In
the Group’s previous blog an Index of Shrines and Memorials which were erected
in the Town’s Churches and Religious buildings was detailed. In the second of
this series an Index of Shrines erected throughout the town by public bodies,
businesses and societies will be provided. In addition several revisions have
also been made to previous blog post.
Street Shrines or Street ‘Rolls of
Honour’
Street
Shrines were possibly one of the most common forms of memorials created during
the First World War, but also one of the of the least recorded types of shrine.
The reasons for this is that although erected in large numbers (sometimes
hundreds) in many major cities, including Hull and London, only a fraction
survive to the modern day. For instance shrines are recorded in Doncaster but
there is no surviving evidence for their erection. The idea originated in the
East End of London during Easter 1916 at the suggestion of the Anglian Church
and the idea was copied throughout the Country. The origins of the Goole Street
Shrines dates to February 1917 when the Church of England’s Men’s Society
decided to take up the idea. The Shrines were to be funded by public
subscription and names were collected by posting letters to every house in
Goole, and Old Goole. A major source of debate evolved around who should be
included on the Rolls of Honour, and to some controversy it was decided that
the Mercantile Marine should be excluded from the Lists and that only men serving
in the Armed Forces be named. In March 1917 a total of 800 houses had made
gifts and 1,400 names had been collected. A letter to the local board indicated
the proposed shrines would measure 3ft 10” high and 2ft 6” wide, the top being
about 7ft 6” from the street level and would project 5” from the face of the
building. A single shrine was erected in February 1917 in Old Goole between
George Street and Swinefleet Road. It was described as - ‘Dark stained wood
with a crucifix set in the centre and glass doors gives easy access to the
letters on which the names are inscribed.’ Between sixty and seventy men were
listed on the Roll of Honour. In total twenty eight shrines would be erected
throughout the town and were dedicated at three ceremonial events:
East Area – May 19th
|
Old Goole – May 22nd
|
West Area – May 26th
|
Axholme
Street
|
George
Street
|
Henry
Street
|
Cross
Edinburgh Street
|
Cooper
Street
|
Parliament
Street
|
Burlington
Crescent (near Alexandra Street)
|
Morley
Street
|
Montague
Street
|
Stanley
Street
|
Swinefleet
Road
(erected February)
|
First
Avenue
|
Carlisle
Street
|
Percy
Street
|
Pasture
Road – Mr Westoby’s Shop
|
Aire
Street
|
Cottingham
Street
|
Pasture
Road – Me Rushworth’s Shop
|
Boothferry
Road
|
Beverley
Road
|
West
Street
|
Kingston
Street
|
100
Jackson Street
|
|
Heber
Street
|
36&38
Weatherill Street
|
|
Duckle’s
Buildings
|
||
Humber
Street
|
||
St
Mary’s Church
(Listing Deceased Old Goole Men)
|
Image by Pippa Stainton |
The
shrines were constructed by Mr Kelsey and the names were written by Mr P
Mahalski. Articles in the Goole Times suggests that the Shrines were regularly
updated and flowers were still being laid at the memorials in 1919. After the
end of the War there is only the occasional reference to the Shrines until 1930
when the Goole Times reported that as the shrines had fallen into disappear and
neglect and because the names had been inscribed onto the Town’s Cenotaph and
Parish Church Memorial they should be removed, unless the action was opposed.
No evidence has been found for objections and it is assumed that the shrines
were removed en masse and destroyed in July 1930. To date there is only one
know picture of the Street Shrines, located in Red Lion Street, Pasture Road.
Mercantile Marine
As
written above during the creation of the Goole Street Shrines it was
controversially decided to exclude the men serving in the Mercantile Marine.
After much debate it was declared that a separate memorial would be created.
During 1917 whilst the names for the Street Shrines were collected the details
of those serving in the Mercantile Marine were also collected, but it was not
until June 1918 that the memorial would be erected. The erection of the
memorial would lead to a near riot in the town as the original centre piece of
the memorial contained a picture of the Jesus at the Sea of Galtree, which was
made in Berlin, much to the anger of the town’s people (the storey is full is
told in a previous blog article). The image was quickly removed and replaced by the
flag of Mercantile Marine, painted directly onto the memorial.
