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Plymouth Naval Memorial

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Unveiled
  
29 July 1924

Total commemorated
  
23,211

Designed by
  
Robert Lorimer

Opened
  
29 July 1924

Plymouth Naval Memorial

Address
  
Hoe Promenade, Plymouth PL1, UK

Hours
  
Open today · Open 24 hoursWednesdayOpen 24 hoursThursdayOpen 24 hoursFridayOpen 24 hoursSaturdayOpen 24 hoursSundayOpen 24 hoursMondayOpen 24 hoursTuesdayOpen 24 hoursSuggest an edit

Architects
  
Robert Lorimer, Edward Maufe

Similar
  
Portsmouth Naval Memorial, Smeaton's Tower, Plymouth Hoe, Tower Hill Memorial, Plymouth Sound

The Plymouth Naval Memorial is a war memorial in Devon, England to British and Commonwealth sailors who were lost in the World Wars.

Contents

History

After World War I, the Royal Navy wanted to find a way to commemorate sailors who had died at sea and had no known grave. An Admiralty committee recommended building memorials at the three main naval ports in Great Britain – Plymouth, Chatham, and Portsmouth. The memorials at all three sites were designed by Sir Robert Lorimer with sculpture by Henry Poole.

Following World War II, the naval memorials were expanded to commemorate the dead from that war. Sir Edward Maufe performed the architectural design for the expansion at Plymouth, and the sculpture was by Charles Wheeler and William McMillan.

The Plymouth memorial also bears the names of sailors from Australia, South Africa, and India. The Plymouth Naval Memorial commemorates 7,251 sailors of the World War I and 15,933 of the World War II.

Other memorials in Halifax and Victoria in Canada, Auckland, New Zealand, Mumbai, India, Chittagong, Bangladesh, and Hong Kong commemorate sailors who came from those parts of the Commonwealth. The Newfoundland Memorial at Beaumont Hamel in France bears the names of 229 Newfoundland sailors lost at sea during World War I.

The memorial is maintained by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. It became a Grade II listed building in 1975, upgraded to Grade II* in 1998, and was further upgraded to Grade I in May 2016 for the centenary of the Battle of Jutland.

Location

The memorial is situated centrally on The Hoe which looks directly towards Plymouth Sound.

Design

The memorial features a central obelisk, with names of the dead arranged according to the year of death. Those for the First World War are on panels affixed to the obelisk's base; those for the Second World War are on panels set into the surrounding wall. Within each year, the names are grouped by service, then by rank and surname.

Sailors commemorated at Plymouth

World War I:

  • Lieutenant Cecil Halliday Abercrombie and Lieutenant-Commander John Skinner Wilson, Scots rugby internationals.
  • Sergeant, Royal Marines Light Infantry, John Costello, English soccer player.
  • World War II:

  • Master-at-Arms W. G. E. Luddington, Royal Navy rugby representative player.
  • Admiral Sir Tom Phillips.
  • References

    Plymouth Naval Memorial Wikipedia