91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Monument | War dead | WW1

City and Midland Bank - WW1

Erection date: 11/11/1921

Inscription

In memoriam
1914 - 1919
A record of those members of the staff of the London Joint City & Midland Bank who gave their lives for their country.
{The 14 panels below list 717 names, alphabetically with rank, see Subjects commemorated.}

Statues flank this central panel. The bases of both are inscribed: Albert Toft, Sc. 1921. One is a winged angel writing in an open book (inscribing the names of the dead), the other is a medieval armoured soldier with down-cast eyes.

The gives Whinney as the designer and Toft as the sculptor and describes the memorial thus: "Marble memorial with triangular pediment and names on fourteen panels below it. Bronze figures of St George on the left and the Recording Angel on the right support it." Rather than photograph and transcribe the 717 names we have copied them from the IWM website.

The IWM also have where there is information about each of the names on this list.

has a facsimile of the 12-page booklet "Unveiling of the Memorial at the Bank, to the members of the staff who gave their lives for their country. Armistice Day, Friday 11th November, 1921, at 5.30 pm, 5 Threadneedle Street, London EC2". In this the memorial is described as being on the north side of the banking hall, just beyond the main entrance lobby. Designed by Whinney, the Bank's architect. The statues, St George on the left and the Recording Angel on the right, are by Toft. The memorial was unveiled by the Chairman of the Board, R. McKenna. The list of names is given with the rank for each one.

Site: City and Midland Bank - war memorial (2 memorials)

E14, Canada Square, 8

From Upper Bank Street steps lead down to this covered walkway. In our photo the large white panel contains the names of the WW1 memorial. The WW2 memorial can be seen - the two lights to the right of the pillar. It is a very plain black cabinet: a plinth below and two lit pages of names above.

When eventually operational a nearby entrance to Crossrail will cause many people to walk past these memorials, and may also change their configuration.

The WW1 memorial was originally unveiled at the Bank’s headquarters in Threadneedle Street. The London City and Midland Bank became the Midland Bank in 1923. When the Bank moved to its new Head Office to Poultry in 1930 the memorial was left behind in what was then simply the Threadneedle Street branch. The WW2 memorial was erected at the Poultry office. Then the bank became part of HSBC and the Threadneedle branch was closed in 1992 so both war memorials was moved to the HSBC HQ in Leadenhall Street. From there the memorials were relocated to Canary Wharf where we found them. The WW1 memorial was moved in 2002, and the WW2 memorial in 2010. The Headquarters of HSBC are nearby at 8 Canada Square. 

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:
City and Midland Bank - WW1

Subjects commemorated i

This section lists the subjects who helped to create/erect the memorial on this page:
City and Midland Bank - WW1

Created by i

Midland Bank

Founded as the Birmingham and Midland Bank in Birmingham. Expanded to become ...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Albert Arthur Toft

Albert Arthur Toft was born on 3 June 1862 in Handsworth, Staffordshire, the ...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

T. B. Whinney

Architect based in London who became the chief architect of the Midland Bank....

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

This section lists the other memorials at the same location as the memorial on this page:
City and Midland Bank - WW1

Also at this site i

City and Midland Bank - WW2

City and Midland Bank - WW2

Between the two lit sections is a bronze wreath with a large V made of a tass...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Nearby Memorials

Chelsea war monument

Chelsea war monument

SW1, Sloane Square

From the typefaces one can tell that the two inscriptions were done at different times, and the WW2 dates don't look squeezed in.  From t...

3 subjects commemorated, 1 creator
Croydon Minster war memorial - cross

Croydon Minster war memorial - cross

CR0, Church Street

"They died that we might live." is a quite common inscription on war memorials and sounds like a quotation but we cannot identify a source.

2 subjects commemorated
St Clement's Church

St Clement's Church

N7, Westbourne Road, 76

The names are listed alphabetically but only by first letter of surname, possibly to make the late additions, of which there are 9, less ...

War dead | WW1
160 subjects commemorated
Eagle Squadrons

Eagle Squadrons

W1, Grosvenor Square

{On the front of the pillar, facing north, into the square, below a carved image with "E. S." and a spread eagle clutching arrows in its ...

War dead, War served | WW2, Other war
291 subjects commemorated, 3 creators
Kingston war memorial - WW2

Kingston war memorial - WW2

KT1, Union Street, Memorial Gardens

Only minor additions were made after WW2; the names of the dead from that war were not added.

1 subject commemorated