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Halifax Soldiers Memorial, unveiled 7th November 1904

© Lion Series, A Vincent Wild

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Halifax Soldiers Memorial, unveiled 7th November 1904

View of the Anglo-Boer War Memorial in West View Park, Highroad Well, Halifax.

Author: A. Vincent Wild
Date: not dated
Location: Halifax
Format: Postcard - Colour
Document ID: 100054
Library ID: 34561578

West View Park is situated high on the hillside on Highroad Well Moor, with views over Calderdale. Previously the land had been part of the Manor of Skircoat, with mineral rights and quarries owned by Lord Saville and common land rights for the locals.




The land was given to the town by local mill-owners Henry Charles McCrea (Mayor of Halifax 1869-1871) and Enoch Robinson (Mayor of Halifax 1904-1905). The park was opened in 1897.




The war memorial to 73 soldiers who fell in the South African or Boer Wars was unveiled in 1904. An elaborate stone structure with bronze tablets, it has a circular upper stage of polished granite supporting a standing bronze figure of a soldier.




In 1937, the statue was blown over in a storm. A balustrade from the eastern side of Halifax Town Hall was removed and placed around the memorial sometime in the 20th century. Three field guns stood by the statue until 1937 when the supporting woodwork was found to be rotten. The memorial is a grade II listed monument.




[undated, 1904-1937]

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