A brief history of how the names came to be there
Every November at 11 o’clock on the   nearest Sunday to the eleventh day, tributes to Britain’s war heroes   are held across the country during Remembrance Day services. 
      
Brentford’s war monument located outside Brentford’s Library is our local Memorial.
It's here residents, former soldiers and   borough dignitaries came a week ago to pay their respects to all the brave Brentford   men who went to war and sacrificed their lives for our liberty. 
        
The names inscribed on this monument   when unveiled in 1923 were restricted to men who were resident in Brentford   at the time of their enlistment. 
        
At the end of the war many towns and   villages up and down the country unveiled memorials to be able to focus   their grief in the absence of an individual grave. 
        
Brentford was no different to any other   town, wanting to record and remember its own local heroes. 
        
A committee would have been formed to   decide what type of memorial would suit them best. 
        
Looking at the names they include the   Sons of some of Brentford’s most important families. For example: 
        
     J. Gomm - a local   brewery family  
      
     W. A. Bradbury - the wholesale grocer family  delivering   all over London 
      
     Frederick Goddard -    local Furniture Company. 
      
     Edgar Turner - the son of Fred   Turner Brentford’s librarian. 
              
Now normally war memorials are funded by subscription.
In some parts of the country if the family   could not contribute towards its memorial then their names were not   included. 
        
I don’t think Brentford had a problem   with this; money was never going to be an issue because the families   with influence had all lost a son. 
        
The committee would first enquire who and how many names should be included on their memorial,
Names taken from the local papers obituary   columns from the previous 4 years was an easy start 
        
But it’s usually from here that the   wrongly spelt surnames or initials when first recorded are then reproduced   incorrectly onto war memorials themselves. 
        
They had to decide what type of memorial   they wanted that would include so many names: 
         
- A sculptured angel or soldier on top as we have at Heston.
     - Something more practical that   doubled as a clock tower like the one in Isleworth. 
            
     - Or Memorial Homes for returning   soldiers and their families, we have those in Burlington Lane,
                     Chiswick. 
            
A square column, three sides of which   lists the names of 378 Brentford men with the words ‘PRO PATRIA’S   surrounded by an ornamental wreath was adopted. 
        
In what order were the name to be recorded: 
        
     by Service:  Army, Navy and   a column for those in The Royal Air Force. 
              
     by Rank:  Highest rank at the top followed   by other ranks below.  
        
Alphabetical was the layout chosen this   kept the name of brothers next to each other and they had at least 4   or 5 sets of brothers to be included. 
        
One Brentford-born man was Sgt Robert Spall of the Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry (Eastern Ontario Regt), who was killed in France on 13th August 1918, aged 25.
His citation reads ‘Serjt Spall deliberately gave his life in order to extricate his platoon from a most difficult situation and it was owing to his bravery that the platoon was saved.
For this he received the Victoria Cross. 
        
The St Lawrence War Memorial recently   refurbished and relocated to the Brentford Library memorial garden was included for the first time this November in our Remembrance Day   ceremonies.  
        
Recently moved from its original location facing the High Street outside St Lawrence Church, this move saved it from possible damage from overgrowing trees within the church yard and years of neglect.
David Bright
        
November 19, 2009
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