Beta This is a new service and a map in progress — works, photographs and cities are still being added. Your feedback helps.
Memorial

Royal Naval Division Memorial

1925-01-01 Covent Garden, London
Royal Naval Division Memorial
Eluveitie · CC BY-SA 3.0

About this work

The Royal Naval Division Memorial is a First World War memorial located on Horse Guards Parade in central London, and dedicated to members of the 63rd Division (RND) killed in that conflict. Sir Edwin Lutyens designed the memorial, which was unveiled on 25 April 1925—ten years to the day after the Gallipoli landings, in which the division suffered heavy casualties. Shortly after the war, former members of the division established a committee, chaired by one of their leading officers, Brigadier-General Arthur Asquith, to raise funds for a memorial. Progress was initially slow. The committee planned to incorporate its memorial into a larger monument proposed by the Royal Navy for Trafalgar Square. When the navy abandoned that project, the RND's committee decided to proceed independently. They engaged Lutyens, who, after negotiation with the Office of Works, produced a design for a fountain connected to the balustrade of the Admiralty Extension building.

Description from Wikipedia, CC BY-SA 4.0.

E
Eric Raymond Broadbent
1896–1965 · United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
View artist