And remembering the sacrifice of those who fought for their country, and for the freedom of their loved ones.
For many Anzacs in World War I - Albany, in Western Australia, was the last glimpse of their homeland. The soldiers who survived the war treasured the memory of the rugged granite coastline as they sailed out of Princess Royal Harbour. They watched the watery view until the rocky islands were a blimp in the distance but the faces of their loved ones remained etched in their minds. In 1962, Jack Nostrini took great pride in reconstructing the block base of the Desert Mounted Corps Memorial on Mt Clarence in Albany. The Monument had previously been erected in Port Said but was damaged during the Suez Crisis uprising in 1956. Jack's masonry skills and team leadership on this project grew a legacy of new Australian pride for himself and his family. Fifty years on, his Australian born son was a Senior Project Officer during the construction of the National Anzac Centre on Mt Adelaide, not far from where his father had contributed in the previous salute to those who gave their lives in the service of our nation.
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