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Home / New Zealand

Eketahuna soldier named in London call

By Andrew Bonallack
Wairarapa Times-Age·
17 Aug, 2014 07:12 PM3 mins to read

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POIGNANT: A sea of red ceramic poppies which form part of an art installation to commemorate World War I is seen in the dry moat of the Tower of London in England on August 4. When complete by November 11, each poppy will represent a British military death in the war.

POIGNANT: A sea of red ceramic poppies which form part of an art installation to commemorate World War I is seen in the dry moat of the Tower of London in England on August 4. When complete by November 11, each poppy will represent a British military death in the war.

An Eketahuna World War I soldier has had the honour of being named during the Tower of London's nightly roll call to commemorate the outbreak of the war.

Sapper John Harold Snell, whose name is commemorated on the 1914-1918 plaque at the Eketahuna War Memorial and on the Anzac Bridge at Kaiparoro, was chosen for the Roll of Honour on the evening of August 12 in London.

Each day at sunset, 180 names are read out at the Tower as the Last Post is played.

John Harold, also known as Jack, of the New Zealand Engineers, died on January 3, 1918, aged 25, of wounds inflicted at Ypres in Belgium.

His grave is in Belgium's Lijssenthoek Cemetery.

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His name was put forward by descendant Renny Snell, who lives in Britain.

Mr Snell, speaking to the Times-Age from his Surrey home, said he got his ancestor's name in "fairly early in the piece, thank goodness.

"After about 10 days, I was biting my nails," he said. "There's been an overwhelming response." He got notice John Harold's name would be read out on Tuesday evening.

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He and his wife attended the roll call at the tower, joining a crowd of around 500 outside.

They viewed one of the tower's yeomen walk into the field of ceramic poppies, an ongoing art installation in the Tower's dry moat, and stand on the mound among the poppies to call out the names at 8.40pm.

Mr Snell said it was an "evocative experience" which brought a lump to his throat.

A guardsman, who accompanies the yeoman, then plays the Last Post.

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Mr Snell, who worked for Shell, left New Zealand in 1969.

He is a descendant of the two original Snell families of Leeston, near Christchurch, and describes himself as "a keen student of the Snell family".

John Harold was born in Leeston but was living in Kaiparoro in Wairarapa when he left for war on April 1915, according to the Lijssenthoek cemetery database.

Mr Snell said John Harold served in Gallipoli as well as the Western Front.

During a recuperation period in England, he married Ysabel Emslie, but Mr Snell believes he may have only seen his bride on one more occasion after the wedding, before he was killed.

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Mr Snell visited the Anzac Bridge in Kaiparoro in the early nineties when "it wasn't in the pristine condition it is now".

The poppies are an evolving art exhibition called Blood Swept Lands and Seas of Red which will see 888,246 ceramic poppies 'planted' in the Tower's moat, to represent the fallen.

From the air, it appears as if the Tower is bleeding, an illusion heightened by suspended poppies appearing to 'gush' out of a Tower window.

The installation requires 8000 volunteers, with the last poppy to be placed on Armistice Day, November 11.

John Harold Snell is the uncle of Olympic and Commonwealth gold medallist Peter Snell, who visited the Anzac Bridge in 2007 to pay tribute to his Uncle Jack.

- additional information, Living in Kaiparoro, by Kay Flavell, Wairarapa Archives.

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