Victory Arch at London Waterloo rededicated

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Victory Arch at London Waterloo rededicated

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Picture of Roger Smith

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Victory Arch Rededication
Credit: Network Rail

London Waterloo station’s Victory Arch, which was erected 100 years ago to pay tribute to railway colleagues who fought and died in the First World War, has been rededicated.

The Victory Arch, which was designed by the LSWR’s chief architect, J R Scott, is built of Portland stone and bronze and depicts War and Peace, with Britannia holding the torch of liberty above.

The arch forms the main entrance to Waterloo station, leading from Station Approach onto the concourse, and is the only part of station to be listed, at Grade One.

Victory Arch Rededication
station’s Victory Arch rededication. Credit: .

The arch was ceremonially opened by Queen Mary, the grandmother of our present Queen. It also marked the end of a 20-year rebuilding of the station by the London and , leaving the station with much the same layout as it is today.

The rebuilding brought together a collection of disparate buildings and remained in the rebuilt form until the early 1990s, when Nicholas Grimshaw’s international terminal was added to the northern side.

On Monday, 21st March. the arch was rededicated by the Railway Chaplain, Reverend Christopher Penley, supported by a host of senior colleagues from the London and South Western Railway’s successors at Network Rail and South Western Railway, as well as representatives from the Railway Heritage Trust, British Transport Police, and the armed forces. The event featured a number of readings, poems, and a musical performance by a group from Year 6 at the Oasis Academy Johanna school. The last post was sounded at 11.00.

Victory Arch Rededication (2)
London Waterloo station’s Victory Arch rededication. Credit: Network Rail.

Network Rail region managing director John Halsall said: “Most people travelling through Waterloo probably don’t give the Victory Arch a moment’s thought, but you only have to stop and look at the names to see the sheer scale of the loss of life, and the huge sacrifices made by the people of the railway and their families. By rededicating the arch today we’re paying tribute not just to them but all those who lost their lives in war. I’m proud to be working for the same railway they did.”

South Western Railway’s Managing Director Claire Mann said: “Today brought home to me how all of us working in the rail industry are carrying on a tradition, following in the footsteps of thousands of people before us.

Rededicating the Victory Arch and seeing the names on the walls reinforces how special this is. It’s important we don’t just reflect on the past, but to use it to inspire us to carry on the tradition of selflessness and dedication that our predecessors possessed.”

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  1. Good to see this being acknowledged. It’s always seemed odd, though, that the view of that splendid arch is blocked by the line into Charing Cross. When you walk down the steps you find yourself on a narrow pavement in a grubby area next to an ugly entrance to the drunk-infested subways, then have to weave past speeding black cabs; it’s a wretched anticlimax.

    I wish that John Robb Scott’s vision had been properly respected and the station given the approach it deserves. Its opposite number in Paris, Gare du Nord, has some of the same problems (even more drunks and beggars), but at least you can see the whole magnificent facade – you really feel you’re starting on a journey of importance there.

    The worry is that Network Rail keeps threatening to wreck Waterloo by building an ugly tower on top of the station, which will ruin the joyous sense of light and space, which is the best part of Scott’s conception.

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