After the First World War, there were long debates in Cambridge about the appropriate type of war memorial, its location, and how the necessary funds should be raised, involving representatives of the city and the university. Proposals included a clock tower, cottages for injured soldiers, public amenities, or improvements at
Addenbrooke's Hospital. A memorial committee was convened in January 1919 by the
Lord Lieutenant of Cambridgeshire Charles Adeane, with its members drawn from
Cambridgeshire County Council, the borough councils in Cambridge and Ely, and the
University of Cambridge. Members included the
Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge Arthur Shipley (who was also
Master of Christ's College, Cambridge); the
Mayor of Cambridge Ralph Starr and his deputy, the previous year's mayor, Rev Dr
Edmund Pearce (who was also
Master of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge); Colonel
Walter Harding of
Madingley Hall and
John Chivers from the
Chivers and Sons jam making business in
Histon; the
Dean of Ely Cathedral Alexander Kirkpatrick (also former
Masters of Selwyn College, Cambridge), the Mayor of Wisbech, and the surveyor
Charles Bidwell of
Bidwells. In April 1919, the committee recommended three parallel memorials: one at Addenbrooke's, a memorial listing the names of the war dead at
Ely Cathedral, and a large monument in Cambridge itself. Fundraising carried on through 1919 to raise the estimated £30,000 for all three works, two-thirds of which was earmarked for Addenbrooke's, but progress was slow. By December 1919, only £12,000 had been raised, of which £6,000 was donated to Addenbrooke's and put towards building a new nurses' home, which was completed in 1924; its origins as a war memorial had been forgotten by the time the hospital moved away from the
Old Addenbrooke's Site in 1976. The colleges of the university contributed little, as they were raising funds to commemorate their own war dead in their own chapels (and very few of them had served in the Cambridgeshire Regiment), and towns and villages elsewhere in Cambridgeshire were also building their own local war memorials. A meeting on 16 October 1920 approved the memorial schemes for Ely and Cambridge. The proposed Ely memorial became a series of oak panels that were erected in St George's chapel, where the 6,000 casualties of the war are listed alphabetically, sorted by town and parish, without distinction of rank. The panels cost £3,500, and were dedicated on 11 May 1922, with an address by General
Lord Horne, commander of
Eastern Command. The third memorial, the monument in Cambridge, was to become the Cambridge War Memorial. Shipley recommended the Canadian sculptor
Robert Tait McKenzie to design a large sculpture of a soldier, to represent Victory, on a pedestal. The meeting also approved the site some distance south of the centre of the city of Cambridge, on Hills Road near the railway station. A site on
Parker's Piece, closer to the city centre, used in the war as a parade ground, was rejected. Only £3,500 was left from the fundraising towards the £4,500 cost. To save money, the sculpture was reduced in height to . The architect was
George Hubbard . ==Description==