Falkner Square War Memorial
History
The memorial was installed in Falkner Square Gardens in 1993, following a campaign organised by community activist Joe Farrag, whose Egyptian grandfather, Ali Hussain Farrag, served as a merchant seaman during World War II. He went down with his ship, along with 36 other crew members, on 12 May 1943.
Over the years since the memorial was installed, the plaque was defaced and pulled from the stone, it was returned by the local gardener. The War Memorials Trust gave a grant to remove the graffiti by steam cleaning.
After several years of the plants around the memorial being overgrown by branches, a Facebook group was set up by local residents to raise awareness of it and have visitor and road signs installed locally. A celebration was held in August 2019 to mark the installation of the signs and increase awareness of the memorial.
Description
The memorial consists of a freestanding red sandstone stone from the (now demolished) Liverpool Seamen's Hostel which bears an embossed plaque. On top of the plaque is the outline of a ship, "Fort Concord", which was sunk by German U-boat U-456 on 12 May 1943.
The inscription on the plaque reads as follows:
- THIS PLAQUE IS DEDICATED TO
- ALL BLACK MERCHANT SEAMEN WHO SERVED
- DURING THE 1939 – 45 WAR
- "THEY HELD THEIR COURSE"
- RESPECT DUE
- IT WAS JOINTLY UNVEILED BY
- MR. VESTY
- PRESIDENT OF THE BRITISH SHIPPING ORGANISATION
- AND
- MR. B.H. SKEETE
- EX-MERCHANT SEAMAN WHO SERVED DURING THE 1939 – 45 WAR
- ON 27TH MAY 1993
- THE 50TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE "BATTLE OF THE ATLANTIC"
- COMMISSIONED BY THE GALLERY & LIVERPOOL CITY COUNCIL
References
- ^ "Black Merchant Seamen – WW2". Imperial War Museums. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
- ^ Rand, Lisa (19 August 2019). "'Forgotten' Liverpool war memorial campaigners have put on the map". Liverpool Echo. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
- ^ "War Memorials Trust". www.warmemorials.org. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
- ^ "Fort Concord (British Steam merchant) – Ships hit by German U-boats during WWII – uboat.net". uboat.net. Retrieved 19 August 2019.