A
Goole Times article of the period described the memorial as a structure of
simple design made of polished teak, surmounted by a cross. Its position is
described as commanding the attention of all those who pass it. It consisted of
three glass panels, which contained the names of nearly 800 serving men, in
alphabetical order. In the centre was a list of 37 men who had made the
‘Supreme Sacrifice’ marked with the inscription “Faithfull unto death”. Above
the rolls were panels with the announcement and extracts from Psalm CXIII in
gold lettering - “Men of the Mercantile Marine from the Parish of Goole who
served their country on the high seas during the Great War” and “They that go
down in their ships and occupy their business in great waters, these men see
the works of the Lord and His Wonders in the deep”. Originally at the top and
centre of the panel was ‘a beautifully finished print depicting Jesus and His
Disciples on the Sea of Galtree’, later to be replaced by the Red Ensign. A flower bowl and permanent flower guard were
provided close by. The location of the memorial is described as being just
inside the Railway Station wall facing Boothferry Road. The lettering was
executed by Mr Alfred Haigh, construction was undertaken by Messrs S.R. and T.
Kelsey and the Goole Times printed the names.
Until
recently it was thought that no images of the memorial has survived but
recently an image of Boothferry Road showing the memorial has been found, by
local history collector Gilbert Tawn.
Image found by Gilbert Tawn |
War Memorial Committee
As
the end of the War approached consideration was given to creating a memorial to
commemorate the men of the town who had sacrificed their lives and served in
the Armed Forces. The first meeting to discuss a war memorial was
convened in December 1918, led by the Chair of the Goole Urban District
Council. A War Memorial Committee was convened, with membership including Councillors, business
men and representatives of the local church. Several ideas were considered
ranging from a town war memorial, memorial for the victims of the Zeppelin
raid, a public park, memorial hall and fund for ex-servicemen and families. In
January 1919 thirteen options were considered for the town’s memorial and out
of these three were selected – a town memorial,
park or parks and a fund for soldiers’ and sailors’ dependants. A subsidiary
scheme of a war memorial to the victims of the Zeppelin air raid was also
agreed upon. The final scheme for the town war memorial was decided at a public
meeting in May 1919, where it was favoured to create a public park and
memorial, with the idea of a Fund abandoned due to a lack of interest. An
ambitious target of £20,000 was set for the project, with the members of the committee delegated the responsibility of gaining public subscriptions.
The
history of the War Memorial Committee during 1919 and 1920 was chequered with poor attendance of meeting,
differences of opinion in what form the memorial should take, accusations that
the Committee and memorial were not representative of the town’s people, accusations
that Committee members were 'figure heads' and not on the committee to work, the slow pace
of fund raising and complaints about the longevity in the creation of the
memorial. Eventually the committee disbanded in early 1920 although was later
reconvened. The newly formed committee revived the idea of the war memorial
with a less ambitious fund raising target, but with more focus, and the final
result was the creation of a Zeppelin War Memorial and the Goole Cenotaph and Memorial Gardens.
Goole Cenotaph
In June 1920 the newly formed war memorial sent a deputation to the
Aire and Calder Navigation to discuss the donation of land for a War Memorial. The
Aire and Calder Navigation Co. was agreeable to the deputation and by October a
site in Boothferry Raid, opposite Bartholomew Hospital, has been decided upon. An
option to purchase additional land, from the Aire and Calder Navigation Co. adjacent
to the site was all agreed, for the creation of a Memorial Park. The Committee then set upon selecting the style of
war memorial, considering four options, and agreeing upon a replica of the
London Cenotaph, at a scale of 18 feet. In November the Committee had funds of
£3100, with the overall cost of the scheme estimated at £4,350 – cost of land
£1,350, memorial £1500 and laying out of the gardens £1500. Throughout 1921 the
additional £1000 required for the memorial were raised, but again there was much
complaint in the letters of the Goole Times about the slow pace of the war
memorial, which ultimately led to the creation of the Parish Church Memorial
(see previous blog). The unveiling of the Memorial would eventually take place
in January 1922. The final memorial being a replica of the London Cenotaph, set
in memorial gardens, and was erected by Mr H.O Tasker, of Goole. The memorial listing 452 men who had sacrificed their
lives during the Great War.
Zeppelin
War Memorial
In
addition to the creation of the Town War Memorial the War Memorial Commitee raised funds, by public subscription for a memorial to the victims of the Zeppelin Raid of 1915. The memorial is
located over the mass grave of the victims, in Goole Cemetery, and was
dedicated in February 1922 (see previous blogs). The design of the memorial is an inclined white
marble book four feet long resting on two pots and stone based and surround by
a curb, completed by Mr H.O. Tasker, of Goole. The memorial is dedicated “In
memory of the citizens of Goole who lost their lives in a German Zeppelin raid
on this undefended town on August 9th, 1915”, and lists the 16 victims of the
air raid.
