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Thank you, Roger.
The Walter Tull exhibition toured natiionally, and was part of a big educational project involving hundreds of young folk across the country and in Scotland. It was around the time of the 90th anniversary of the Armistice, and we spent the actual anniversary in Westminster and the Abbey, with members of Walter's family and the families of other casualties, and with young folk from Walter's old school in Folkestone. It was a day of looking back and looking forward - the young folk were delightful and so enthusiastic, and really helped make it a perfect way to mark such an important anniversary.
There are some plaques in Folkestone for Walter Tull, eg on the bandstand on the Leas, his old school, and on the Christchurch tower. Members of Walter's family still live in Dover, and in Kent; others are in Scotland. Walter Tull is on two memorials in Dover - at River, where his sisters and stepparents lived, and on the Town Memorial outside Maison Dieu House. He's also on a scroll inside River Parish Church.