Flanders Fields Memorial Garden

Memorial garden in London

51°30′1.66″N 0°8′8.85″W / 51.5004611°N 0.1357917°W / 51.5004611; -0.1357917

The Flanders Fields Memorial Garden at Wellington Barracks.

The Flanders Fields Memorial Garden is a monument dedicated to the participants of World War I situated alongside the Guards Chapel at Wellington Barracks in Central London, England.

The garden was opened by Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and King Philippe of the Belgians on 6 November 2014.[1] Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh and Prince William, Duke of Cambridge were also in attendance, alongside soldiers of the Household Division.[1]

Design

The garden was designed by the Belgian architect Piet Blanckaert.[1] The garden features a 'circular grass bed' which holds soil collected from Flanders in Belgium, the site of many battles in the Western Front of World War I and trees native to Flanders.[1] The grass bed is inscribed with words from the poem "In Flanders Fields" by John McCrae. A stone bench is also situated in the garden made from Flemish bluestone.[1] The curator of the memorial garden, Andrew Wallis, said that the garden's design was "...full of meaningful features" and it was a "...wonderful fusion of Belgo-Anglo craftsmanship."[1]

The soil held in the grass bed was collected by children from 70 war cemeteries and battlefields in Flanders in 'ceremonies of remembrance'.[1][2] Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh and Prince Laurent of Belgium were present for the ceremony in Ypres to hand over the sandbags of soil for the memorial on Armistice Day in 2013.[1] The soil was carried by Belgian and British schoolchildren and soldiers from the British Household Division, who loaded the soil onto a gun carriage of the King's Troop.[2] From Belgium the soil was transported by sea by the Belgian Navy's frigate Louisa Marie (F931) and was given to the British Army on 29 November 2013 while alongside HMS Belfast. The sandbags were then transported through London on the original gun carriage to the memorial garden.[2]

See also

Gallery

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "The Queen leads remembrance events in London". BBC News Online. 6 November 2014. Retrieved 6 November 2014.
  2. ^ a b c "The Memorial Garden". Flanders Fields Memorial Garden. The Memorial Garden. Retrieved 6 November 2014.

External links

  • Media related to Flanders Fields Memorial Garden, London at Wikimedia Commons
  • Official website
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Key: † No longer extant, on public display or in London (see List of public art formerly in London)
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