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DetailsOriginal Format: 35mm Colour: Black & White Sound: Sound Duration: 30 secs
Summary This is a short film of the unveiling of the Marston Moor Memorial in 1939. The film is accompanied by a commentary.
Description This is a short film of the unveiling of the Marston Moor Memorial in 1939. The film is accompanied by a commentary.
The film begins at the foot of the new memorial, where Phillip King gives a reading on Cromwell. The unveiling is by Isaac Foot, President of the Cromwell Association, who makes a speech to an assembled crowd standing in front of the memorial.
Context
On a rather on a grey day, a sombre crowd assembles to witness the unveiling of a memorial to the 4,000, mainly Royalists, who fell at Marston Moor in one day in July 1644. Nearly three hundred years later in July 1939, with Europe on the verge of a much bloodier conflict, Liberal politician and founder and President of the Cromwell Association, Isaac Foot, speaks to the crowd before performing the ceremony.
Presumably the unveiling took place on or near the date of anniversary of the date...
On a rather on a grey day, a sombre crowd assembles to witness the unveiling of a memorial to the 4,000, mainly Royalists, who fell at Marston Moor in one day in July 1644. Nearly three hundred years later in July 1939, with Europe on the verge of a much bloodier conflict, Liberal politician and founder and President of the Cromwell Association, Isaac Foot, speaks to the crowd before performing the ceremony.
Presumably the unveiling took place on or near the date of anniversary of the date of the battle on 2nd July, 1644. The Battle of Marston Moor, just to the west of York, was the biggest of the battles of the English Civil War. The English and Scots, the Independents and Presbyterians, all united and sided with the Parliamentarians to defeat the Royalists who, consequently, lost their foothold in the North. Over the years many similar memorials have been erected to commemorate battles of the Civil War, often with annual battle re-enactments, as at Marston Moor. One of Isaac Foot’s sons was the left wing Labour politician Michael Foot, and a grandson was the even more left-wing journalist and political activist Paul Foot.