The granddaughter and great-grandson of a Largs solider who tragically died in the last year of the Great War will lay a wreath as part of a very special Armistice this year.
It will be a poignant moment for the family who have lived in the town ever since the tragedy a century ago.
Linda Hopkins' grandfather Robert died near the end of the great war on 4 August 1918 in the Second Battle of the Marne, near Rheims, France. He was only 28.
A Lance Corporal, Robert was enlisted in the army joining the 1/6 Battalion (Black Watch), and was a hairdresser to trade in the town.
He died of wounds sustained in battle and was awarded the Military Medal for bravery in the field posthumously.
On Remembrance Sunday, 11 November, this year, the Largs branch of Royal British Legion Scotland wreath will be laid by the oldest member, President Jack Ransom.
Linda Hopkins, grand-daughter and Jay Morrow, 11 year old great great grandson of Robert Hopkins whose name is on the War Memorial, will also lay down wreathes. It is a special and historic milestone of the anniversary of the end of the Great War when the memorial will be taking place. 
Linda responded to an appeal in the 'News' earlier this year looking for descendants in the local area of soldiers who were listed on the Largs War Memorial to mark the centenary of the end of World War One.
Linda said: "It is a very special thing for our family to be asked and we are very honoured.
"I am the only one of the direct family now left in Largs, and it is special that I will be joined by my grandson Jay who lives in Kilwinning.
"After my grandfather got killed, my gran Agnes re-married a chap called John Chalmers who had come to Largs after the war to recuperate after losing both his legs following a shell explosion. They had two boys, and there is family that still exist in the local area.
"My grandfather actually had a shop in the Main Street and was a barber to trade. My gran had to get rid of the shop and that is when she moved to Kilmarnock.
"It was a nice touch that my grandfather was awarded a military medal for bravery posthumously, and it means that both my grandfathers were awarded military medals, as my grandfather on my mother's side John Crawford was also awarded. He was in France too and part of the Bute battery."
Linda has a special shrine dedicated to her grandfather in her back garden in The Roundel, and she says it helps bring a feeling of peace.
Ruth Gregory, secretary of the Largs Legion said: "The joint gesture of the old, middle aged and the young telling a story - here to remember the sacrifice made by the brave young men of the Great War - and of those in other wars and conflicts - and here to say, ‘Thank You’, to all who served, sacrificed and changed our world for the better."
Largs resident Jack Ransom, who has written a book called The Scottish Cockney, is now 98, and regularly featured in the 'News' in recent years
During the Second World War, Jack was taken prisoner of war by the Japanese and forced to work on the infamous “Death Railway” in Burma where he suffered cruel and inhumane treatment and saw many of his fellow soldiers die. Jack has been been speaking to local groups including the Largs Girls Brigade about the importance in remembering The Great War.