Event    From 18/6/1815  To 18/6/1815

Battle of Waterloo

Categories: Armed Forces

Just like a Hollywood movie that doesn't know when to end, Napoleon escaped from Elba, and returned for one last attempt at world domination. The memorial at the station refers to the "Allied armies" which rather recalls the WW2 term for the good guys. In 1815 these were: Austria, Prussia, Russia and the UK. Our picture source, the BBC, has a pretty good timeline for the Battle, which the Allies won, by the way.

Waterloo, once countryside in the Netherlands, is now a suburb of Brussels in Belgium.

For the story of how the news of the victory at Waterloo reached London see The Waterloo Way.

2022: The Guardian reported on the on-going mystery of what happened to the dead. Tens of thousands of men and horses died but the bones seem to have disappeared. It was thought that the bones were collected and pulverised into fertiliser for agricultural use. Academic archaeologists have been researching reports from the time and are planning a visit to the battlefield to see if they can find some graves.

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Battle of Waterloo

Commemorated ati

Achilles statue

Modelled on the statue of Dioscuri in Rome. A gay friend of ours is fond of ...

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Battle of Waterloo

The Fitzwilliam Museum has a page showing an original medal and: "The victory...

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Duke of Wellington statue - EC2

Unveiled in Wellington's presence, this is one of only a handful of statues i...

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Show all 7

Other Subjects

W. D. Grout

W. D. Grout

Co-partner or employee of the South Suburban Gas Company. Served but did not die in WW1.

Person, Armed Forces

War served, WW1
1 memorial
Lord Douglas Haig

Lord Douglas Haig

1st Lord Haig. Born Edinburgh into the whisky family. Senior commander during WW1. Initially nicknamed "butcher of the Somme", but then popular before his death. He has since been criticised for mi...

Person, Armed Forces, Scotland

3 memorials
WPC Jane Arbuthnot

WPC Jane Arbuthnot

Andrew Behan has researched this woman: Woman Police Constable Philippa Jane Arbuthnot was born on 8 October 1961, the youngest of the four children of Lieutenant Commander John Keith Arbuthnot O.B...

Person, Armed Forces, Tragedy

1 memorial
Joint Service Defence College

Joint Service Defence College

A training academy for British military personnel. It was established as the Combined Staff College in Latimer, Buckinghamshire. Renamed the National Defence College in 1971. Moved to Greenwich in ...

Place, Armed Forces, Education

2 memorials

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Henry Weekes

Henry Weekes

Sculptor.  Born Canterbury.

Person, Sculpture

5 memorials
King Cole

King Cole

E2, Meath Gardens

This website confirms that the Aboriginal words mean the same as the preceding line.

2 subjects commemorated, 1 creator
Charles Pope VC

Charles Pope VC

E1, Sidney Square

{Below an image of a Victoria Cross medal:} Lieutenant Charles Pope, Australian Imperial Force (Western Australia), 15th April 1917.

War dead | WW1
2 subjects commemorated, 1 creator
Ha-ha in Hyde Park

Ha-ha in Hyde Park

W2, West Carriage Drive

We find the terminology used on the information board confusing; 'bastion' is used when 'ha-ha' would make more sense.  British History s...

4 subjects commemorated, 1 creator
Deep Lee

Deep Lee

Cyclist. 24-year-old fashion student going to college on the first day of her final year of a design degree course at Central St Martin's at its new King's Cross campus. At about noon on Monday she...

Person, Cyclist, Tragedy, Korea

1 memorial