91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Event   

Recycling the nations' railings - WW2

Categories: Architecture, Property

Recycling the nations' railings - WW2

As WW2 wore on, there was an increasing need for metal to make bombs, planes and tanks. To this end, the gates and railings around parks and open spaces were reclaimed as part of the war effort. Likewise railings outside private houses were culled, (although there was a suspicion that upper-class areas were exempted).

Whether the metal was really useful has been debated, and there were rumours at the time that tons of the stuff couldn't be used and were dumped in the Thames Estuary. There's also a suggestion that the factories were over-supplied with iron, but the destruction continued because its effect was to raise the population's awareness of the extreme effort required to fight the war.

The initiator of this metal collecting project was Lord Beaverbrook who was the Minister of Supply 1941-42. As he was also a newspaper publisher he would have been well aware of the propaganda value. 

For more information see the excellent .

Credit for this entry to: Alan Patient of www.plaquesoflondon.co.uk

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

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Recycling the nations' railings - WW2

Commemorated ati

Norland Square railings

  This is the second plaque we have found commemorating railings replacem...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

St Luke's West Norwood - railing replacement

These railings were completed in 2009 to replace the original railings which ...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Other Subjects

John William Charles Darbourne CBE

John William Charles Darbourne CBE

Architect. He and fellow architect Geoffrey Darke founded the firm of Darbourne and Darke, specifically, to design the Lillington Gardens Estate in Pimlico. They also designed much of the landscapi...

Person, Architecture

1 memorial
Viacheslav Bukhaev

Viacheslav Bukhaev

Architect.  Member of the Russian Academy of Arts.

Person, Architecture, Russia

2 memorials
Embassy of the Republic of Poland

Embassy of the Republic of Poland

Located at 47 Portland Place.

Group, Architecture, Poland

3 memorials
Peter of Colechurch

Peter of Colechurch

His name, sometimes given as Peter de Colechurch, is connected to the church where he was a priest, St Mary Colechurch in Cheapside. Colechurch had already rebuilt London Bridge from elm in about ...

Person, Architecture, Religion

1 memorial
John Barnett

John Barnett

Designed houses in Kensington, Clapham and Highbury. Seems not much is known about him.

Person, Architecture

1 memorial