Person    | Male  Born 1920 

Unknown warrior

Categories: Armed Forces, Religion

The idea of a ceremonial burial for an unknown soldier came from a WW1 Army padre, Rev. David Railton. The French and the British acted on the idea in 1920 and over the years many other countries have followed suit.  The British monument is in Westminster Abbey and the first, annual, service took place there on 11 November 1920. To encompass all three armed services the body is known as the unknown warrior.

There is an interesting follow-up to the burial of the unknown warrior. By 2005 the number of surviving British veterans of WW1 had reduced to nine and the government decided that the last one should be offered a state funeral. In 2008 only three remained, by chance, representing the three services. In July 2009 only Harry Patch remained. Harry was never a man to allow his life or death to be used for empty nationalism; he repeatedly condemned war as 'a calculated and condoned slaughter’ and thus he refused a state funeral. But he did allow a large public one at Wells Cathedral near where he had lived all his life.

2023: We heard the 99% Invisible podcast episode "The Known Unknown". In the States an unknown was buried to represent all the unknown dead of WW1. Another unknown was then buried to represent all the unknown dead of WW2, and one was buried for the Korean War, and yet another for the Vietnam War. However, due to advances in medical science such as DNA analysis, it seems they had great difficulty finding any unidentified body from that war, and ended up burying one who, actually, they knew who it was. This truth did not come out for 14 years. Since then they have buried no more unknowns.

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Unknown warrior

Commemorated ati

Unknown warrior arrival

The vehicle used for the delivery was the Cavell Van, the railway wagon which...

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Other Subjects

W. L. Watts

W. L. Watts

Co-partner or employee of the South Suburban Gas Company. Served but did not die in WW1.

Person, Armed Forces

War served, WW1
1 memorial
Field Marshal, First Viscount Alanbrooke

Field Marshal, First Viscount Alanbrooke

Churchill's chief military advisor in WW2.  Born (and brought up) in France as Alan Brooke into the Irish aristocracy.  Entered the army aged 18 and served in Ireland and India and then in WW1, in ...

Person, Armed Forces, France, India, Ireland

1 memorial
Captain M. F. Blaney

Captain M. F. Blaney

Royal Engineer killed defusing a bomb. Awarded the George Cross posthumously and Blaney Crescent, E6, where we understand there is/was another plaque, was named for him. Blaney had already defused ...

Person, Armed Forces, Tragedy, Ireland

War dead, WW2
1 memorial
Sir John French, 1st Earl of Ypres

Sir John French, 1st Earl of Ypres

Born Kent.  1913 promoted field marshal. 1922 created earl of Ypres for his Irish services. 1923 appointed captain of Deal Castle. He made his home there and died there.

Person, Armed Forces

1 memorial
7th (City of London) Battalion, The London Regiment

7th (City of London) Battalion, The London Regiment

London unit which served in WW1. The 7th (City of London) Battalion had no traditional name, but was nicknamed the 'Shiny Seventh' because it wore brass buttons in a Regiment whose other battalion...

Group, Armed Forces

1 memorial