes
displays of some stories of those who were lost.
• The
Auckland War Memorial Museum exterior
will be illuminated from 4-11 November, featuring a film
(looped) onto the northern façade of the
building.
• Vector Lights commemorates the Armistice
Centenary with a lighting and audio show Auckland Harbour
Bridge illumination, 4 – 11 November, 8pm to
midnight.
• An information kiosk will be open daily
from 10am–6pm.
Timelapse video – Featuring the
installation of 18,277 named crosses on the northern slopes
of the Auckland War Memorial Museum Tāmaki Paenga Hira and
in front of the Cenotaph.
If you have any specific filming requests, please call Chris Gregory to discuss. Media accreditation will be required for the commemoration on 11 November, and details regarding that will be sent at a later date.
Notes to editors
The Fields of Remembrance is the final, and largest, installation by the Fields of Remembrance Trust (FoRT), a partnership between the Auckland RSA, National RSA and the Passchendaele Society.
The Fields of Remembrance Trust is working alongside Ngāti Whātua, Auckland Council, Auckland War Memorial Museum, Auckland Tourism, Events and Economic Development, Eden Park Trust and the New Zealand Defence Force.
ends