Difference between revisions of "Lenham Cross"
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Latest revision as of 23:16, 23 December 2019
Lenham Cross is a figure carved as a war memorial into the chalk hillside of a ridge of the North Downs to the north of the village of Lenham in Kent, to the south-east of Maidstone.
The North Downs Way and the Pilgrims' Way share a path which runs along the slope by the memorial.
The cross was constructed as a permanent testament to the sacrifice of those from the parish who died during the First World War. It was designed by Mr C H Groom the headmaster of the village school and dug out by local volunteers. It was unveiled in September 1922 by Major-General Sir Arthur Lynden-Bell.[1]
The memorial originally included an inscribed memorial stone within a separate fenced enclosure at the south end of the cross, but this has since been moved to the parish church.
Outside links
- Location map: 51°14’32"N, 0°43’44"E
- Streetmap: TQ90585277
- Imperial War Museum: The Lenham Cross
- Lenham Cross: Mark Hows
References
- ↑ National Heritage List 1438738: The Lenham Cross
Hill figures |
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Battle of Britain Memorial • Cerne Abbas Giant • Firle Corn • Folkestone White Horse • Lenham Cross • Long Man of Wilmington • Mormond Hill Horse & Stag • Osmington White Horse • Red Horse of Tysoe • Whipsnade White Lion • Whiteleaf Cross • Wye Crown • Uffington White Horse |