NOTES

Abbreviations

Baker H. Baker, Architecture and Personalities, London, 1944
BirkenheadLord Birkenhead, Rudyard Kipling, New York, 1978
BlomfieldR. Blomfield, Memoirs of an Architect, London, 1932
BlytheR. Blythe, The Age of Illusion, London, 1963
CWGCCommonwealth War Graves Commission Archives
Immortal Heritage F. Ware, The Immortal Heritage: An Account of the Work and Policy of the Imperial War Graves Commission during Twenty Years, 1917–1937, London, 1937
KenyonF. Kenyon, War Graves: How the Cemeteries Abroad Will Be Designed, HMSO, London, 1918
LongworthP. Longworth, The Unending Vigil, London, 1967
Lutyens Lettersed. C. Percy and J. Ridley, The Letters of Edwin Lutyens to his Wife Lady Emily, London, 1985
MilnerBodleian Library, Milner Papers
StampG. Stamp, The Memorial to the Missing of the Somme, London, 2007
WilsonK. M. Wilson, A Study in the History and Politics of the Morning Post 1905–1926, Lampeter, 1990
The Worker F. Ware, The Worker and His Country, London, 1912

 

Prologue

Ioannes AcutusF. Saunders, Hawkwood, Diabolical Englishman, London, 2005, p. xvii

holy, haunted groundLord Byron, Childe Harold Canto II, London, 1812

Would it have beenD. A. Reid, Memoirs of the Crimean War, London, 1911, p. 161

Imagine them moving … Immortal Heritage, p. 27

corner of a foreign fieldR. Brooke, The Collected Poems of Rupert Brooke, London, 1918, p. 148

Chapter 1

Now, God be thankedIbid., p. 144

this Rupert of the penViolet Markham, Queen, 28 May 1921, p. 25

dared questionJ. R. Brooke, Westminster Gazette, 1911, CWGC PO1/1

My academic qualificationsMilner, d38 ff.367

pity and indignation … Morning Post, 1 February 1906

As an undergraduateW. Nimocks, Milner’s Young Men: The ‘Kindergarten’ in Edwardian Imperial Affairs, London, 1970, quoted, p. 13

For you your job … The Worker, p. vi

I was working lateMilner, d38 ff.14950

It is magnificentW. Beveridge, Power and Influence, London, 1953, quoted, p. 40

I told him of courseIbid., p. 33

erratic but brilliantJ. R. Brooke, Westminster Gazette, 1911, CWGC PO1/1

At the time ofIbid., quoted, p. 15

awake and ‘miserable’Ibid., quoted, p. 13

has been wantingIbid., quoted, p. 15

party hackIbid., quoted, p. 28

I am to take the viewsIbid., quoted, p. 20

The existence of … The Worker, pp. vii, 1415, 276

highest attainmentIbid., p. 25

third-class carriagesC. Carrington, Rudyard Kipling: His Life and Work, London 1955, quoted, p. 326

ready to performF. Ware, Educational Foundations of Trade and Industry, London, 1901, pp. 57148

So long as … The Worker, p. 276

Chapter 2

The Royal Automobile ClubP. Longworth, Unpublished First Draft of ‘The Unending Vigil’, CWGC

no objectionIbid.

The Mobile Unit was organisedCWGC MU1, Spring Report 1915

October 29thCWGC MU1, November Report 1914

To be fair to themCWGC MU1, 26 February 1915

The strong and ableIbid.

It is good work … Milner, d349 ff.33233

from ‘all the muddleCWGC MU1, 21 December 1914

The British Red CrossCWGC MU1, 21 February 1915

I shall never forgetL. Earle, Turn Over the Page, London, 1935, p. 102

when one dayIbid., p. 104

The experience gainedCWGC MU1, Spring Report 1915

It was while … visiting … Ibid.

I may addCWGC MU1, 6 December 1914

Another and very ingeniousIbid.

the proud satisfactionIbid.

