Welsh Memorial Park, Ypres

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Welsh National Memorial Park
Wales
File:Welsh Memorial Park Ypres 001.jpg
For the Welsh serving in World War I
Unveiled 16 August 2014
Location near Boezinge, Belgium
Designed by Erwin Ureel (general design) and Lee Odishow (dragon sculpture)
To all those of Welsh descent who took part in the First World War between 1914 and 1918.

The Welsh National Memorial Park is a war memorial in Langemark near Ypres (Belgium) for soldiers of World War I, located near the Pilkem Ridge in the former Ypres Salient. It commemorates the services of men and women from Welsh origin(Wales), wherever they served during the Great War as part of the Allied Powers, as well as the non-Welsh soldiers serving in Welsh formations.

Location

The memorial is located to the north of Ypres, approximately halfway in between Pilkem and Langemark. It stands on the ridge to the south west of Langemark, where in the summer of 1917 the Battle of Pilckem Ridge (31 July – 2 August 1917) was fought, and where many Welsh units took part this opening attack of the main part of the Battle of Passchendaele (Third Battle of Ypres, 31 July – 10 November 1917).[1] The battle saw the participation of the 38th (Welsh) Division, which fought through that area in July 1917 and earned Haig's comment that they were one of his best divisions. The 29th Division included among its units the 2nd Battalion South Wales Borderers and the 2nd Battalion Monmouthshire Regiment, and the Guards Division included the Welsh Guards, all of whom are represented in the nearby Artillery Wood Cemetery, along with men from the Welch Regiment and the Royal Welch Fusiliers. Among those killed near here on 31 July 1917 was 30-year-old Ellis Humphrey Evans ("Hedd Wyn"), the famous Welsh language poet who was posthumously awarded the bard's chair at the 1917 National Eisteddfod.

Design

Cromlech memorial

The bronze dragon on top of the memorial was created by Lee Odishow, whose design was chosen from a selection of four artists.[2] The general design (cromlech, surmounted by a dragon) is from Erwin Ureel, original initiator of the project. It takes the form of a cromlech, an edifice common to Celtic peoples, composed of three large upright blue pennant stone slabs and a large flat slab on the top. The cromlech is surmounted with a 8 ft red bronze dragon. The stone came from a quarry in Pontypridd. The memorial is inscribed “To all those of Welsh descent who took part in the First World War between 1914 and 1918.[3]

Other memorials

Beyond the cromlech memorial, the memorial park on Pilkem Ridge features a large boulder with a message of welcome in Welsh, a headstone shaped like those used by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission but inscribed with the words of the Welsh national anthemHen Wlad Fy Nhadau”, and a flag pole with the Flag of Wales. Trees and benches surround the memorials.

History

The memorial is the first Welsh war memorial built in Flanders,Belgium.[2] and the first and only national Welsh Great War Memorial outside Wales (there is specific 38th Welsh Division Memorial at Mametz, Somme, France. It is the result of a three-year campaign by supporters of the Welsh Memorial in Flanders committee who wanted a permanent dedication to the Welsh victims of the conflict.[1][2]

Wales lost more people as a percentage of its population than any other country. The memorial was not only erected to commemorate the people who died, but to remember with gratitude all those of Welsh descent who were involved in the Great War, regardless of the location where they served or their function (as a result, it includes the Home Front).The memorial was originally the idea of the local community, who bought the land on which it stands. A committee was set up in Wales consisting of Peter Carter Jones Welsh Committee Co-ordinator, Ian McLeod, Paul Silk, Ivan Beatty, Russel Harris, Alwyn & Glenna Bevan and Ian Gumm to raise the funds for the memorial itself. Several plans were considered and eventually the design by Lee Odishow was chosen. With the support of the Welsh Government and a Flemish committee headed by Erwin Ureel, the campaign raised more than £100,000 to pay for the memorial, most of which came from private individuals and organisations. The memorial was unveiled by First Minister Carwyn Jones, Flemish minister president Geert Bourgeois and Mayor Alain Wyffels on 16 August 2014.[1]

Gallery

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "WW1 memorial to honour Welsh dead unveiled in Belgium", www.bbc.co.uk 17 August 2014 (access date 13 May 2015, online)
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Welsh First Minister unveils new WW1 memorial design, access date 13 May 2015
  3. Welsh Memorial appeal, access date 13 May 2015

External links

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