-
Aubourn - Taken by G W Martin 27 Aug 1991
-
view - Taken by Charles J Anderson 22 Nov 2006
-
Aubourn and Haddington War Memorial - Taken by Ian S (geograph) licensed for reuse under the Creative Commons License 12 Jun 2012
Reference WMO/226277
Address:
St Peter's Church
Bridge Road/Church Road/Bassingham Road junction
Auborn
LN5 9FB
England
Open large map- Stone Stone (any)
- First World War (1914-1918)
- Second World War (1939-1945)
Grants to support the repair and conservation of war memorials are available from the charity War Memorials Trust if it has raised funds. Support is focused on war memorials in Very bad or Poor condition or where there is a serious Concern.
Before applying for a grant you should read the advice available on War Memorials Trust`s website. The What we can and cannot fund helpsheet explains what types of work the charity can fund.
If you believe your project is eligible for a grant you should complete the Pre-application enquiry form. You will need to be registered and logged in to complete this.
The Pre-application enquiry form is a series of questions to see if your project is eligible. If it is, you will need to provide further details and submit current colour photographs of the war memorial in either a png, gif, jpg or jpeg format.
You can save your Pre-application enquiry form as you go along. Once submitted War Memorials Trust will respond.
Please be aware that a summary of your enquiry, without your contact details, will appear on this page once submitted. This ensures others are aware that an enquiry has been made and can read the response to avoid duplicate enquiries. Information provided by you to us will be used for the purpose of managing the grant enquiry, for further details please read our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy .
As a charity, War Memorials Trust relies on voluntary donations and every contribution, no matter how large or small, makes a really big difference to our work. Your donation will help protect and conserve war memorials for future generations so please support War Memorials Trust’s work.
“To the Glory of God, in commemoration of the successful termination of the Great War, 1914 to 1919, and in loving memory of the men from Aubourn and Haddington who gave their lives". Following WW2 1939 – 1945
James William Dowman, killed in France, 1916, aged 41 years John William Scott, killed in France, 1918, aged 31 years Joseph Scott, died of wounds in France, 1918, aged 27 years William Ansell, killed in France, 1917, aged 21 years Henry Longmate, killed in France, 1917, aged 28 years William Frederick Wood, killed in France, 1917, aged 39 years Harold Stuart Wood, died in Frances, 1919, aged 26 years Gerald Fotherby (Marine) Aged 23, killed in action 9th June 1940.
Information Required
Information Required
Information Required
Information Required
Information Required
Information Required
Information Required