Armed Forces Memorial

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Armed Forces Memorial
United Kingdom

The memorial, photographed on 16 November 2007
For All soldiers killed on duty since the Second World War
Unveiled 12 October 2007
Location Coordinates: 52°43′34″N 1°43′41″W / 52.726, -1.728 near Lichfield, Staffordshire
Designed by Liam O'Connor

The Armed Forces Memorial is a national memorial in the United Kingdom, dedicated to the 16,000 servicemen and women of the British Armed Forces killed on duty or through terrorist action since the Second World War.

Contents

[edit] History

The creation of a national memorial for members of the Armed Forces killed on duty was announced by the Secretary of State for Defence in a statement in the House of Commons on 10 November 2000, to be funded by public subscription.

An international competition was held for the design of the Memorial, which was won by Liam O'Connor Architects and Planning Consultants. The project design team consisted of Liam O'Connor (architect), Christopher Barrett (project manager), Christina Godiksen, Robert Rhodes, and Daniel Benson. Liam O'Connor also designed of the Commonwealth Memorial Gates on Constitution Hill in London.[1] Ian Rank-Broadley contributed sculptural elements of the Memorial. He earlier sculpted the effigy of Queen Elizabeth II which has appeared on coins in the UK and Commonwealth coins since 1998. The design of the Memorial was officially unveiled at the Imperial War Museum, London on 6 April 2005.[2]

The Memorial was officially dedicated on 12 October 2007 in a ceremony attended by Queen Elizabeth II, Prime Minister Gordon Brown and Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams. It was opened to the public on 29 October 2007.[3] At the unveiling Charles, Prince of Wales said:

The magnificence of this new memorial will, at long last, provide a fitting recognition for all those killed on duty since the end of the Second World War. It does not differentiate between those killed in the heat of battle or on a training exercise, by terrorist action or on peace-keeping missions.[4]

In addition to the Memorial in Staffordshire, a memorial without names will be added to the South Cloister of Westminster Abbey, dedicated to members of the Armed Forces killed in conflict and the members of the Royal Fleet Auxiliary and the Merchant Navy who died in conflict zones since the end of the Second World War; and rolls of honour will be displayed at the St Martin-in-the-Fields (for the Royal Navy) and the chapel of the Royal Hospital Chelsea (for the British Army), in addition to the existing Rolls of Honour for the Royal Air Force at St Clement Danes in the Strand.

[edit] Design

Armed Forces Memorial, Alrewas, Staffordshire. Southern sculpture showing opening in wall aligned on the sun's position for 11 November (photographed 16 November 2007)
Armed Forces Memorial, Alrewas, Staffordshire. Southern sculpture showing opening in wall aligned on the sun's position for 11 November (photographed 16 November 2007)

The Memorial cost £6 million to build, principally funded by sales of a commemorative Trafalgar coin sold by the Royal Mint, and grants from the Millennium Commission. The Memorial takes the form of an earth tumulus (mound), 100 metres in diameter. Inspiration for the Memorial came from "the ancient burial mounds of our ancestors … that recollects monuments like Silbury Hill and the mounds around Stonehenge. [5]

The mound is surmounted by a Portland stone circle, with openings to the east and west and an obelisk at the eastern end. Within the circle are two straight stone walls, with bronze sculptures at their centres. The names of the 16,000 service personnel are carved into the Memorial's stone walls, with space for an additional 15,000 names to be added. The names of all those killed in combat, in training, on peacekeeping operations and on exercise are included. It includes the dead from operations in Palestine, Korea, Malaysia, the Falkland Islands, Iraq, Afghanistan and Northern Ireland.

The bronze sculptures are the work of Ian Rank-Broadley. The northern sculpture shows a wounded serviceman borne by comrades, watched by grieving friends and family. It represents the cost of armed conflict on those left behind. The southern sculpture shows the body of a fallen serviceman taken into the arms of his comrades, and a figure pointing through a narrow gap in the stonework to the world beyond. The structure is aligned so that at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month, the sun's rays will stream through the gap to illuminate the centre of the Memorial.

[edit] Location

The Memorial is located on a 150-acre site at the National Memorial Arboretum, at Alrewas near Lichfield in Staffordshire, which opened in 2001, where there are already a number of Service-related memorials. A central location in the UK, outside London, was chosen deliberately to ensure that the memorial was accessible to all communities in the UK.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Commonwealth Memorial Gates. Imperial war Museum. Retrieved on 2007-10-12.
  2. ^ Armed forces Memorial Appeal Launch. Retrieved on 2007-10-12.
  3. ^ "Queen unveils new forces memorial", BBC, 2007-10-12. Retrieved on 2007-10-12. 
  4. ^ "Queen unveils forces memorial", The Times, 2007-10-12. Retrieved on 2007-10-12. 
  5. ^ (2007) Armed Forces Memorial Appeal – Dedication Ceremony brochure, page 5. 

[edit] External link