I feel sureCWGC MU1, 6 December 1914

With very few exceptionsCWGC MU3, 10 May 1915

I was endeavouringCWGC MU1, 6 December 1914

our soldiers in the shellCWGC WG1298, 25 May 1916

We had one poor fellow killedI. Mackay, Tell Them of Us, privately printed letters, 26 February 1915, ed. D. Mackay, 1994

Dear Miss F. RobertsonJ. Robertson, The Hair Trunk, unpublished manuscript, p. 200

words of rough regretCWGC WG548, undated press cutting

It is fully recognisedLongworth, quoted, p. 7

a lot of trouble overCWGC SDC22, 25 September 1916

Into the old-fashionedCWGC WG789, undated press cutting

At the beginningCWGC SDC22, 28 September 1916

There is not, of courseCWGC Add4/1/3, 12 March 1915

It would be a matterCWGC GRC2, 11 March 1915

neither cares nor understandsMilner, d350 ff.10307

By means of thisCWGC GRC1, 21 August 1915

I saw the AGCWGC GRC1, 31 August 1915

I am sorryCWGC GRC1, 28 October 1915

to the crokersI. Mackay, Tell Them of Us, privately printed letters, 1 October 1914, ed. D. Mackay, 1994

Chapter 3

the sole intermediary … Longworth, quoted, p. 39

The dug-outsV. Brittain, Testament of Youth, London, 2004, p. 174

I told youMilner, d350 ff.10307

I have warned the PressCWGC WG1076, 2 July 1915

In all agesIbid., Report of the French Commission of Public Health, Summer 1915

As regards the questionCWGC Add4/1/3, 27 February 1915

The noise is just likeViscount Gladstone, W. G. C. Gladstone: A Memoir, London, 1918, quoted, p. 113

Heaven knowsIbid., quoted, p. 107

We have beenIbid., quoted, p. 116

I thoroughly enjoyed itIbid.

This unfinished letterIbid.

He had been warnedIbid., p. 122

It was the earnest wishIbid., p. 124

I notice Gladstone’s bodyCWGC GRC1, 16 April 1915

CONFIDENTIALCWGC GRC1, 5 May 1915

detestable … alienViscount Gladstone, W. G. C. Gladstone, London, 1918, p. 100

Here the Germans … Immortal Heritage, quoted, pp. 2021

I believe that youCWGC GRC1, 17 July 1915

Chapter 4

Collectivist, individualist … The Worker, p. 24

To Fabian WareViolet Markham, Queen, 28 May 1921, p. 24

keenness of allCWGC MU1, undated report of Colonel Stewart

Vitalisers are fewViolet Markham, Queen, 28 May 1921, p. 24

With such examplesCWGC SDC22, 7 March 1917

He had heard rumoursIbid., 25 September 1916

class-bound and incompetentD. Stevenson, 1914–18: The History of the First World War, London, 2005, p. 117

I am sending youCWGC WG1298, 7 July 1916

The French governmentGeneral Routine Orders 1104, December 1915

At the time of burialCWGC GRC7, 17 April 1916

In special casesIbid.

On no accountCWGC Add3/1/3, 1 February 1918

We were not awareJ. C. Smuts, Jan Christian Smuts, London, 1952, p. 195

In April, 1916L. Earle, Turn Over the Page, London, 1935, p. 113

South AfricaCWGC Add3/1/3, 25 February 1919

[footnote] It was all AustraliaR. Kipling, The Five Nations, London, 1903, p. 191

Beyond the areaE. Blunden, Undertones of War, London, 1936, p. 131

Crossing the Ancre againIbid.

the measurements and descriptionCWGC Add3/1/3, 30 June 1917

We are on the vergeCWGC SDC4, 29 June 1917

I am held up on my workLongworth, quoted, p. 18

[footnote] My Dear WareCWGC SDC4, 13 December 1916

The field of GommecourtR. Holmes, Tommy, London, 2004, quoted, p. 46

Chapter 5

the great expansionF. Ware, General Report for the period 21st May 1917, to 31st March 1920, II, HMSO, 1920, p. 5

It was vitalCWGC SDC22, 15 March 1917

old baitLongworth, quoted, p. 27

In looking forwardCWGC SDC22, 15 March 1917

the first organisationLongworth, p. 28

to keep aliveIbid., quoted, p. 28

the freedom of the individualH. Strachan, The First World War, London, 2005, quoted, p. 237

Democracy is not goingA. M. Gollin, Proconsul in Politics, New York, 1964, quoted, p. 238

When I visitedA. W. Hill, Our Soldiers’ Graves, Lecture to Royal Horticultural Society, CWGC Add3/1/3, 25 February 1919

