If it is Hastings Abbey then the thing it marks is the spot old Harold
died on.
The battle lines were further away on top of the ridge nearby....Brave but terminally impatient and undisciplined battle and march weary Saxons at the top of the ridge, orrible horse mounted garlic gobbling descendents of Viking pirates who got lost on their way to Norfolk in the swampy flat bit at the bottom led by William The Bastard...and he was. Harold supposedly got shot in the eye with an arrow, and so wasnt there to make sure the shield wall held its ground. They chased the retreating frogs down the hill, the cavalry turned on em and carved em to bits. The shield wall collapsed and the Saxons ran, chased down by the frog horsemen as Harold lay dying at the site of the Abbey. Thus the kingdom fell. William, living up to his name, had his knights desecrate the dead kings body, then made sure his burial site remained unmarked, so nobody is sure where he is buried. William spent his reign massacring Saxons, his son spent his hunting them for sport. Until the reign of Edward III, the first truly English king, the official language of England was Norman French. Normans are called Normans because like them its a bastardised version of "Norse"...they are not actually French, as any Norman will tell you.
Its one of only two battlefields where an English king died on the field of battle. The other one is Bosworth where Richard III died.
Then again, Im not that sure it IS Hastings abbey.
Next one.....
The shipwreck is of the SS Samtampa but the funeral cortege photo is that of the brave lifeboatmen of Mumbles Lifeboat Crew who went out into a massively stormy sea depite being told not to go. They all died attempting to rescue the crew of the SS Samtampa. Happened in 1947.
It was on a program called "Coast" about coastal Britain last week on True Explore Channel 2 which shows a lot of BBC history stuff and is well worth watching

I recognised the photo of the kids and so looked it up.

"Science flew men to the moon. Religion flew men into buildings."
"To sin by silence makes cowards of men."