The landscaping and relocation is now complete with a much better view as can be seen from the image with all the surrounding hedgerows drastically trimmed back and replanting of the borders.
The memorial was originally unveiled on the 9th November 2012 as a lasting tribute to the men of the 9th Battalion of The Royal Sussex Regiment and those who fought and died in the Burma campaign. The unveiling was in the presence of about 80 people including the late Stan Coombe and Ron Charrington BEM who were both veterans of the battle and instrumental in the concept and design of the memorial, along with Pinwe Club veterans and their families.
The central feature of the memorial is a stone which was collected from a remote and heavily forested ‘chaung’ (riverbed) in Northern Burma (now Myanmar) code-named ‘Stourbridge Chaung’, and the scene of a ferocious action as part of the bitter three week battle for the village of Pinwe, in which the 9th Battalion was heavily involved on the 9th November 1944, which broke the back of Japanese resistance on the Northern Burma sector.