At the eastern end of the magnificent Lady Chapel built by
King Henry VII is a chapel dedicated to the men of the Royal Air
Force who died in the Battle of Britain between July and October
1940. This chapel received damage from bombs which fell in that
year and a hole made in the stonework has been preserved and
covered with glass. The Tudor glass in the window had also been
blown out at the same time. The Dean of Westminster was
approached early in 1943 by Mr N.Viner-Brady who suggested the
idea of a memorial to "The Few" and Dean Labilliere chose this
small chapel as one suitable for the purpose. Lord Trenchard
(Marshal of the RAF) and Lord Dowding (who led Fighter Command
during the Battle) headed a committee to raise funds for the
furnishing of this chapel and for a stained glass window. The
English walnut altar was designed by A.E.Richardson with
sculptured figures of King Arthur and St George (although an
embroidered frontal usually covers them). The silver cross,
candlesticks and rails were designed by J.Seymour Lindsay. The
chapel was unveiled by King George VI on 10 July 1947.
The Battle of Britain memorial window
The stained glass window, by Hugh Easton, contains the
badges of the fighter squadrons that took part in the Battle.In
four panels are shown visions which symbolise the Redemption. In
one a squadron leader kneels before the Virgin Mary and the
Christ Child. Below this she is represented in her sorrow with
the dead Christ across her knees (a symbol of the sacrifice of
the mothers and widows of those who died in the conflict). On the
opposite side a panel shows a sergeant pilot kneeling before the
Cruficifixion (a symbol of the sacrifice of the pilot himself).
Lastly, above this, is the Resurrection seen by a pilot officer
(representing the pilots' triumph). Seraphim, with six wings and
with hands outstretched to paradise, are shown in the top row of
the window. In the central section are the Royal Arms, the badge
of the Fleet Air Arm and the badge and motto of the RAF "Per
Ardua ad Astra" (Through struggle to the Stars) together with the
furled flags of New Zealand, Canada, Australia, South Africa,
Czechoslovakia, Poland, Belgium, and the United States of
America. In two of the bottom panels are words from Shakespeare's
Henry V "We few, we happy few, we band of brothers". Painted on
the stonework below the glass are the names of six RAF war
leaders (added in 1989). Trenchard and Dowding are buried in this
chapel.
The Roll of Honour, illuminated by Daisy Alcock and given by
Captain Bruce Ingram, contains the names of l,497 pilots and
aircrew killed or mortally wounded during the Battle, of which
449 were in Fighter Command (whom the window specially
commemorates), 732 in Bomber Command, 268 in Coastal Command, 14
in other RAF commands and 34 in the Fleet Air Arm. The names
include those of 47 Canadians, 47 New Zealanders, 35 Poles, 24
Australians, 20 Czechoslovaks, 17 South Africans, 6 Belgians and
one American, as well as those from the United Kingdom and
Colonies.
A Services of Thanksgiving for the victory gained in the
Battle of Britain has been held annually in the Abbey since 1944.
The victory in the air over the German Luftwaffe was the major
factor in forcing Hitler to postpone and eventually abandon his
invasion of Britain. In the words of Prime Minister Winston
Churchill "Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed
by so many to so few".
A postcard of the window is available from Westminster Abbey
shop. The Commonwealth War Graves Commission website (
www.cwgc.org)
will give information about those who died during the war.