Following the unveiling of the tablet in Westminster Abbey in 1926, requests were made to the Commission for permission to install replicas of the tablet in various locations. In some cases, full-scale copies were produced and installed in churches. In other cases, colour prints of the tablets were distributed to British Legion branches and other ex-servicemen organisations in the UK and abroad. An example of the latter is the framed colour print recorded in the
UK National Inventory of War Memorials as being held at a Royal British Legion branch in
Liverpool, UK. A similar print was presented by the Imperial War Graves Commission in 1935 to the Legacy Club in
Fremantle, Australia, later presented to the city council for safekeeping. A replica of the standard French tablet is installed at the museum (inaugurated in 1986) at the
Delville Wood Memorial. Two replicas of the Westminster tablet are maintained by the Canadian Agency of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. These replicas are located in the Church of the Ascension,
Hamilton, Ontario, and in
Christ Church Cathedral, Vancouver, British Columbia. The Hamilton tablet, erected by the
Royal Hamilton Light Infantry, was unveiled on 2 October 1927 by the former Lieutenant Governor of Ontario, Major General Sir
John Morison Gibson. As at the Westminster Abbey service the previous year, the hymn
O Valiant Hearts was included in the service. Major General
Sydney Chilton Mewburn addressed the congregation before the unveiling, and the memorial tablet was dedicated by the Lord Bishop of Niagara
Derwyn Owen. It was unveiled on the tenth anniversary of the Armistice (11 November 1928) by the Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia
Robert Randolph Bruce. A replica of the Westminster tablet was also installed in the Anglican Church of St George in
Baghdad, Iraq, in the 1930s. As with the original tablets, those maintaining the replicas had to make a decision after the Second World War whether to leave the wording of the inscription unchanged, or to update the wording. The tablet in Vancouver was updated to include the Second World War period from 1939 to 1945, and then again to include the
Korean War period from 1950 to 1953. Over the years since their installation, a number of the Commission's tablets in France and Belgium have required maintenance, restoration or replacement. Some were affected by damp (at Orléans and Laon), and some were damaged during the Second World War (at Rouen, Boulogne and Nantes). The replacement tablets were produced by Reginald Hallward's daughter Patricia Hallward. Another tablet to suffer war damage is the one that was installed in St George's Anglican Church in Baghdad, Iraq. The current church building was erected by the British in 1936 during the period when they controlled the area after the First World War. Worship resumed at the church in 1998 following a 14-year period of neglect. The stained glass windows, and the building itself, were memorials to the British regiments that fought Ottoman forces here in what was then Mesopotamia. Prior to the
war in Iraq in 2003, the memorial tablet was faded but undamaged. During the war, the tablet, mounted on the wall of the nave, was damaged by shrapnel. As reported by journalist
Robert Fisk in December 2003 and April 2012, parts of the inscription were damaged, with the initial lines and final lines still legible: "... in honour for ever". ==Notes and references==