The
Unknown Soldier Of World War I Great Britain
The British tomb of The Unknown Warrior holds an unidentified
British soldier killed on a European battlefield during World
War I. He was buried in Westminster
Abbey, London on November 11, 1920, the earliest such
tomb honoring the unknown dead of World War I.
Even the battlefield the Warrior came from is not known,
kept permanently unknown so that the Unknown Warrior might
serve as a symbol for all of the unknown dead wherever they
fell.
The tomb in Westminster Abbey is in the far western end
of the nave, only a few feet from the entrance. The black
Belgian marble covering the grave is the only tombstone in
the Abbey on which it is forbidden to walk.
When Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, better known as the late Queen
Elizabeth, the Queen Mother, married the future King George
VI on April 26, 1923, she laid her bouquet at the Tomb on
her way into the Abbey, a gesture which every royal bride
since has copied, though on the way back from the altar rather
than to it.
History
In 1916 the Reverend David Railton was serving as a chaplain to British forces
at the front in France. In a garden at Armentierés one day he noticed
a make-shift grave marked by a rough wooden cross across which was written "An
Unknown British Soldier".
The sight was not lost on him and four years later he wrote
to the Dean of Westminster to convey a remembrance of that
scene. Dean Ryle recognised the message spoken by that grave
in France and became the leading force that resulted in the
Tomb of the Unknown Soldier of Great Britain.
Selection of the soldier (or perhaps sailor or airman) destined
for burial in the Nave at Westminster Abbey began in France,
where the remains of four unknown British war casualties were
exhumed from Aisne, the Somme, Arras and Ypres. The four bodies,
from the four different battlefields, were transported to St.
Pol in Northern France on the night of November 7, 1920.
There Brigadier General L.J. Wyatt, commander of all British
troops in France and Flanders, entered the chapel where the
unknown soldiers lay, each covered with a Union Flag. At random
the general selected one to become the Unknown Soldier of the
Great War, and two officers placed the body in a plain coffin
and sealed it. The remaining bodies were reinterred at a nearby
military cemetery.
On the morning of November 8th a service was held to commemorate
the sacrifice of the Unknown Soldier, officiated by chaplains
from the Church of England, the Roman Catholic Church, and
the Non-Conformist Churches. The body was then escorted under
a French honor guard to Boulogne, drawn by a wagon with six
horses and following by a mile-long procession.
On November 9th the plain coffin was placed inside another
that had been constructed of oak from Hampton
Court, then sent over from England. Into the bands that
secured the coffin was inserted a 16th century crusaders sword
from the Tower of London collection. A plate on the coffin
was inscribed:
"A British Warrior who fell in the Great War 1914-1918
for King and Country".
The HMS Verdun, escorted by six warships, transported the
Unknown Soldier to Dover, where the coffin's arrival was greeted
with a 19-gun salute. Six warrant officers from the Royal Navy,
Royal Marines, Royal Air Force and Royal Army then bore the
coffin home to British soil to be taken by train to Victoria
Station in London.
On the morning of November 11, six black horses drew the carriage
that bore the Unknown Soldier through London's crowd-lined
streets, pausing at The Mall, Whitehall, where the Cenotaph
was unveiled by King George V. The King, his three sons, members
of the Royal Family and Ministers of State then followed the
coffin through the streets to the north entrance of Westminster
Abbey.
At the west end of the Nave in Westminster Abbey the Unknown
Soldier was laid to rest after passing through an honor guard
that consisted of 100 recipients of the Victoria Cross (both
British and Canadian).
Following the hymn "Lead Kindly Light", King George
V sprinkled soil from the battlefield at Ypres. (Six barrels
of Ypres earth accompanied the Unknown Soldier home to England
so that his coffin might lie on the soil where so many of his
comrades had lost their lives.
When the coffin had been lowered and the hymn "Abide
With Me" sung, the congregation sang Rudyard Kipling's
Recessional "God of Our Fathers". Reveille and
Last Post were sounded and the grave covered by a silk funeral
pall, with the Padre's flag above it.
For seven days the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier of Great Britain
lay under the watchful eye of a military guard while thousands
of mourners passed by to leave their last respects. On November
18 a temporary stone sealed the grave, inscribed with the words:
"A British Warrior Who Fell in the Great War 1914-1918
for King and Country. Greater Love Hath No Man Than This."
On October 17, 1921 American General John J. Pershing presented
the Medal of Honor to the Unknown Soldier of Great Britain.
That Medal of Honor now hangs in a frame on a nearby pillar.
On November 11, 1921, the same date on which the American
Unknown Soldier was laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery,
the temporary stone marking the Unknown Soldier of Great Britain
was replaced. A slab of black Belgian marble became the permanent
replacement with a guilded inscription to forever commemorate
the Unknown soldier from World War I. |