Royal Fusiliers War Memorial



The Royal Fusiliers Monument is a war memorial in London. It was erected in 1922 and dedicated to the nearly 22,000 soldiers of The Royal Fusiliers (City of London Regiment) who died during the First World War. Further inscriptions added later commemorate the Royal Fusiliers who died during the Second World War and in subsequent campaigns.

The memorial stands at Holborn Bar, one of the ancient entry points to the City of London. It occupies a traffic island in the middle of High Holborn, on the City's boundary with the London Borough of Camden, denoted by a dragon boundary mark on either side of the street. The site is near High Holborn's junction with Gray's Inn Road, and close to the historic Staple Inn and the more recent Prudential Assurance Building.

The 8.5 ft high bronze statue was designed by Albert Toft and cast by the A. B. Burton foundry, with Cheadle and Harding as architects. It is said to be modelled on a Sergeant Cox, who served throughout the First World War. It depicts a private soldier in service dress, carrying a rifle with fixed bayonet in his right hand, facing along the road to the west to guard the entrance to the City of London. The statue stands on a 16.5 ft pedestal of Portland stone. A plaque on the east side of the pedestal records each of the Regular, Service and Territorial battalions of the regiment that served in the First World War.

An original intention to erect a war memorial to the Royal London Fusiliers in a Royal Park shifted to Hounslow Barracks and then Holborn. A subscription list opened in 1919 and raised £3,000 by August 1920. The memorial was unveiled by the Lord Mayor of London at 2:30 pm on Saturday 4 November 1922. The church of St Sepulchre-without-Newgate, about 450 yards east of the memorial, was selected as the regimental chapel in 1946. The memorial became a Grade II listed structure in 1972.

An identical statue is one of five bronze figures by Toft forming the war memorial in Oldham, Greater Manchester, unveiled in 1923. The same single bronze figure was unveiled in 1932 as the memorial to the 41st Division at Flers, near the site of the Battle of Flers-Courcelette, where tanks were used in battle for the first time on 15 September 1916.