People of London Memorial -- St Paul's Churchyard, City of London, UK
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Benchmark Blasterz
N 51° 30.856 W 000° 05.902
30U E 701328 N 5711007
This understated and elegant memorial in St Paul's Churchyard remembers the Londoners who died in the German bombing raids on London in WWII
Waymark Code: WMTCY9
Location: London, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 11/03/2016
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member ištván
Views: 2

This memorial, an evocative modern stone memorial, remembers the 30,000 Londoners killed in the bombing raids that occurred in the city during WWII.

The memorial is inscribed as follows:

[on top]

"In war, resolution. In defeat, defiance. In victory, magnanimity. In peace, good will."

[around the sides]

"REMEMBER BEFORE GOD, THE PEOPLE OF LONDON 1939-1945"

Nearby, a small plaque identifies who placed the memorial:

"This memorial, subscribed by readers of the Evening Standard, id dedicated to the people of London for their fortitude during the Second World War"

From the Exploring London blog: (visit link)

"10 more curious memorials . . . No. 4, "People of London" memorial

August 7, 2013

Amid all the grand war-related memorials of London, this rather humble memorial sitting outside the north transept of St Paul’s Cathedral in St Paul’s Churchyard can easily be overlooked.

Known as the Memorial to the Londoners killed in World War II Bombardments or simply as the ‘People of London’ memorial as it’s called on the sculptor’s website, it commemorates the 30,000 Londoners who were killed during the Blitz (not to be confused with the National Firefighters’ Memorial, known informally to many as the Blitz Memorial, which sits opposite the cathedral’s south transept and commemorates firefighters who died during the Blitz).

The round memorial was carved from a three tonne block of Irish limestone and is set into paving (it was initially very shiny).

The gilded inscription which runs around the outside reads “Remember before God the people of London 1939-1945” while on top, written in a spiral, is an inscription written by Sir Edward Marsh – “In war resolution, in defeat defiance, in victory magnanimity, in peace goodwill”, the text of which was used by Sir Winston Churchill in the frontispiece to his history, The Second World War.

Unveiled by the Queen Mother on 11th May, 1999, the memorial is the work of Richard Kindersley, whose other memorials include the Commonwealth Memorial on Constitution Hill.

Kindersley writes on his website, that the “position of the memorial adjacent to St Paul’s is most appropriate, as most people will remember the dramatic photograph of the Cathedral dome of the taken during a devastating attack in 1941.”

It was paid for by public funds raised following an appeal in the Evening Standard newspaper, launched in connection with the 50th anniversary of VE Day."
Date of Dedication: 01/01/1999

Property Permission: Private

Access instructions: visit St Paul's Cathedral, which is usually open to the public

Access times: From: 7:00 AM To: 7:00 PM

Location of waymark:
St Paul's Churchyard
South transept
London, UK


Commemoration: 30,000 Londoners killed in the bombings of London

Website for Waymark: Not listed

Visit Instructions:
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Master Mariner visited People of London Memorial -- St Paul's Churchyard, City of London, UK 11/06/2016 Master Mariner visited it
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