Legendary England and Gloucestershire cricketer Jack Russell will be signing copies of his Final Roll Call book at the Soldiers of Gloucestershire Museum in Gloucester.
The wicketkeeper turned artist will be at the museum this Saturday from 11am and 2pm and all proceeds from his book will help sustain the museum for generations to come.
Russell has painted portraits of ten veterans of the 1951 Battle of the Imjin River which took place during the Korean War.
“It’s been quite a journey – we managed to find ten surviving Gloucestershire Regiment veterans or soldiers that were attached, so I set about trying to paint these guys and I’ve been doing over the last year or so,” explained Jack.
“The exhibition here at the museum will run for the whole of winter. It’s been an amazing journey for me. None of the pictures are for sale. I’ve just done it off my own back and just out of love for these guys in the regiment, and the experience of painting them has been beyond words, really. It’s been priceless.”
Jack’s fascination with the Korean War began when he was in his teens and he approached veteran, Sgt Henry Peglar, who was a driving instructor, at The Prince Albert in Rodborough.
“When I was 17, I got my provisional license, and I needed somebody to teach me to drive. My driving instructor was Sergeant Henry Pegler, who I used to meet in the Prince Albert Pub up in Rodborough.
“But I think I probably learned more about the Korean War and the Battle of the Imjin River than I did about driving. How I passed my driving test I don’t know!”
The exhibition runs from October 18th through to March next year.