Today is Remembrance Sunday, a day of reflection when the nation unites to make sure that no-one is forgotten and to remember and honour those who have sacrificed themselves to secure and protect our freedom.
This year people are being encouraged to mark Remembrance Sunday by taking part in remote and socially distanced remembrance activity - pausing for the Two Minute Silence in their home or on their doorsteps.
Here are our readers' photos of their loved ones who took part over the years on active service at home and abroad as conscript and volunteers.
They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old:
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
1. John Anderson, aged 20, taken on 20th December 1941
John Anderson, volunteered for the RAF in 1939, aged 18. He then served for six years, being involved both in the Battle of Britain and D-Day as a Radar and Radio Technician. He settled in Corby with his wife Rotraut, a German nurse. He set up and ran the Physiotherapy Department in the newly built Nuffield Diagnostic Centre. From 1954 to 1986
2. Kettering Ladies Fire Brigade - Second World War
Daniel Craig said: "My great auntie Ida was part of the first ladies fire brigade in Kettering during WW2. Here is a picture of those brave ladies. My great auntie was the one on the far left. She died in 2004 at the fantastic age of 99."
3. Walter Turner - First World War
Born in 1898 in Havelock St, Kettering, Private Walter Turner served in the Royal Sussex Regiment. He was on the SS Transylvania when it was torpedoed off the coast of Italy in 1917 and was in the water for 8 hours. There is a plaque in the parish church for this. He laid a wreath every year until ill health stopped him. He died in 1989 aged 91.
4. George Thompson - Second World War
Andrew Thompson sent this picture is of his granddad George Thompson who was a truck driver in Africa (Desert Rat). His other grandfather Reginald Parker went D-Day on his birthday and got badly injured, both survived.