Southwark War Memorial
The St. Saviours Southwark War Memorial is a war memorial on Borough High Street, in the former parish of Southwark St. Saviour, to south of the River Thames in London. It became a Grade II listed building in 1998.
The memorial includes a bronze sculpture designed by Philip Lindsey Clark. He had enlisted as a private in the Artists' Rifles in 1914, and was commissioned in the 11th (Service) (1st South Down) Battalion of the Royal Sussex Regiment in 1916, ending the war as a captain with a DSO.
The bronze for the memorial was cast by the Maneti foundry in London.
The statue stands on a high stone pedestal with rounded ends. On its long sides are bronze reliefs: one with biplanes to the east and another with battleships to the west. On one side below the biplanes plaque is the inscription "Give honour to the men of St. Saviours Southwark who gave their lives for the empire 1914–1918. Their names are inscribed within the parish church. May their memory live for ever in the minds of men. " and on the other side below the battleships plaque is the inscription "This memorial was erected by the parishioners of Saint Saviour's Southwark in the year 1922." A model of the main figure was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1923.
The ends of the pedestal are decorated with stone carvings of St George and the Dragon to the front (south), and a carving of a mourning woman with child and dove to the rear (north).
The memorial was unveiled on 16 November 1922 by General Henry Horne, 1st Baron Horne, and dedicated on the same day by the Suffragan Bishop of Woolwich William Hough (or possibly by the Bishop of Southwark Cyril Garbett). A similar sculpture of an infantryman with rifle was used by Albert Toft for the Royal Fusiliers War Memorial in Holborn.
It was dismantled, restored and rebuilt in 2013, and rededicated in 2014 by the Dean of Southwark Andrew Nunn.
Coordinates: 51°30'15.35"N 0°05'27.18"W
Image: By Nigel Chadwick, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=14004227