Arch Of Remembrance

About Arch Of Remembrance

The Arch of Remembrance is a war memorial in Victoria Park, Leicester, designed by Edwin Lutyens, comprising a monumental tetrapylon quadrifrons triumphal arch in a railed enclosure. It is one of 58 war memorials designed by Lutyens in the UK and elsewhere; the 44 in England are all listed buildings. The Arch of Remembrance became a listed building in 1955, and was upgraded to Grade I in 1996. It has been described as "the most imposing of Lutyens's English war memorials". BackgroundAfter the end of the First World War, a public meeting was held in Leicester on 14 May 1919, leading to the creation of a War Memorial Committee to propose a suitable memorial. Edwin Lutyens was selected as the architect. His original plan involved crossing avenues of lime trees to create the plan of a cathedral, with a Cenotaph at the west end, and a Stone of Remembrance at the crossing, within a circular walled enclosure, inscribed with the names of the dead. The funds raised were not sufficient to realise this ambitious plan, and the proposals were scaled back in March 1923, limited to a single memorial archway which became the Arch of Remembrance. Construction started on the revised memorial in 1923 and work was completed by 1925. The structure was begun by Nine Elms Stone and Masonry Works, and completed by Holloway Brothers (who also built the Cenotaph, Southampton for Lutyens). Due to a continuing shortfall of funding, the War Memorial Committee took out a bank loan to pay for the works to be completed, with five members as guarantors.

Arch Of Remembrance Description

The Arch of Remembrance is a war memorial in Victoria Park, Leicester, designed by Edwin Lutyens, comprising a monumental tetrapylon quadrifrons triumphal arch in a railed enclosure. It is one of 58 war memorials designed by Lutyens in the UK and elsewhere; the 44 in England are all listed buildings. The Arch of Remembrance became a listed building in 1955, and was upgraded to Grade I in 1996. It has been described as "the most imposing of Lutyens's English war memorials". BackgroundAfter the end of the First World War, a public meeting was held in Leicester on 14 May 1919, leading to the creation of a War Memorial Committee to propose a suitable memorial. Edwin Lutyens was selected as the architect. His original plan involved crossing avenues of lime trees to create the plan of a cathedral, with a Cenotaph at the west end, and a Stone of Remembrance at the crossing, within a circular walled enclosure, inscribed with the names of the dead. The funds raised were not sufficient to realise this ambitious plan, and the proposals were scaled back in March 1923, limited to a single memorial archway which became the Arch of Remembrance. Construction started on the revised memorial in 1923 and work was completed by 1925. The structure was begun by Nine Elms Stone and Masonry Works, and completed by Holloway Brothers (who also built the Cenotaph, Southampton for Lutyens). Due to a continuing shortfall of funding, the War Memorial Committee took out a bank loan to pay for the works to be completed, with five members as guarantors.

More about Arch Of Remembrance

Arch Of Remembrance is located at Leicester, United Kingdom