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- Q22271787 abstract "Spalding War Memorial is a First World War memorial in the gardens of Ayscoughfee Hall in Spalding, Lincolnshire, in eastern England. The memorial was designed by the architect Sir Edwin Lutyens in a departure from the usual style of Lutyens' war memorials. The proposal for a war memorial in Spalding originated in January 1918 with Barbara McLaren, whose husband and the town's Member of Parliament Francis McLaren was killed in the war. She engaged Lutyens via a family connection and the architect produced a plan for a grand memorial cloister sited in the middle of a circular pond in the gardens of Ayscoughfee Hall, which was owned by the local district council. When McLaren approached the council with her proposal, it generated considerable debate within the community and several alternative schemes were suggested. After a public debate in August 1919, followed three weeks later by a vote, a reduced-scale version of McLaren's proposal emerged as the preferred option, in conjunction with a clock on the town's corn exchange building.The total cost of the memorial was £3,500, of which McLaren and her father-in-law contributed £1,000 each; her brother-in-law donated a pair of painted stone flags and the remainder was raised from voluntary subscription, which took until 1922. The memorial as-built consists of a brick pavilion at the south end of the garden and a Stone of Remembrance (designed by Lutyens for the Imperial War Graves Commission, for which he was one of the principal architects), both at the head of a long reflecting pool, which incorporates the remains of an 18th-century canal. It was unveiled at a ceremony on 9 June 1922. Lutyens went on to use the style of the pavilion for buildings in several war cemeteries on the Western Front, and the connection with Barbara McLaren may have led to his commission for the Royal Naval Division Memorial in London after she remarried to a prominent officer in that unit. Spalding War Memorial is today a grade I listed building, having been upgraded when Lutyens' war memorials were declared a "national collection" and all were granted listed building status or had their listing renewed.".
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- Q22271787 comment "Spalding War Memorial is a First World War memorial in the gardens of Ayscoughfee Hall in Spalding, Lincolnshire, in eastern England. The memorial was designed by the architect Sir Edwin Lutyens in a departure from the usual style of Lutyens' war memorials. The proposal for a war memorial in Spalding originated in January 1918 with Barbara McLaren, whose husband and the town's Member of Parliament Francis McLaren was killed in the war.".
- Q22271787 label "Spalding War Memorial".
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- Q22271787 depiction Ayscoughfee_Hall_Gardens_-_geograph.org.uk_-_990061.jpg.