I visited the
National Memorial Arboretum on Friday, a most unusual site with more than 130 memorials dedicated primarily to military forces but also including civil and personal remembrances.
The site's a reclaimed one and currently suffering greatly from flooding and water-logging on a large section of it, it was a shame to see some of this but it looks like they're really working on improving things. I didn't really know what to expect but the view on leaving the visitors centre is decidedly strange, near as far as the eye can see are slabs, plaques, statuary and sculptures all with an intense meaning for those that erected them, overshadowing all the memorials small and large is the giant mass of the National Armed Forces Memorial, dedicated to all those lost in the line of duty since the Second War.
Some of the memorials are really rather striking, particularly, for me, two sections of Railway line, one from the Sumatra Railway & another from The Burma Railway, these are attended closely by the original Lychgate erected at the Changi Prison Cemetery by the prisoners there, & a small museum erected by
COFEPOW & dedicated to the specific horrors faced by those in captivity in the Far East,
very strong stuff & exceptionally moving.
Some may be seen as controversial such as the shot at dawn memorial & others were really rather disturbing, to me, like the Stillbirth trusts section but all seem valid as they obviously mean a great deal to the groups that were prepared to put the effort into making a permanent mark.
One particularly nice thing being done there is providing safe haven for many neglected memorials from demolished buildings, reused sites, or defunct firms that now have a permanent place to reside on public display.
The Armed Forces Memorial appeared both striking & fitting to me, the path to it being guarded by the 49th Division's Bear:
Within it's outer walls are 2 more parabolas of stone, one of which has an opening in it about half way along:
This is inscribed on it's inside face with these words:
On the other side of the wall the crack is formed by a stone door being opened as part of a Bronze scene:
Across the way from this vignette, with a large, low, cenotaph between is another scene:
The statues are of the finest quality to my eye, and seem most appropriate to the memorials subject matter. Perhaps most sobering of all is the sheer amount of blank space on the faces of the memorial waiting to take the names of those losses to come...
The whole edifice struck me as a fitting tribute to those that pay the ultimate price for us.
Cheers,
Adam.