Listed building outline

Meldon War Memorial

Field Value Fact links
Reference 1458498 Facts
Prefix listed-building-outline Facts
Name Meldon War Memorial Facts
Dataset Listed building outline no fact link
Organisation Northumberland County Council no fact link
Start date 2018-08-28 no fact link
End date no fact link
Entry date 2018-08-28 Facts
Typology geography no fact link
Geometry MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.815082 55.150123, -1.815079 55.150131, -1.815092 55.150128, -1.815089 55.150124, -1.815082 55.150123))) Facts
Point POINT (-1.815085 55.150127) Facts
Notes Summary of Building Stone base for a flagpole, commemorating First World War service by parishioners. Reasons for Designation Meldon War Memorial, which stands outside the former School House, is listed at Grade II for the following principal reasons: Historic interest: * as an eloquent witness to the impact of world events on the local community, and the contribution it made in the First World War. Architectural interest: * an unusual First World War memorial comprising the surviving simple yet monumental flagpole base. Group value: * with the Church of St John the Baptist (Grade I) and Meldon Village Farmhouse (Grade II). History The aftermath of the First World War saw the biggest single wave of public commemoration ever with tens of thousands of memorials erected across England. This was the result of both the huge impact on communities of the loss of three quarters of a million British lives, and also the official policy of not repatriating the dead, which meant that the memorials provided the main focus of the grief felt at this great loss. Nevertheless, a small number of `Thankful Villages? - a term coined by Arthur Mee in 1936 - enjoyed the safe return of all their service personnel from theatres of conflict. More than 50 Thankful Villages have been identified in England and Wales. A number of these have plaques, Rolls of Honour, church windows, and other types of memorial marking the First World War service of parishioners. Instead of a war memorial commemorating the sacrifice made by men who had died, the people of Meldon raised a flagpole to record their thanks that those who had left the parish to serve in the First World War also all came home. Funds were collected by public subscription, and the memorial was made by Mr Robinson of The Clear House, Meldon. The stone base and timber flagpole were erected outside the former School House (not listed). A flagpole is an unusual choice for a memorial erected in the 1920s: the majority recorded by the War Memorials Register are post-Second World War. Notable examples include Sheffield?s Grade II*-listed memorial (1925), and flagpoles erected as part of whole schemes such as in the memorial garden of the Grade II-listed Birtley Cenotaph and shelters (1923). Sir Edwin Lutyens notably incorporated flags at a number of his war memorials: in carved and painted stone (such as at Spalding War Memorial, 1922, Grade I), metal (originally at the Civil Service Rifles War Memorial, 1924, Grade II*, replaced with stone); and textile (The Cenotaph, 1920, Grade I). Meldon?s timber flagpole has since gone but the monumental stone base is still in place. Details The memorial stands outside the front wall of the former School House (unlisted), approximately 130m to the north of the Church of St John the Baptist (Grade I-listed) and approximately 75m to the north of Meldon Village Farmhouse (Grade II-listed). It takes the form of a large stone pedestal with a moulded top, standing on a two-stepped circular base. The front of the pedestal is carved in the shape of a shield. The shield bears the dedicatory inscription, reading ERECTED/ TO/ COMMEMORATE THE VICTORY/ AND/ IN GRATEFUL THANKS/ FOR THE SAFE RETURN/ OF ALL THOSE MEN/ WHO LEFT THE PARISH/ TO SERVE IN/ THE GREAT WAR. The dates 1914 and 1919 are carved to either side of the shield?s base. Selected Sources Websites North East War Memorials Project, accessed 2 July 2018 from http://www.newmp.org.uk/detail.php?contentId=7987 National Grid Reference: NZ1188483991 Facts
Listed building 1458498 Facts

Available Code Snippets:

{
    "reference": "1458498",
    "prefix": "listed-building-outline",
    "name": "Meldon War Memorial",
    "dataset": "listed-building-outline",
    "organisation-entity": "220",
    "start-date": "2018-08-28",
    "end-date": "",
    "entry-date": "2018-08-28",
    "typology": "geography",
    "geometry": "MULTIPOLYGON (((-1.815082 55.150123, -1.815079 55.150131, -1.815092 55.150128, -1.815089 55.150124, -1.815082 55.150123)))",
    "point": "POINT (-1.815085 55.150127)",
    "entity": 42153072,
    "notes": "Summary of Building Stone base for a flagpole, commemorating First World War service by parishioners. Reasons for Designation Meldon War Memorial, which stands outside the former School House, is listed at Grade II for the following principal reasons: Historic interest: * as an eloquent witness to the impact of world events on the local community, and the contribution it made in the First World War. Architectural interest: * an unusual First World War memorial comprising the surviving simple yet monumental flagpole base. Group value: * with the Church of St John the Baptist (Grade I) and Meldon Village Farmhouse (Grade II). History The aftermath of the First World War saw the biggest single wave of public commemoration ever with tens of thousands of memorials erected across England. This was the result of both the huge impact on communities of the loss of three quarters of a million British lives, and also the official policy of not repatriating the dead, which meant that the memorials provided the main focus of the grief felt at this great loss. Nevertheless, a small number of `Thankful Villages? - a term coined by Arthur Mee in 1936 - enjoyed the safe return of all their service personnel from theatres of conflict. More than 50 Thankful Villages have been identified in England and Wales. A number of these have plaques, Rolls of Honour, church windows, and other types of memorial marking the First World War service of parishioners. Instead of a war memorial commemorating the sacrifice made by men who had died, the people of Meldon raised a flagpole to record their thanks that those who had left the parish to serve in the First World War also all came home. Funds were collected by public subscription, and the memorial was made by Mr Robinson of The Clear House, Meldon. The stone base and timber flagpole were erected outside the former School House (not listed). A flagpole is an unusual choice for a memorial erected in the 1920s: the majority recorded by the War Memorials Register are post-Second World War. Notable examples include Sheffield?s Grade II*-listed memorial (1925), and flagpoles erected as part of whole schemes such as in the memorial garden of the Grade II-listed Birtley Cenotaph and shelters (1923). Sir Edwin Lutyens notably incorporated flags at a number of his war memorials: in carved and painted stone (such as at Spalding War Memorial, 1922, Grade I), metal (originally at the Civil Service Rifles War Memorial, 1924, Grade II*, replaced with stone); and textile (The Cenotaph, 1920, Grade I). Meldon?s timber flagpole has since gone but the monumental stone base is still in place. Details The memorial stands outside the front wall of the former School House (unlisted), approximately 130m to the north of the Church of St John the Baptist (Grade I-listed) and approximately 75m to the north of Meldon Village Farmhouse (Grade II-listed). It takes the form of a large stone pedestal with a moulded top, standing on a two-stepped circular base. The front of the pedestal is carved in the shape of a shield. The shield bears the dedicatory inscription, reading ERECTED/ TO/ COMMEMORATE THE VICTORY/ AND/ IN GRATEFUL THANKS/ FOR THE SAFE RETURN/ OF ALL THOSE MEN/ WHO LEFT THE PARISH/ TO SERVE IN/ THE GREAT WAR. The dates 1914 and 1919 are carved to either side of the shield?s base. Selected Sources Websites North East War Memorials Project, accessed 2 July 2018 from http://www.newmp.org.uk/detail.php?contentId=7987 National Grid Reference: NZ1188483991",
    "listed-building": "1458498"
}
Loading...

© Crown copyright and database right 2025

Licensed under the Open Government Licence v.3.0.

Geographical area


Help improve this data

Give feedback on this dataset, or email your questions and corrections to digitalland@communities.gov.uk.