This year, on 11 November, marks the 100th anniversary of the Unknown Warrior - an unidentified body chosen to represent all the soldiers, airmen and sailors who were lost in the First World War.
Brigadier General Louis John Wyatt was the General Officer in command of British troops in France and Flanders, as well as Director of graves, registrations, and enquiries. In this capacity, in a makeshift chapel at St Pol in France, Wyatt chose the body of a soldier to represent the Unknown Warrior. This unidentified body was chosen to represent the many lives lost and was buried with reverence in Westminster Abbey.
The funeral and burial in London of the Unknown Warrior on Armistice Day in 1920 was the biggest outpouring of grief the country has ever seen. Thousands lined the streets of the funeral procession from Victoria Station to Westminster Abbey. They had all come to pay their last respects, silent, many in tears, the men bareheaded. More than 10,000 people applied for a seat inside Westminster Abbey for the burial, whilst over the next week more than a million people filed past the Tomb of the Unknown Warrior. There was barely a family untouched by the Great War in some way.