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The
Saluting Bunder
If we were to take a walk northwest
from The Prince of Wales
Crescent, past the Government and the P&O Coal Grounds, onto Jopp Promenade, and directly opposite the
Police Chowkee, we would have seen the Saluting
Bunder where six twelve-pounder guns, on 4-wheeled
carriages, were positioned for saluting arriving dignitaries.
In 1876 a cast iron shed was erected, supported by 8
posts. It had a semi rounded roof with a
full-length vent in the top.

HMT Euphrates off Saluting
Bunder 1875
The Saluting Bunder was later
renamed The Prince of Wales Pier.

Picture taken c. 1902.
Passenger ship belongs to the German East Africa Line (D.O.A
L.). She is probably the Burgurmeister (5,902 g.t.),
completed at the Flensburg yard in 1902.
The
Duke of Connaught visited Aden for the second time
in 1921. He had been due to land January 1st that
year on his way to India to open the Reformed
Legislative Council, but he was ill. He was travelling
on the battleship HMS Malaya and had been due to receive
a reception similar to the one he had been given on his
previous visit in 1905. But he was well enough to
receive on board the principal chiefs and the leading
citizens and officials of Aden. Fortunately on his
return journey he did land briefly to open the Memorial
Building on the Prince of Wales Pier, which had been
built and paid for by the Port Trust to honour those
servicemen who had lost their lives in Aden during the
Great War.

The War Graves
booklet mentions that a brass plaque was put up in the
hall to commemorate the 19 NCOs and men of the
Brecknockshires who died in 1915, nearly all from
heatstroke 4-5 July. Somewhere many years ago I thought
I had read that 21 died from heatstroke - but this
probably was the total UK casualties from heatstroke -
seven or eight gunners also died according to the
booklet.

War Memorial on the Prince
of Wales Pier. Sheikh Ahmad tomb to the right and
Hogg Tower above, on the
hill. |