Monument | War dead | WW1

Spitalfields WW1 cairn

Inscription

{Along the cross-bar:}
Greater love hath no man than this that a man lay down his life for his friends.
{From John 15:13}

{On both sides of the upright:}
1914 - 1918

The cross is granite and is planted in a cairn of granite boulders, many of which have a flat section carved out and a name spelt out in lead lettering. This technique, used for all the inscriptions on the cross, was possibly chosen because, being a very hard stone, granite is not easy to carve. We noticed that there are some boulders with a flat section but no name - which suggests the cairn was built, or the stones prepared at least, before they know the total number of names.

This is an unusual way of arranging the names on a war memorial and not one we'd recommend to anyone wishing to make transcription easy. These 81 names have taken an inordinate amount of time to correctly transcribe, primarily because there is no way to process them systematically: top-down, left-right, spiral - none of these sequences will be certain to get them all once, and only once.

To check what we had done we asked a guide at the church if there was a list. A nice lady there gave us a copy of their typed list, and we found another list on-line. We are not the only ones who have found this task difficult: both those lists have errors - that's if you take the memorial itself to be correct. The best is the on-line list and we refer to that on our pages for the names where there are discrepancies. Where that list differs from ours we went back to our photographs so we feel pretty confident that our list is now the best. Note: we are not claiming ours is perfect!

Our objective is to correctly transcribe the names on the memorial. One has to allow for errors on the memorial itself - either introduced by the craftsmen who created it, or by the people responsible for drawing up the list from which the craftsmen worked. It is possible that the on-line list, while different from what's on the memorial, is actually more correct.

2023: Spitalfields Life has researched the names, plotted their homes on a map and photo'ed many of the buildings.

Site: Spitalfields WW1 cairn (1 memorial)

E1, Commercial Street, Christ Church Spitalfields garden

Spitalfields Life has a 1961 photo showing this memorial in its original location, where it was at the south west corner of the church and seems to have been inside its own railed area, about where the drive-way entrance is now. And another.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the subjects commemorated on the memorial on this page:
Spitalfields WW1 cairn

Subjects commemorated i

World War 1

We'd always assumed that this war was known as the Great War until WW2 came a...

Read More

Cpl. T. D. Anderson

The list gives "L/Corporal" but the memorial definitely has just "Cpl."

Read More

Show all 82

Nearby Memorials

Henry Reader Williams Clock Tower

Henry Reader Williams Clock Tower

N8, The Broadway

The bas-relief of Williams is by Sir Albert Gilbert.

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
WW2 Arctic Convoys memorial

WW2 Arctic Convoys memorial

EN1, Silver Street

Our image shows a close-up of the logo on the memorial. We think that the bird (a swallow?) used to be flying in front of an enamelled bl...

5 subjects commemorated, 6 creators
Finsbury war monument

Finsbury war monument

EC1, Rosebery Avenue, Spa Green Garden

The statue represents winged Victory on orb, lightly draped and holding a laurel wreath in extended left hand. There are bronze crossed l...

5 subjects commemorated, 1 creator
Rossetti fountain

Rossetti fountain

SW3, Chelsea Embankment

Unveiled by William Holman Hunt. There must have been a committee to erect this memorial because in the list on the back Forman is given ...

1 subject commemorated, 101 creators
Church WW1 Memorial

Church WW1 Memorial

E8, Kingsland Road

Very sad - a stump of a memorial that is also weathered into illegibility.

1 subject commemorated

Previously viewed

Sir Alexander Fleming

Sir Alexander Fleming

Born Lochfield, Scotland. Pharmacologist and bacteriologist who discovered penicillin in 1927. However he did not realise the significance and it was not until 1940 that Florey and Chain demonstrat...

Person, Medicine, Science, Seriously Famous, Scotland

6 memorials
Cecil C. Mays

Cecil C. Mays

Worked at the Stock Exchange and died in WW1.

Person

War dead, WW1
1 memorial
R. A. S. Thomas

R. A. S. Thomas

Surbiton man killed serving in WW2.

Person

War dead, WW2
1 memorial
Second Lieutenant Arthur Philip Abecasis

Second Lieutenant Arthur Philip Abecasis

Arthur Philip Abecasis was born in Paddington, London, in 1889, the youngest of the three children of Victor Emile Abecasis (1861-1929) and Amelia Frances Lucas Abecasis née Belinfante (1864-1939)....

Person, Armed Forces, France, Switzerland

War dead, WW1
3 memorials
James R. Clapham
War dead, WW1
1 memorial