The Victims of Goole Zeppelin Raid 9th
August 1915
|
|||||
Surname
|
Forname(s)
|
Age
|
Surname
|
Forename(s)
|
Age
|
Acaster
|
Sarah
|
65
|
Pratt
|
Agnes
|
36
|
Acaster
|
Sarah
Ann
|
34
|
Woodhall
|
Alice
Elizabeth
|
3
|
Acaster
|
Kezia
|
32
|
Woodhall
|
Grace
|
31
|
Stainton
|
Violet
|
18
|
Carroll
|
Mary
|
32
|
Goodall
|
Hannah
|
74
|
Carroll
|
James
|
26
|
Harrison
|
Alice
|
6
|
Carroll
|
Alice
|
4
|
Harrison
|
Florence
|
4
|
Carroll
|
Gladys
|
3
|
Pratt
|
Margaret
Seina
|
9 months
|
Smith
|
Alice
|
17
|
Schools
Goole
Secondary (Grammar) School
In
the Hall of what is now the Goole High School are two brass memorial tablet
dedicated in the memory of the former pupils and teachers of the school who
gave their lives during the First and Second World Wars. Throughout 1919 and
1920 there were several articles placed in the Goole Times reporting that the
Old Pupils’ Association of the Goole Secondary School were considering the question
of a War Memorial, and that funds were being raised for the memorial. The
result of the effort of the Association was the donation of an organ with brass
plaque with the dedication – ‘This Organ was presented by the Old Pupils’
Association to Honour the Memory of’ –
The Deceased Old Pupils and Teachers
Of the Goole Secondary School
|
|||
T
W
|
Barnett
|
C
|
Johnson
|
R
|
Bradley
|
H
|
Markham
|
G
A
|
Burkill
|
R
A
|
Marshall
|
G
W
|
Cannon
|
J
E S
|
Pepper
|
H
|
Dougherty
|
C
|
Riley
|
N
|
Haigh
|
A
|
Smith
|
E
C
|
Ingleby
|
H
|
Trickett
|
R
|
Jackson
|
H
|
Woodhouse
|
‘Who
From this School Gave Their Lives in the European War 1914-1918’. Although the Organ does not survive the brass
plaque is still displayed in the old hall of the Goole High School.
Societies
Goole Pleasant Sunday Afternoon Association.
Although
not a memorial in its own right the Goole Pleasant Sunday Afternoon Association,
based at the Sailors’ Welcome, issues Rolls of Honours to its members.
Contained in a book awarded to an Association member is a copy of a Roll of
Honour, which it is assumed, was issued to members with the inscription – ‘A
RECORD OF FRIENDS AND RELATIVES WHO ANSWERED THE CALL OF KING AND COUNTRY IN
THE GREAT WAR: 1914-1915
Hull
District of the Free Gardeners Friendly Society Roll of Honour
In
a Goole Times article dated 18th January 1918 it was announced that
a Roll of Honour had been created, listing 18 Lodge Members, of which 12 men
belonged to the Aire and Calder (Goole Lodge).
Hull District of the Free Gardeners
Friendly Society Roll of Honour
|
|
Lodge
|
Name
|
Aire
and Calder – Goole
|
Brunyee,
J W
|
Aire
and Calder – Goole
|
Crewe,
T
|
Aire
and Calder – Goole
|
Duebury,
K
|
Aire
and Calder – Goole
|
Hayton,
H
|
Aire
and Calder – Goole
|
Howden,
A
|
Aire
and Calder – Goole
|
Jacques,
R
|
Aire
and Calder – Goole
|
Jynman,
H
|
Aire
and Calder – Goole
|
Ouseley,
E
|
Aire
and Calder – Goole
|
Robinson,
G
|
Aire
and Calder – Goole
|
Rushton,
G E
|
Aire
and Calder – Goole
|
Sharp,
J
|
Aire
and Calder – Goole
|
Tether,
L
|
Beaumont
Lodge – Carlton
|
Bedford,
J H
|
Farmers’
Friend - Swinefleet
|
Sykes
|
Rose
of Sharon – Snaith
|
Axup,
J W
|
Rose
of Sharon – Snaith
|
Grimes,
J
|
Rose
of Sharon – Snaith
|
Parratt,
A
|
Rose
of Sharon – Snaith
|
Vause,
T
|
The
current location of the Roll of Honour is unknown.
Goole Businesses
Goole
Shipbuilding and Repair Co Ltd.
