The National War Memorial is a World War I memorial in downtown St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada. It was erected at King's Beach on Water Street where, in 1583, Sir Humphrey Gilbert claimed Newfoundland for England (following John Cabot's 1497 expedition). It was formally unveiled on Memorial Day, 1 July 1924 by Field Marshal Douglas Haig, 1st Earl Haig.
Donations poured in from across the island for the memorial. Construction was supervised by Lieutenant-Colonel Father Thomas Nangle, the Roman Catholic Padre of Royal Newfoundland Regiment and (Ret) Captain Gerald (Gerry) Whitty.
On the Memorial's centennial, it was refurbished and the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier was added, with Canada's Governor General and Prime Minister in attendance for the ceremony. This is the only time that the Commonwealth War Graves Commission allowed a second tomb for an unknown soldier in the same country. Both tombs inter a soldier who died in the First World War, which took place before the Dominion of Newfoundland became a part of Canada in 1949: the Newfoundland tomb inters a soldier of the Royal Newfoundland Regiment who was previously buried in the Beaumont-Hamel Newfoundland Memorial in France, and the Canadian tomb in the Canadian National War Memorial in Ottawa inters a soldier who fought in the Battle of Vimy Ridge, which Newfoundland was not involved in. About 1,700 Newfoundlanders died in the war; 820 have no known grave.
Background
thumb|The memorial in 2005
On 1 July, 1916, the Royal Newfoundland Regiment was part of the massive battle known as the Battle of the Somme. They were located in the northern French town of Beaumont-Hamel when they were ordered to charge enemy positions. Within about 30 minutes, 86 percent of the regiment was either dead, missing, or injured. The next morning, out of 800 men, only 68 reported for roll call. The Great War Veterans' Association and the Newfoundland Patriotic Association launched the campaign to have the National War Memorial established.
Out in front, on the lower pedestal, are fishermen in oilskins and Wellington boots, and a lumberman with his axe slung over his shoulder, symbolizing the Newfoundlanders who served with the Merchant Marine and the Forestry Corps. Over their heads is a granite cross symbolizing the sacred nature of the war memorial. Below, is a bronze plaque stating that the memorial was erected by "a grateful people to honour its war dead". Similar plaques were added on both sides of the pedestal to commemorate the Newfoundlanders who died in World War II, the Korean War, and the War in Afghanistan.
Unveiling 1924
thumb|Unveiling on Memorial Day, 1 July 1924
Field Marshal Earl Douglas Haig, the former commander of the British Expiditionary Forces during most of World War One, was asked to be present to unveil the National War Memorial, on 1 July 1924. 20,000 people came out on the warm July day. That crowd represented about 10 percent of the island nation's population.
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Centennial and Tomb of the Unknown Soldier
In preparation for the centennial and the entombment, the Memorial received a major $6.1 million restoration that brought the sculptures back to their original state, added new accessible walkways and stairs. Another component of the restoration was creating the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. After originally awarding the contract to create the tomb to a Newfoundland company, Ocean Floor Granite, the government had to cancel the contract in December 2023. Ocean Granite was using materials sourced from Newfoundland and Labrador to create the tomb. A Nova Scotian company, Heritage Memorials, was awarded a new contract in January 2024, and they would use Quebec gabbro for the tomb, but the lid ended up being made from locally sourced anorthosite containing the mineral Labradorite. That meant that he was a Canadian soldier, and did not represent Newfoundland because the island's regiment was not part of that battle. Newfoundland was its own Dominion at the time of the war and flew its own flag. The Commission granted permission in July 2022.
thumb|The casket of the Unknown Soldier lies in state at the [[Confederation Building (Newfoundland and Labrador)|Confederation Building]]
The government purposely chose an anonymous grave with many dead in it, so that the Unknown Soldier could represent all of Newfoundland and Labrador. The tomb means that the war memorial is now under the War Graves Commission's protection. The ceremony to repatriate the Royal Newfoundland Regiment soldier took place at the Beaumont-Hamel memorial and cemetery on 25 May 2024.
The remains were transported back to St. John's that day, where an honour guard drove it from the airport and visited several important sites along the way, including the National Memorial. At the end of June, the Unknown Soldier's remains were laid in state in the East Block Lobby of the Confederation Building of the Newfoundland and Labrador House of Assembly.
On 1 July 2024, an unknown soldier, killed at Beaumont-Hamel, Princess Anne, the colonel in chief of the Royal Newfoundland Regiment and the president of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission, was supposed to be present at the ceremony. Just over a week before the ceremony, she was injured. Buckingham Palace released an official statement that mentioned the trip had to be cancelled because of her injury. Simon represented Princess Anne by reading the royal message at the ceremony. Premier Furey stood in as the ceremonial next of kin for the soldier and received both the ensign flag and the Canadian flag before entombment.
Ceremonies
Each year the memorial is the site of several ceremonies to commemorate those service personnel who died in past wars.
- 25 April, the date of the commemoration of the Gallipoli offensive in World War I
- First Sunday in May, the Battle of the Atlantic is commemorated
- 1 July—Memorial Day—is the date of remembrance of Battle of the Somme at Beaumont-Hamel
- Third Sunday in September, the anniversary of the Battle of Britain is celebrated
- 11 November, is Armistice Day, the anniversary of the official end of World War I
Legacy
In 1928 Newfoundland issued a postage stamp titled 'War Memorial, St. John's', depicting the memorial.
