Great Eastern Railway War Memorial

War memorial in Liverpool Street station
51°31′3.94″N 0°4′55.76″W / 51.5177611°N 0.0821556°W / 51.5177611; -0.0821556
Liverpool Street station

near 
City of London
Commemorated1100
To the glory of God and in grateful memory of the / Great Eastern Railway staff who in response to the call of their / King and Country, sacrificed their lives during the Great War

The Great Eastern Railway War Memorial is a World War I war memorial installed at the Liverpool Street station in the City of London, United Kingdom.[1]

The large marble memorial plaque was created by Farmer & Brindley at a cost of £3,326. It lists over 1,100 names in 11 columns, with carved marble pilasters to either side, surmounted by a segmental pediment housing the arms of the Great Eastern Railway. An inscription at the top reads: "To the glory of God and in grateful memory of the / Great Eastern Railway staff who in response to the call of their / King and Country, sacrificed their lives during the Great War".

The memorial was originally located in the station's booking hall. It was unveiled on 22 June 1922 by Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson and dedicated by the Bishop of Norwich. A few hours later, Wilson was shot and killed on his own doorstep in Eaton Place, Belgravia, by members of the Irish Republican Army as he returned home from unveiling the memorial.

It was relocated c.1990 when the station was renovated, and moved to a site above the main station concourse, near the entrance from Liverpool Street. An inscription reading "Great Eastern Railway", removed from the nearby Harwich House when it was demolished as part of the renovations, was installed above the relocated memorial. Also relocated to the wall below the large war memorial are smaller memorials to Wilson, and to Captain Charles Fryatt, an officer of the Great Eastern Railway's marine service who was executed by the Germans in 1916 after being convicted at a court martial as a franc-tireur.

See also

References

  1. ^ Wilkinson, Alan (30 January 2014). The Church of England and the First World War. Lutterworth Press. ISBN 9780718893217. Retrieved 28 October 2015.

External links

  • Monument: WW1 at Liverpool Street Station
  • Imperial War Museum
  • v
  • t
  • e
Portrait sculpture
British/English
royalty
Arts
Explorers
Merchants
Military
Nurses
Politics
British
Prime ministers
Other politicians
International
Religion
Science and
engineering
Social reformers
and humanitarians
Sport
Fictional
characters
See also
Other monuments and memorials
War memorials
Pre-C20
Boer Wars
WWI · WWII
Regimental
Local
Corporate
Holocaust
Post-WWII
Blue plaques
Other works
Sculptures
Fourth plinth, Trafalgar Square
Elisabeth Frink
Barbara Hepworth
Henry Moore
Eduardo Paolozzi
The Line
Fountains
Murals
Banksy
Land art
See also
By location
City of Westminster
Key: † No longer extant, on public display or in London (see List of public art formerly in London)
Portals:
  • icon Architecture
  • icon London