91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Monument

Bomber Command Memorial

Erection date: 28/6/2012

Inscription

{Inside the pavilion, on the west end:}
The fighters are our salvation but the bombers alone provide the means of victory.  Winston Churchill. September 1940 

{On the north side:}
This memorial also commemorates those of all nations who lost their lives in the bombing of 1939 - 1945. 

{On the east end:}
This memorial is dedicated to the 55,573 airmen from the United Kingdom, British Commonwealth & allied nations who served in RAF Bomber Command & lost their lives over the course of the Second World War.

{Around the reveal of the large sky-light in the roof:}
Per Ardua ad Astra {Latin: 'Through adversity to the stars' - the motto of the RAF.}

{In the niche at the west end:}
This memorial was built with the generous support of the Lord Ashcroft, John Caudwell, Richard Desmond, James Dooley, Robin Gibb and the Heritage Foundation, the Bomber Command Association and the families and friends of those who died.  Ministers of the Crown, The Royal Air Force, The RAF Benevolent Fund, The RAF Museum, The Government of Canada / le Gouvernement de Canada, The Governments of Australia and New Zealand, the Polish Air Force Association, le Ministere de la Defense et des Anciens Combattants - France, the Daily Telegraph Group, the Express Group and public donations from around the world.

Architect - Liam O'Connor
Sculptor - Philip Jackson
Inscriptions - Richard Kindersley
Wreath - Colin Dudley DFC
General Contractor - Gilbert-Ash
Stone Contractor - S McConnell and Sons 

{In the niche at the east end:}
The completion of this memorial was made possible by principle benefactor Lord Ashcroft, KCMG, May 2012. 

{On the red granite statue plinth, at the front:}
HM Queen Elizabeth II unveiled this memorial 28 June, in the year of her Diamond Jubilee, 2012.

{at the back:}
Freedom is the sure possession of those alone who have the courage to defend it.  Pericles

{On the south face of the pavilion either side of the entrance:}
This stone was laid by John Caudwell, principal benefactor of this memorial, 8 March 2012.

This stone was laid by His Royal Highness the Duke of Gloucester, KG, GCVO on behalf of Marshal of the Royal Air Force, Sir Michael Beetham, GCB, CBE, DFC, AFC, President and {sic, we think this should read "of"} the Bomber Command Association, 4th May 2011.

The campaign to bomb civilians was so controversial that the bombers were given no specific medal or monument until this was erected, 65 years after the event. Note the rather unusual text declaring that the victims of the bombs are also commemorated by the memorial.

2021: The roof of this memorial is constructed from aluminium recovered from the crashed Halifax LW682/OW-M.  On 13 May 1944, this plane was on its way, with 119 other aircraft, to bomb the railyards at Louvain, Belgium, but it was shot down by the Luftwaffe, and crashed into a bog at Schendelbeke. All eight crew members were killed. The difficult terrain delayed recovery until 1997. Aluminium recovered from the crash site was melted down into ingots and is being used in a number of appropriate memorials. See for more information.

Site: Bomber Command Memorial (1 memorial)

W1, Piccadilly

This memorial has been controversial in all sorts of ways. First the dubious ethics of the bombing raids meant that some felt there should be no memorial at all. Then there were protests that the site chosen necessitated the chopping down of a number of trees. Since the unveiling the monument has been popular but the artistic reviews have not been complimentary; criticising not just the fact of its traditionalism and classicism but also the quality of the architectural design. 

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in to see them

This section lists the subjects commemorated on the memorial on this page:
Bomber Command Memorial

Subjects commemorated i

Diamond Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II

Our picture shows Queen Elizabeth II in the River Thames Diamond Jubilee Page...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Bomber Command crews

During WW2 they flew over Germany at night to bomb first industial targets bu...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

This section lists the subjects who helped to create/erect the memorial on this page:
Bomber Command Memorial

Created by i

Show all 25

Nearby Memorials

W. T. Stead - WC2

W. T. Stead - WC2

WC2, Victoria Embankment

The inscription refers to Stead having worked near this site for 30 years. This was in Catherine Street in the offices of the Pall Mall G...

1 subject commemorated, 2 creators
William III's arrival and George III's health

William III's arrival and George III's health

EN2, Bulls Cross, Myddelton House Gardens

There are so many issues with this memorial, it's difficult to know where to begin. We take the main part of the inscription to mean tha...

2 subjects commemorated
The Who in Harrow

The Who in Harrow

HA1, Sandridge Close, Daltrey House

Pete Townshend was the guitar-smasher. We visited the site in May 2012 to find the plaque gone and replaced with a hand-scrawled rather ...

2 subjects commemorated, 2 creators
Sir Henry Wilson at Liverpool Street Station

Sir Henry Wilson at Liverpool Street Station

EC2, Liverpool Street Station

The memorial that Wilson had just unveiled before his death is the main war memorial, not the one to Fryatt.

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Streatham civilian war memorial

Streatham civilian war memorial

SW16, Streatham High Road, Garden of Rememberance, Streatham Common North

"Grief has no boundaries" is a quotation from a poem by Rohit Sapra. The information board defines the scope for this memorial: "people ...

2 subjects commemorated, 1 creator