
|
|
Crofton
Park War Memorial
"The
Glory of England"
Article
from The Kentish Mercury, June 4, 1920
In
the presence of a large gathering - which included Churchpeople,
Nonconformists, ex-sailors and soldiers, and boy scouts - General
Sir Ian Hamilton, G.C.B., G.C.M.G., D.S.O., unveiled on Saturday
afternoon a Celtic cross (an exact copy of the ancient cross of
St. Columb, Cornwall) which has been erected in the grounds of St.
Hilda's Church, Crofton Park, as a memorial of the 144 men and one
nursing sister (Miss Rosabelle Stanley) from the parish who laid
lown their lives in the war. The cross which is of Cornish granite,
is 14 ft in height, and the cost, upwards of £350, has been
subscribed by the relatives of the fallen and other residents in
Crofton Park. The names of those who made the supreme sacrifice
are carved, together with an inscription, on the base of the cross.
Sir
Ian Hamilton was received with a gaurd of honour furnished by the
1st (St. Hilda's) Crofton Park Troop of Scouts and the church-wardens
(Messrs. B. Ingram and F. H. Pascoe), a general salute being sounded
by trumpeters of the Army Ordnance Corps. In the procession from
the vestry, the Vicar (the Rev. A. Shirley) walked first, followed
by the augmented choir. General Ian Hamilton, the Bishop of Woolwich
(in cope and mitre), two former Vicars, the Revs. Courtenay Weeks
and C. T. Waring (Vicar of St. Philips, Sydenham), the Rev. Bruce
Walker (curate), and two former curates, the Revs. S. W. A. Collins
and S. Luscombe. There were also present in the enclosure the Mayor
of Lewisham (Councillor Harry Chiesman, J.P., M.B.E.), and the following
members of the Lewisham Borough Council:- Councillors Mrs. Allen,
Mrs. Cockerton, Garside, White, May, Elkerton and Marsh. Grouped
in front of the Memorial were a number of children, the names of
whose fathers and relatives are inscribed thereon.
The
opening hymn was "O God our help in ages past," and the
Bishop having blessed the people, Mr. R. J. Mines (hon. sec. of
the memorial fund) read the names of the fallen. Under the direction
of Mr. A. E. Perry, F.R.C.O. (organist and choirmaster of the church),
the choir lead the singing of Arkwright's "O valiant hearts,"
and the Rev. Courtenay Weeks read a lesson from Wisdom, first chapter,
eighth verse ("The souls of the righteous are in the Hand of
God"), which was followed by the antiphon "Give rest O
Lord to Thy servants and Thy saints" and the 121st Psalm ("I
will lift up mine eyes"). The Vicar recited the opening sentences
of the "Burial Service" after the General Sir Ian Hamilton
gave the address.
The
General said that those boys - they were most of them very young
- in whose remembrance a memorial was now to be unveiled, were just
their own boys. There was nothing about them to mark them out from
their fellows in offices, workshops, factories. They were not a
caste apart, soldiers by profession or soldiers of fortune. They
were workers, shielded always, as was the British tradition, from
the miseries of war by a Regular Army. So it came that in the early
summer of 1914 those whose names were inscribed on the memorial
were absorbed in their own affairs; educating themselves at school
for their career, or already earning their living. No scene more
peaceful could be imagined than that through which suddenly there
sounded an alarm; a call which rang through the quiet countryside
and stilled the bustle of the town - "The Enemy!" How
it had all happened no one exactly knew, but there the emeny stood
at the gate; howitzers, machine guns, high explosives; war-trained
straining at the leash after a hundred years of conscription. So
what did these boys do - hands that had never held a sword, minds
that had never dream of war? Why, they downed their tools, books
or pens and picked up their rifles. Their fathers and mothers were
cut up; there was a girl, perhaps through whose soul there passed
a chill and deadly fear; but, on the whole, there was no fuss; quite
simply they went; no grand send-off or cheering crowd, because everyone
that worthy of the name of Britain was doing the same; it seemed
the natural, the only thing to be done. This manner of the going
of our young men to war would be accounted for ever and ever the
chief glory of England and Scotland; at the same time, an explanation
and a justification of the magnificence of the British Empire. He
was about to unvail the names of men in the day were free; not the
record of registered numbers who got orders to take the field and
mechanically obeyed. They were live, free men of Crofton Park and
they went on their own. Five million volunteers - that was what
no historian would be able to understand. That was what no foreigner
could understand now - no, not one of them. Voluntaryism - freedom
- for they were twins - formed the finest foundation for a great
Empire. They understood why they went, for they were their own boys;
they loved them and through love they understood. He
was not worthy to unveil the memorial, but some of them present
thought him worthy and wrote as follows: "Please Sir Ian, do
come if you can. We are only a working class district, and have
no influence, but we did love our boys and want to honour their
memory as much as we possibly can." "So," concluded
the galiant General, "I unveil this Celtic Cross, more glorious
as a record of our race than marble Kings and Queens, or even than
the Abbey that holds them."
The
Bishop then dedicated the memorial, and the impressive service terminated
with the National Anthem and the "Last Post" and "Reveille"
sounded by the trumpeters.
The
cross, designed by Messrs. F. H. Greenaway and J. E. Newberry, the
architects of the church, was prepared and built by Mr. W. Richards,
monumental sculptor, of Brockley Road. The Vicar was chairman of
the memorial committee, who comprised: Mr. R. J. Mines, hon. secretary;
Messrs. B. Ingram Bryant and F. H. Pascoe, hon. treasurers; Messrs.
E. Lester, G. A. Westlake, T. Sherborne, C. H. Johnson, and F. W.
Lee, Mrs. Harrop, Mrs, Midgley, and the Misses J. Hoge, M. Mergan
and O. W. Brooker, committee.
Special
services of thanksgiving were held all day on Sunday, the Vicar
preaching in the morning and the Rev. W. Bruce Walker in the evening.
A combined service for the young people of the church was held at
the cross in the afternoon, the Vicar officiating.
|