The Commission recognisedCWGC SDC51, 19 November 1918

There is in artStamp, quoted, p. 60

For its characterR. Byron, Country Life, January 1931

Schooled under RhodesC. Hussey, The Life of Sir Edwin Lutyens, London, 1950, p. 322

I realisedBaker, p. 88

The cemeteries, the dotted gravesLutyens Letters, p. 350

I most earnestly adviseStamp, quoted, p. 78

I have not had the courageCWGC Add1/1/3, 3 August 1917

The first person I sawLutyens Letters, p. 357

I bearded the ArchbishopCWGC Add1/1/3, 7 August 1917

There must be nothingIbid., 28 August 1917

The most beautifulLutyens Letters, p. 354

Such a rushIbid., p. 351

Afterwards went and sawIbid., p. 355

Lytton saidCWGC Add1/1/3, 20 August 1917

I see a bell-fryIbid., 25 July 1917

Professional jealousyLutyens Letters, quoted, p. 369

You are a werry nice manIbid., p. 348

The Commission recognisedKenyon, p. 2

Chapter 6

He is an interestingCWGC WG517, Chicago Tribune, 25 January 1920

The cemeteries, carefullyBlomfield, p. 178

in the squalid surroundingKenyon, p. 3

I have also hadIbid.

It was felt thatIbid., p. 6

It is necessaryIbid.

My endeavourIbid., p. 4

be markedIbid., p. 7

There is someIbid., p. 9

It would meetIbid., p. 10

That the principleF. Ware, General Report for the period 21st May 1917, to 31st March 1920, II, HMSO, 1920, p. 6

green coverlets … Immortal Heritage, p. 10

The beauty, the serenityIbid.

Those gruesome ragsV. Brittain, Testament of Youth, London, 2004, p. 225

We see men go onE. Remarque, All Quiet on the Western Front, trans. B. Murdoch, London, 1996, p. 46

three rather gamy GermansI. Mackay, Tell Them of Us, privately printed letters, 20 March 1915, ed. D. Mackay, 1994

Kiss meR. Holmes, Tommy, London, 2004, quoted, p. 569

Covered with snowE. C. Vaughan, Some Desperate Glory, London, 1917, p. 73

Chapter 7

I have not consideredKenyon, p. 21

of specificationsLongworth, quoted, p. 38

The resting placesCWGC WG237/1, Kipling Advertisement

The cemeteries were oftenBlomfield, p. 176

The total numberF. Ware, General Report for the period 21st May 1917, to 31st March 1920, II, HMSO, 1920, p. 9

Exhumation was a routineJ. Summers, Remembered: The History of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission, London, 2007, quoted, p. 30

committee of architectsKenyon, p. 21

The Principal ArchitectsBlomfield, p. 177

unspeakable tyranny … The Times, 3 May 1919

the most heartlessIbid., various, 19191920

I know how English people dislikeCWGC WG219 pt 1, 8 July 1919

Nothing could put … Spectator, 1 February 1919

The last thingIbid.

when they left usIbid.

Your Royal HighnessCWGC Add4/2/7, Petition to the Prince of Wales, 1919

Lost three sonsIbid.

[footnote] CWGC SDC30 various, September 1919

When the widowsW. Burdett-Coutts, War Graves – Statement of Reasons in Support of the Proposal of the Imperial War Graves Commission, London, 1920, p. 4

As I see the position nowCWGC WG999, 16 April 1920

as one who is stronglyW. Burdett-Coutts, War Graves, p. 2

An attack onCWGC WG999, 15 April 1920

I understand that youIbid.

The Imperial War Graves CommissionW. Burdett-Coutts, War Graves, p. 10

No one could be … Hansard, 4 May 1920 [and subsequent quotations passim]

Chapter 8

The Commission itselfLongworth, p. 59

Life in that wildernessIbid., p. 63

It is the simplest … The Times, 2 September 1920

In France and BelgiumStamp, quoted, p. 99

I, for one … Hansard

It is impossible … Ibid.

It will certainlyIbid.

My own feelingCWGC WG219 pt 1, 18 February 1919

Sir, my sonIbid., 18 December 1919

In my recollectionIbid., 4 March 1919

I may tell youIbid., 8 July 1919

Pernicious little bitchBirkenhead, quoted, p. 271

Allah, for his own purposesIbid., quoted, p. 290

He was a manIbid., quoted, p. 288

One mustn’t letJ. Flanders, A Circle of Sisters, London, 2001, quoted, p. 319

He looks very straightBirkenhead, quoted, p. 267

Two of my menIbid.

