Westminster Scholars War Memorial

Westminster Scholars War Memorial
The memorial, viewed from the dome on Methodist Central Hall, in 2014
Map
LocationLondon
DesignerGeorge Gilbert Scott
Opening date1861

Memorial in the angle between the west entrance to Westminster Abbey, and the gatehouse leading to Dean's Yard
Detail of the floral capital, statues of Henry III and Elizabeth I, and the rear of St George and the dragon

The Westminster Scholars War Memorial, also known as the Crimea and Indian Mutiny Memorial, is an 1861 memorial in London. It commemorates 19 former pupils of Westminster School who died in two wars: ten in the Crimean War of 1854–56, and nine in the Indian Mutiny of 1857–58. It was designed in High Victorian Gothic style by George Gilbert Scott, who was Surveyor of the Fabric of Westminster Abbey from 1849 to 1878.

The memorial is installed on a triangular plot outside the west entrance to Westminster Abbey, and north of the gatehouse leading to Dean's Yard. It stands near where Broad Sanctuary to the north becomes Victoria Street to the west, with a short road The Sanctuary running to the south and east.

It became a Grade II listed building in 1958. Westminster Abbey and the Dean's Yard gatehouse (also designed by Scott in Gothic style, and constructed in 1853–54) are each separately listed, at Grade I and Grade II respectively. Westminster School is still based in the Abbey's precincts.