Better late than never ...
I gather that a forgotten hero has finally been remembered on Parliament's World War One memorial, 102 years after he was killed.
The marble installation recognises the sacrifice of peers, MPs, MPs' sons, and senior officers of Parliament, who died in service during the Great War.
But this year a historian realised one former MP had been left off.
Lieutenant Gerald Arbuthnot, once the Conservative MP for Burnley, has had his name belatedly added. The 44-year-old was killed in action in 1916 during the Battle of the Somme.
Dr Kathryn Rix, from the History of Parliament Trust, spotted his name's absence from the memorial.
"I think perhaps it was because he wasn't an MP for very long," she said. "Perhaps people didn't remember he was an MP between January and December 1910.
"Also he was a former MP at the time and they weren't originally added to the memorial in 1921.
"But then some former MPs were added in 1922, so really, he should have been added at that time.
"They just forgot him - which is rather sad - but now he is being remembered."
The marble installation recognises the sacrifice of peers, MPs, MPs' sons, and senior officers of Parliament, who died in service during the Great War.
But this year a historian realised one former MP had been left off.
Lieutenant Gerald Arbuthnot, once the Conservative MP for Burnley, has had his name belatedly added. The 44-year-old was killed in action in 1916 during the Battle of the Somme.
Dr Kathryn Rix, from the History of Parliament Trust, spotted his name's absence from the memorial.
"I think perhaps it was because he wasn't an MP for very long," she said. "Perhaps people didn't remember he was an MP between January and December 1910.
"Also he was a former MP at the time and they weren't originally added to the memorial in 1921.
"But then some former MPs were added in 1922, so really, he should have been added at that time.
"They just forgot him - which is rather sad - but now he is being remembered."
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