A century of sacrifice... Why the poppy reminds us of those we lost
It was in 1921 that a teacher named Anna Guérin, the originator of the Remembrance Day poppy who had been selling them in France for the benefit of war orphans, supplied the first ones to Britain. They were so popular that the following year the British Legion set up a factory, staffed by disabled ex-servicemen, to produce its own. It does so to this day.
The paper poppies symbolised the real ones that flourished on the Western Front during the First World War, in the soil churned up by the fighting and shelling.
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Hide AdToday, poppies are no longer exclusively red. White petals symbolise peace without violence and purple flowers are worn to honour animals killed in conflict.
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