Thornton-Cleveleys War Memorial | |
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England | |
For soldiers who died and served in World War I and World War II | |
Unveiled | 1923 (101 years ago) (1923) |
Location | 53°52′18″N 3°00′39″W / 53.87173°N 3.0107°W / 53.87173; -3.0107 |
Designed by | Albert Toft |
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Erected in 1923, the Thornton-Cleveleys War Memorial is located in the English conurbationofThornton-Cleveleys, Lancashire. A Grade II listed structure, it stands in a small garden in the southwestern corner of a junction known as Four Lane Ends.[1][2]
The war memorial, designed by Albert Toft and sculpted by W. L. Cookson, consists of a bronze statue depicting a soldier standing with a rifle. The statue is on a square granite shaft, on a tapered plinth, on a base of two steps. On the shaft is an inscription and the names of those lost in the First World War. In front and at the sides of the memorial are three granite tablets in the form of open books with the names of those lost in the Second World War. Colonel Hugh Jeudwine was present at the memorial's unveiling on 11 November 1923.[1][2]
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Sculptures |
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