Volunteers from a Norfolk lifeboat station took part in their town's Remembrance Day service on Sunday, 10 November.
The Hunstanton crew joined the parade from the town hall to the town's war memorial, before a wreath laying at the town's war memorial, which carries 71 names of the fallen.
Dignitaries, veterans and service personnel present and past, including a contingent from the American Air Force took part, along with people from local organisations and businesses.
Lifeboat and hovercraft crew member Roger Smith carried the station's standard, while senior hovercraft commander Lee Torrice laid a wreath on behalf of Hunstanton RNLI.
Roger's great, great maternal uncle, John Scott, was a 19-year-old private in the Norfolk Regiment, who grew up in Hunstanton and died on the Western Front in October, 1917.
His name is carved on the war memorial at nearby King's Lynn, where he worked as a hairdresser before joining the army in 1915 and being posted to the trenches the following year.
'I felt honoured to represent my crew,' said Roger after the service.
'My great, great uncle fought at the Battle of the Somme and his body was never recovered, only his wallet.'
He added his mother Libby became emotional when he turned 19 - the age at which her great-uncle was lost.
Launch authority Jeff Lenton's distant cousin Gerald Lenton is remembered on the Cenotaph at Hunstanton.
He was Second Lieutenant in the 2nd Battalion of the Bedfordshire Regiment, who also fell on the Western Front.
He died of his wounds on 27 July, 1917, aged 33 and is buried at Lijssenthoek Military Cemetery in Belgium.
Jeff, who grew up in Wimblingon, in Cambridgeshire, remembers taking the train to Hunstanton for days out with his parents in the 1960s.
He said while his mother and father visited members of Gerald Lenton's family in the seaside town, he spent his visits roller skating to pop music on a rink where the fair now stands.
He said he would love to get in touch with family members in the area.
Hunstanton Mayor Mike Ruston was pleased with the Remembrance Day turnout, with hundreds attending.
'The fears of attendance dwindling with the generations haven't been realised,' he said.
Editor's notes
Hunstanton's Cenotaph carries 71 names. They include 54 who fell in the First World War (1914 - 18), 15 who fell in the Second World War (1939 - 45) and two who died in peacetime.
A memorial nearby carries the names of 32 people who died when in the East Coast floods of 1953.
RNLI media contacts
For more information call Chris Bishop, Hunstanton RNLI volunteer Deputy Lifeboat Press Officer on 07584 147219, Clare Hopps, RNLI Regional Communications Manager, North and East on 07824 518641, or the RNLI Press Office on 01202 336789.
Key facts about the RNLI
The RNLI charity saves lives at sea. Its volunteers provide a 24-hour search and rescue service around the United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland coasts. The RNLI operates 238 lifeboat stations in the UK and Ireland and more than 240 lifeguard units on beaches around the UK and Channel Islands. The RNLI is independent of Coastguard and government and depends on voluntary donations and legacies to maintain its rescue service. Since the RNLI was founded in 1824, its lifeboat crews and lifeguards have saved over 146,000 lives.
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