The
Goole Museum Contains three First World War Memorials, which are on public
display. One of these is a Silver Roll of Honour for the men of the Goole
Shipbuilding and Repairing Co Ltd. The Memorial bears the dedication – ‘Roll of
Honour of Employees of the Goole Shipbuilding & Repairing Co Ltd Who served
their Country during the Great War 1914-1918’. The Memorial lists 87 men who
served during the War and a further twenty-one men who made the ‘Great
Sacrifice’
Goole Shipbuilding and Repairing Co
Ltd Roll of Honour
|
|||||
Forename
|
Initial
|
Regiment
|
Forename
|
Initial
|
Regiment
|
Axup
|
W
|
E Yorks
|
Houghton
|
S
|
R.E
|
Arton
|
C
|
R.G.A
|
Houghton
|
A
|
Lincs
|
Brignall
|
T
|
Lincs
|
Holt
|
J
|
|
Byrnes
|
M
|
K.O.Y.L.I
|
Hellary
|
T.W
|
Navy
|
Bland
|
J
|
R.E
|
Jepson
|
G
|
|
Brunyee
|
N
|
R.N.D
|
Jackson
|
A
|
|
Bolder
|
H
|
K.O.Y.L.I
|
Kendall
|
H
|
K.O.Y.L.I
|
Blackburn
|
E
|
K.O.Y.L.I
|
Kind
|
S
|
R.A.F
|
Burgoyne
|
H
|
W.R.R
|
Kirk
|
R
|
M.G.C
|
Blackburn
|
C
|
Lofthouse
|
J.T
|
R.E
|
|
Bagshaw
|
W
|
Lazenby
|
R
|
R.A.F
|
|
Bonser
|
H
|
Lydon
|
J
|
Leic. Reg
|
|
Brunyee
|
W
|
L.F
|
Maw
|
J
|
M.G.C
|
Connor
|
R
|
K.O.Y.L.I
|
Milner
|
G.D
|
M.G.C
|
Carr
|
F
|
R.A.F
|
Mell
|
J
|
|
Carter
|
W
|
Marritt
|
H
|
||
Cobb
|
J W
|
K.O.Y.L.I
|
Palmer
|
T.W
|
R.A.F
|
Colbridge
|
S.B.
|
K.O.Y.L.I
|
Palmer
|
S
|
Navy
|
Chappell
|
W
|
R.F.A
|
Raywood
|
S
|
K.O.Y.L.I
|
Drury
|
G
|
E. Yorks
|
Robinson
|
G
|
K.O.Y.L.I
|
Duff
|
J
|
Rockett
|
E
|
R.A.F
|
|
Duckett
|
G
|
Stanley
|
J
|
K.O.Y.L.I
|
|
Denby
|
W
|
Spink
|
G
|
A.O.G
|
|
Duffill
|
A
|
Tank Corps
|
Smith
|
W.H
|
K.O.Y.L.I
|
Duckett
|
C
|
Yorks&Lancs
|
Spink
|
W
|
E. Yorks
|
Darnborough
|
R
|
Scott
|
J
|
R.E
|
|
Duckles
|
J W
|
Smith
|
H
|
R.M.L.I
|
|
Fowler
|
J
|
R.E
|
Saynor
|
A
|
C.G
|
Fielder
|
T
|
Remounts
|
Tether
|
H
|
Navy
|
Franklin
|
W
|
Temperton
|
S
|
||
Ford
|
S
|
R.E
|
Theaker
|
R.W
|
I.W.T
|
Franklin
|
G
|
K.O.Y.L.I
|
Watson
|
J
|
K.O.Y.L.I
|
Goulden
|
G
|
K.O.Y.L.I
|
Walker
|
E
|
K.O.Y.L.I
|
Garner
|
J
|
Walker
|
F.G
|
K.O.Y.L.I
|
|
Graham
|
H
|
Whitehead
|
A
|
Sussex
|
|
Gatherer
|
G
|
Weatherall
|
S
|
S.R.B
|
|
Goodwin
|
G.H
|
R.E
|
Watson
|
F
|
|
Hailstone
|
G
|
Whitely
|
C
|
||
Houhton
|
C
|
Wroot
|
E.G
|
Liverpool
|
|
Hainess
|
C
|
Wroot
|
G.E
|
||
Hewitt
|
F
|
K.O.Y.L.I
|
Waterhouse
|
J
|
Tank Corps
|
Haslam
|
R
|
Yeoman
|
G
|
R.N.D
|
|
Hemmingway
|
J
|
Hewitt
|
T
|
||
Huntington
|
E
|
R.E
|
Goole Shipbuilding and Repairing Co
Ltd Roll of Honour
Of these the following made the
supreme sacrifice.
|
|||
Forename
|
Initial
|
Forename
|
Initial
|
Blackburn
|
C
|
Hemmingway
|
J
|
Bagshaw
|
W
|
Jepson
|
A
|
Carter
|
W
|
Jackson
|
A
|
Cobb
|
J W
|
Mell
|
J
|
Chappell
|
W
|
Marritt
|
H
|
Duff
|
J
|
Saynor
|
H
|
Franklin
|
A
|
Watson
|
R
|
Graham
|
H
|
Whiteley
|
C
|
Houghton
|
C
|
Wroot
|
G E
|
Hewitt
|
T
|
Milner
|
C M
|
Haslam
|
R
|
The
Silver Hall Mark informs that the Roll of Honour was made by Walker and Hall Silver Smiths of
Sheffield in 1919. The Company also ran a shop in Hull.
