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The Great Britain Guide

Memorials & monuments · London

Tower Hill Memorial

ModernFree admission♿ Wheelchair accessible

Tower Hill Memorial is a memorial in the United Kingdom.

Tower Hill Memorial, memorials & monuments in London

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Plan your visit

Typical visit
15 min–45 min
Nearest railway station
Tower Hill · 0.1 km
  • Free entry
  • Dog-friendly
  • Wheelchair accessible

About

Tower Hill Memorial is a public memorial or monument in the United Kingdom. Records date its origin to 1928. OpenStreetMap heritage rating: 2/5. Wheelchair accessible (per OpenStreetMap). Coordinates: 51.5097°, -0.0777°.

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From the Wikipedia article

The Tower Hill Memorial is a pair of Commonwealth War Graves Commission memorials in Trinity Square Gardens, on Tower Hill in London, England. The memorials, one for the First World War and one for the Second, commemorate civilian, merchant seafarers and fishermen who were killed as a result of enemy action and have no known grave. The first, the Mercantile Marine War Memorial, was designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens and unveiled in 1928; the second, the Merchant Seamen's Memorial, was designed by Sir Edward Maufe and unveiled in 1955. A third memorial, commemorating merchant seamen who were killed in the 1982 Falklands War, was added to the site in 2005. The first memorial was commissioned in light of the heavy losses sustained by merchant shipping in the First World War—more than 17,000 people died and some 3,300 British and Empire-registered commercial vessels sunk as a result of enemy action. The Imperial War Graves Commission (IWGC) commissioned Lutyens, who initially designed a massive arch on the banks of the River Thames, but this was rejected by the authorities, to Lutyens' disdain. A compromise was struck, as a result of which the memorial was constructed in Trinity Square Gardens on Tower Hill, a site further from the river but with a long maritime history. The site was Crown land, meaning a special Act of Parliament was required to allow the construction. Queen Mary unveiled the memorial on 12 December 1928 at a ceremony broadcast live on the radio, her first use of the medium. The memorial is a vaulted corridor reminiscent of a Doric temple and similar to Lutyens' structures in cemeteries on the Western Front. The walls are clad with bronze panels which bear the names of the missing. Merchant shipping losses in the Second World War were significantly higher than in the first (4,786 ships, 32,000 lives) and the IWGC commissioned a second memorial on the same site, intended to complement the first. Maufe designed a sunken garden, accessed by steps behind the…

Excerpt from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0. See the source article linked in Sources below.

Background

History

The IWGC sought advice on the form of the memorial from the seafarers' unions, who consistently requested a memorial in the form of a home for aged seamen or similar, but the commission was set against functional memorials in the belief that they became associated more with their function than with commemoration. It rejected the request, overruling its own advisory committee in doing so, on the grounds that its charter did not allow it to fund the ongoing costs of an institution. It insisted that merchant seamen would be commemorated on a monument. Lutyens described the RFAC's opinion as "bosh", and suggested to Ware that they should continue regardless and force a confrontation. Ware was…

Architecture

, which Lutyens also designed for the IWGC, has been compared to the Mercantile Marine Memorial.]] The main structure is in Portland stone. It takes the form of a vaulted colonnade or pavilion reminiscent of a Doric temple but open at both ends. It is raised on a platform slightly above street level, oriented east to west and accessed from the street by a set of five stone steps at each end. The structure is 21.5 m long by 7 m wide and up to 10 m tall. It consists of three bays on either side, created by eight alternating square piers and six pairs of round columns. The eight piers are clad in rectangular bronze panels to give the impression of rustication. The panels (divided into 24…

Sourced from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Coordinates
51.5097, -0.0777
Parish
City of London, unparished area
Postcode
EC3N 4AL
Parliamentary constituency
Cities of London and Westminster
Established
1928
Nearest railway station
Tower Hill0.1 km
Official site
www.hrp.org.uk

Sources

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Frequently asked questions

Where is Tower Hill Memorial?
Tower Hill Memorial is in London, United Kingdom (postcode EC3N 4AL), in the parish of City of London, unparished area.
When was Tower Hill Memorial built?
Built or established in 1928.
Is Tower Hill Memorial free to visit?
Yes, Tower Hill Memorial is free to enter.
How do I get to Tower Hill Memorial?
The nearest railway station is Tower Hill, about 0.1 km away. Drivers can navigate to postcode EC3N 4AL.