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TOWTON
MEMORIAL SERVICE 1st April 2007 - Palm Sunday On Sunday 1st April a hand picked
delegation of BPP members visited the battlefield of Towton. This is
the third year running a wreath has been laid on the anniversary
of this the bloodiest balltle ever fought on English soil.
For the last wo years this has been a BPP delegation. A wreath of White Roses was laid by Bradford BPP member, Dave Brown on behalf of the Movement and in memory of the 29,000 Englishmen who died that bloody day. We will be back again next year! The Battle of Towton
Meanwhile, instead of following up his triumph at St. Albans with a decisive march on the capital, Henry VI opted for caution and withdrew his men north. The actual decision to pull back was probably Henry's, though he was easily led, particularly by his strong-willed queen, Margaret of Anjou. So the Lancastrians withdrew to their power base in the north, probably destroying as they did so their only real hope of a quick end to the conflict. Edward IV threw caution aside, quickly raised a fresh army, and pushed north on his enemy's heels. He caught up with them near the river Aire, where both armies spent the night on the cold, snowy ground. The Battle Edward immediately sent another force upstream to cross the river at Castleford and cut off Clifford's retreat. This fresh force caught Clifford's men and killed most of them within sight of their lines. Somerset, for reasons known only to himself, sent no troops to help the unfortunate Clifford, but instead waited for the advance of the main Yorkist army. Now the snow whipped up, driving full into the face of the Lancastrians. This made their attempts to return arrow fire laughable, and Edward's archers inflicted great damage. Perhaps because of this, Somerset ordered his men to advance first. In a terrible hand to hand fight that lasted all day the Lancastrians pushed their foe back, yard by bloody yard. The bodies piled high in the freezing cold, and fresh troops had to climb over corpses to reach the front lines. Edward's cause looked almost lost, when reinforcements arrived in the shape of men under the command of the Duke of Norfolk. Norfolk's men changed the course of the battle, and now it was the Lancastrians who were pushed back, across the field we now know as Bloody Meadow. Finally they could take no more, and Somerset's men broke and ran. At least as many perished in the panic that followed, and the death toll may have reached 28,000 men or more. Towton was by far the bloodiest battle of the Wars of the Roses. The Results Over
the next decade a further seven major battles were fought until the Battle of Tewkesbury in 1471 brought about a
lull in the struggle. But for the moment, Edward IV was free to prepare
for his coronation and enjoy his rule. ![]() Lord Dacre's Cross at Towton near Leeds
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