Goole
Steam Shipping Clerks
Memorial to the Deceased
In
July 1920 in was announced in the Goole Times that there would be another Goole
Roll of Honour by the Shipping Clerks of the Goole Steam Shipping (Lancashire
and Yorkshire Railway Co.), as a tribute to their fallen comrades. The memorial tablet was originally located in
the vestibule of the large hall of the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway (Goole
Steam Shipping) Offices. The Tablet was unveiled at a ceremony attended by Mr
Winterbottom, steamship manager, representatives of the Goole’s Churches, employees
and relatives of the deceased. The memorial is dedicated “To the honour of our
fellow clerks who gave their lives for King and country in the Great War
1914-1919” and lists six men, formerly in the employment of Goole Steam Shipping,
who were killed during War:
The Deceased of the Goole Steam
Shipping
|
|||
Surname
|
Forename
|
Surname
|
Forename
|
Buttery
Jnr
|
W
|
Johnson
|
R
W
|
Hopkinson
|
A
D
|
Johnston
|
H
|
Hall
|
R
|
Richardson
|
J
H
|
The
memorial takes the form of a brass tablet surmounted by the flag of the
Lancashire and Yorkshire Goole Steam Shipping Company.
Memorial
to Those Who Served
In
Mr Winterbottom’s dedication there is a reference to a second memorial tablet
for the men of the Goole Steam Shipping, this tablet, which was to be erected
opposite to the above mentioned memorial, was to be dedicated to those who had
served King and country and returned safely. The location of this memorial
tablet is currently unknown.
Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Mercantile Marine
The
final memorial in Goole Museum is dedicated to the Marine Engineering Staff of
the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway who were killed during the War. In
November 1920 the Goole Times announced ‘yet another’ Goole War Memorial, which
was unveiled in the presence of the Vicar of Goole (Rev. Bishop Iliff),
relatives of the deceased and representatives of the Engineering staff. The
memorial was located in the offices of the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway
Engineering Department. The tablet is described as of ‘handsome design’ is ‘of
bronze on an oak pediment’ and is surmounted by two flags in enamel – the Union
Jack and the ensign of the L. & Y. Railway Company – and was made by ‘The
Engraving Co Limited, Wolverhampton’. The memorial is dedicated “in honour of
those members of the staff, who served in the Great War, and in remembrance of
those named below who made the great sacrifice. In total 14 men are listed on
the memorial, who served on three ‘Lanky’ vessels and two men who was killed on
the Western Front:
The
Deceased of the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Co. Engineering Department
|
||
S.S.
Hebble, Sunk by Enemy Action, May 6th 1917
|
||
F
|
Laycock
|
Chief Engineer
|
A
|
Jackson
|
Fireman
|
A
|
Howard
|
Fireman
|
S.S.
Rye, Sunk by Enemy Action, April 18th 1918
|
||
W
|
Coombes
|
Fireman
|
T W
|
Pettinger
|
Fireman
|
S.S.
Unity, Sunk by Enemy Action, May 2nd 1918
|
||
A
|
Thompson
|
Chief Engineer
|
H
|
Appleyard
|
Fireman
|
G
|
Bateman
|
Fireman
|
J
|
Jones
|
Fireman
|
C
|
Hansome
|
Fireman
|
E
|
Whitehead
|
Fireman
|
G
|
Wilson
|
Fireman
|
Killed
in France
|
||
C
|
Okley
|
Lance Cpl R.E.
(Third Engineer, S.S. Berlin)
|
E.G.
|
Smith
|
L.Cpl 20th Batt.
N’TH’M’Land Fus. (Clerk)
|
Conclusion
The
list of memorials given above is as accurate as the surviving records allow and
as the research and interest in the legacy of the First World War grows will
surely be expanded. The large number of memorials erected in the town gives an
indication of the great sacrifice and loyalty to ‘King and country’ by the
town’s people. They also demonstrate the great need by the town to commemorate
and remember all those who had served during the war and those who were never
to return to the town and their form lives.
In the last of this series of articles an index of memorials listing
Goole men erected throughout the Country will be outlined.