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Thursday 19 May 2011

World War 1 War Memorial updated





In 2006 one of our young people at St. John’s Seven Kings, Sara James, together with two friends, won first prize out of 1000 students who had entered a TV competition in Channel 4’s Lost Generation season. Entries were open to students aged 11-16, working in groups of three or five to create a short project about World War One.

Sara, with her friends Rebecca Smith and Zeenat Pelaria, decided to adopt the war memorial dedicated to those who lost their lives in the First World War from St. John’s. The three 14 year olds represented the Chadwell Heath Foundation School and were up against GCSE students from the best private and grammar schools from all over England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.


Initially they obtained information from historical research of St. John’s. They then compared the names on our War Memorial with a photograph of the church football team from a few years before the war (above) and found that several of the names matched. They were able to obtain more information on the internet using sites such as the Commonwealth War Graves Commission, 1837 Online and the Western Front Association in order to find out more about some of those who had died.
Their competition entry, along with all the others, was judged by a panel of historians, writers, teachers and others involved in Channel 4’s history programmes. They won a ClipBank History Library worth £700 for their school’s history department, which will enable everyone to obtain further wide-ranging historical materials about the two World Wars. There was also a VIP trip for Sara’s class of around 30 students, along with some humanities teachers, to the Imperial War Museum in London.

As a result of their research featuring on our website we were contacted by the family of Charles Brooks Smith, in the football photo, and his brother Frederick Allam Smith. Both had been killed during WW1, Charles Brooks Smith at the Somme no less, but their names had not be included on the War Memorial. Their family, therefore, asked whether their names could be added to the Memorial and today that happened with the letter cutting being undertaken by Mark Tremaine of Woodenyou

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The Call - War Weary World.

1 comment:

when was world war 1 said...

I'm very proud of the children because they were able to contribute in updating some historical facts. I hope they continue their love for history.