| The Royal Naval Division monument
has been moved from the grounds of the old Royal Naval College
Greenwich in readiness for its return to its original home
at the old Admiralty Building.
After a period of refurbishment and restoration, the monument
will return to the balustrade of the building on Horse Guards
Parade in Whitehall in late summer ready for a re-dedication
by the Prince of Wales in November. The Prince has been a
strong supporter of the campaign.
The money needed for the restoration amounted to £200,000,
and funds are still coming in from public subscription and
private donation.
Capt Christopher Page, vice-chairman of the campaign, said
they had tried to contact the descendants of those involved
in the Royal Naval Division: “They have been fantastically
generous, as have their regimental units.”
The RND Memorial commemorates no fewer than 45,000 casualties
sustained by the Royal Naval Division in World War I. The
Division was formed in 1914 by the First Sea Lord, Winston
Churchill, as an intervention and raiding force.
It fought at Gallipoli and on the Western Front, winning
a reputation as a fine frontline fighting force – one
factor being that the Division was forced to provide its own
officers, so an existing cadre of high-quality Royal Marines
were supplemented by promotions from the rank on merit, contributing
to the quality of the leadership.
Many recruits to “Churchill’s private army”
were recruited from the North of England and Scotland, and
there was a strong esprit de corps which helped it integrate
into the British Expeditionary Force.
Army units were incorporated into the RND from 1916, but
it maintained a strong Naval ethos until it was disbanded.
The Division was formally disbanded at a parade on Horse
Guards Parade in 1919 at which the Prince of Wales took the
salute, and survivors commissioned Sir Edward Lutyens to create
an appropriate memorial to overlook the spot.
The site and Lutyens’ design – a simple but elegant
monolith and fountain – were personally approved by
King George V.
An inscription on the memorial displayed the words of poet
Rupert Brooke, who died on active service with Hood Battalion
of the RND at Gallipoli: “Blow out you bugles over the
rich dead. There’s none of these so lonely and poor
of old, but, dying, has made us rarer gifts than gold. These
laid the world away, poured out the red sweet wine of youth,
gave up the years to be of work and joy, and that unhoped
serene, that men call age, and those who would have been their
sons, they gave, their immortality.”
The Royal Naval Division included elements of the Royal Navy,
Royal Marines and the Army:
Naval Infantry Battalions: Howe, Anson, Hood, Nelson, Drake,
Collingwood, Benbow, Hawke
Royal Marines Infantry Battalions: Chatham, Deal, Portsmouth,
Plymouth, later the 1st and 2nd RMLI
Army Infantry Battalions: 7th Royal Fusiliers, 4th Bedfords,
1st HAC, 10th Royal Dublin Fusiliers, 1/28th Londons (Artists
Rifles); 2nd Royal Irish Rifles; 1/4th Kings Shropshire Light
Infantry, 14th Worcesters (Pioneers).
Royal Artillery: 4th Field Brigade of the RFA
Royal Engineers: 247th, 248th, 249th, Field Companies
Royal Army Medical Corps
Battle Honours for the Division are: Antwerp, Gallipoli,
Ancre, Arras, Ypres, Welsh Ridge and Hindenburg Line.
More than 40 per cent of Royal Navy casualties suffered in
World War I were in the trenches, yet they rarely made up
more than a tenth of the Navy’s total strength.
The monument was officially unveiled in 1925, but had to
be dismantled in 1939 and moved into storage when work began
on the building of a citadel behind the Admiralty in preparation
for war.
The memorial was rebuilt at Greenwich in 1951, but when links
with the Royal Navy were severed with the closure of the College
it was deemed an appropriate opportunity to return the memorial
to its rightful place in the heart of London.
The original plinth, and the associated pipework for the
fountain, still exist, and the re-installation should be a
relatively straightforward matter
Anyone wishing to support the return should write to: RND
Memorial Appeal, c/o The Royal Marines Corps Secretary, HMS
Excellent, Whale Island, Portsmouth PO2 8ER. |