That’s an interesting way to travel about and see things.
In 2018, the Lloyd’s Motor Club did a similar thing, finding the graves (or where there is no known grave, the name on the walls of ‘missing’ soldiers) of all those who worked in Lloyd’s. We found them all and photographed them. Some were buried overseas, including one in Iraq. Via the Lloyd’s agents, it was arranged for the local War Graves people to visit the grave sites and, if possible, photograph them. The gentleman in Iraq, who (through the thick and thin of war and God knows what else) tends the graves there, did exactly what he was asked to do. Lloyd’s Motor Club made a special donation to him.
The photographs and, where possible, a potted history of the person, Lloyd’s Motor Club had published into quite a nice book. Interestingly, Lloyd’s of London was itself very uninterested in the effort made, not least as it was deep into its much more ‘useful’ Diversity and Inclusion project. Make what you will of that. Hey-ho, the modern world!
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PS If I remember correctly, the person who kicked off the Lloyd’s Motor Club initiative (himself an amateur historian) discovered that:
A. Lloyd’s of London has no archivist. If true, that alone is a crime, given that Lloyd’s has been linked with just about every social, political and economic event, since its first coming into existence.
B. Had all but dumped the book recording the names of the fallen into a dusty locker in the basement. It would have been lost forever. It was found by the amateur historian after a search and then only because a Lloyd’s employee (known as, a ‘waiter’) remembered it. The waiter was about to retire and there are now none as such. Progress? I think not.