After nearly two years’CWGC WG999, 16 July 1920

There should be a graniteCWGC WG237/2, 18 February 1919

fragments of destroyedCWGC WG237/2, 24 January 1919

The policy of the CommissionCWGC WG219 pt 2, 12 January 1921

During the past weekCWGC 219/4, 19 January 1921

Clearly … some compromise … Longworth, p. 85

Chapter 9

The design of suchKenyon, p. 7

the dignity of theCabinet Papers 123, 14 November 1919

only a very fewCWGC WG1617 NBMC Report, 24 February 1921

agreed to abandonH. F. Chettle, ‘British Monuments on the Scenes of the Great War’, Dalhousie Review, January 1935, p. 448

The [Naval Memorials] Committee … National Archives Adm116/1160

fills me with dismayCWGC WG1617, 20 July 1921

great scheme of decorationLongworth, quoted, p. 98

unfortunately did not understandIbid., p. 15

May I suggest somethingCWGC WG1031, 15 March 1920

because my childJ. Winter, Sites of Memory, Sites of Mourning, Cambridge, 1996, quoted, p. 25

the temporary structureStamp, p. 42

In the autumn of 1919Blomfield, p. 186

I was in fact … Ibid.

I tried hardIbid., p. 188

had to findIbid., p. 187

Having regard toCWGC WG1687/2, 22 November 1921

It is a memorialStamp, quoted, p. 105

For instanceCWGC WG219 pt 2, 10 February 1923

One only has to glanceStamp, quoted, p. 123

Its high arch screamsIbid., quoted, p. 184

Many preferred to lookIbid., p. 158

I wanted a massive lionBlomfield, p. 189

Let us pass on toCWGC Add1/1/21 F, Ware Script for Armistice Broadcast, 10 November 1929

From the great wallBaker, quoted, p. 92

It was laid outIbid., p. 91

[The King] expressedIbid.

It consists ofIbid.

Oaks were plantedIbid., p. 90

The unveiling ceremonyIbid.

What I wantedBlomfield, p. 179

at eighteenBirkenhead, quoted, p. 291

His lossIbid., p. 261

Chapter 10

Each stage reproduces … The Worker, p. 32

Do you thinkCWGC WG250/1/1 pt 2, 5 February 1931

I have just returnedIbid.

might ultimately be allowedLongworth, quoted, p. 138

For WareCWGC Add1/1/21, Leo Amery, Memorial Service Address 1949

and falter in his faithCWGC Add1/1/141, 10 November 1926

Can we possiblyIbid., 24 April 1933

On former NovembersIbid., 10 November 1929

In the course of my pilgrimageLongworth, quoted, p. 80

regenerative power of sacrificeE. T. Linenthal, Sacred Ground: Americans and their Battlefields, Chicago, 1991, p. 97

Cold must be the heartIbid., quoted, p. 95

I am here to speak to youCWGC Add1/1/21, 10 November 1930

The one realIbid.

Yes, here is heardCWGC Add1/1/141, 10 November 1927

tired of this gushE. T. Linenthal, Sacred Ground: Americans and Their Battlefields, Chicago, 1991, quoted, p. 97

It was like tryingLongworth, p. 159

one day ‘of any holiness’K. S. Inglis, J. Brazier, Sacred Places: War Memorials in the Australian Landscape, Melbourne, 1998, quoted, p. 4

[footnote] If they had any shameIbid., quoted, p. 268

He was called Legion … Immortal Heritage, p. 20

At the head of the graveBlythe, quoted, p. 13

I attended a largeB. Janes, The Unknown Warrior and the Cavell Van, Tenterden, nd, quoted, p. 19

‘11.17’ reads the ship’s logNational Archives Adm53/869766

The train thundered through the darkB. Janes, The Unknown Warrior and the Cavell Van, Tenterden, nd, quoted, p. 24

Admirals MeuxBlythe, p. 10

The reckless destructionIbid.

some horror in Church circlesStamp, p. 42

Very Rev. SirBlythe, quoted, p. 12

On a gravestoneIbid.

The symbolic significanceLongworth, quoted, p. 174