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Medal awarded to volunteer's at the Hove War Hospital Supply Depot, after one year's service. |
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Hove and Portslade played an active role during both World Wars.
In World War I, Hove Cricket Ground, Brunswick Lawns and some local parks were used for military training. Hospitals opened on Portland Road, Holland Road and Dyke Road, whilst German Officers were imprisoned in this building. Several local businesses became munitions factories making shell boxes, fuses and hand grenades. By the close of the war 641 Hove residents and 89 from Portslade Village had been killed in action.
Nineteen days after World War II was declared in September 1939, the Allied Supreme War Council met at Hove Town Hall. Prime Minister Chamberlain and the French Premier Daladier were flown into Shoreham Airport for the meeting and later lunched at the Princes Hotel.
HMS King Alfred on Hove's seafront, became the home of the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve. It trained over 22,500 naval recruits including actors Sir Alec Guinness and Sir Michael Horden and broadcasters Richard Baker and Sir Ludovic Kennedy.
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