User:Carcharoth/WWI and WWII deaths

WWI and WWII deaths
Created Category:Lists of people killed in World War I. CWGC records also cover WWII deaths.

List of MPs killed should be somewhere. Plus the generals.

Members of Parliament killed in both World Wars are commemorated on the Parliamentary War Memorial. Lists are at the links in that article. See also here.

Lots and lots of information on the parliament website:
 * Lords memorial (WWI)
 * Lords memorial (WWII)

Could also transcribe the wording on the Westminster memorial panel 6

Many of the aristocracy had multiple generations killed, some in WWI and some later in WWII.

Some former MPs listed here.

MPs in WWI
Twenty-two MPs on the Westminster Hall memorial, of which nineteen also have heraldic shield memorials in the House of Commons chamber.


 * ^ = CWGC reference in article (may need tidying) [13]
 * & = no CWGC reference in article [9]


 * CWGC references added or converted for 20 of these articles (30 August 2016); two done earlier
 * Data also added to 20 Wikidata entries (30 August 2016); two done earlier
 * Added all 22 MPs to Wikidata entry for Parliamentary War Memorial (31 August 2016); plus references added on Wikidata
 * Parliamentary War Memorial references added for these 22 articles (31 August 2016)
 * Heraldic shield and Book of Remembrance references added for these 22 articles (30 August-1 September 2016)
 * Book of remembrance (to add, also and  and  and )
 * Heraldic shields (to add, see also - the chamber was destroyed in WWII and rebuilt)

Heraldic shields:
 * Thomas Charles Reginald Agar-Robartes (^)
 * Guy Victor Baring (&)
 * Francis Bennett-Goldney (&)
 * Duncan Frederick Campbell (^)
 * Harold Thomas Cawley (&)
 * Oswald Cawley (^)
 * Percy Archer Clive (^)
 * Ninian Edward Crichton-Stuart (&)
 * Valentine Fleming (&)
 * William Glynne Charles Gladstone (^)
 * Philip Kirkland Glazebrook (^)
 * Michael Hugh Hicks Beach (&)
 * Francis Walter Stafford McLaren (^)
 * Charles Thomas Mills (^)
 * Arthur Edward Bruce O'Neill (^)
 * Neil James Archibald Primrose (^)
 * William Hoey Kearney Redmond (^)
 * Alexander George Boteville Thynne (&)
 * William Lionel Charles Walrond (^)

Only on Westminster Hall memorial:
 * Charles Henry Lyell (^)
 * Thomas Michael Kettle (&)
 * John Joseph Esmonde (&)

Series of blog articles "written by Dr Kathryn Rix of the Victorian Commons" on MPs killed in WWI (as of 18 October 2018, all of the 22 have been covered, plus two of the former MPs not named on the Westminster Hall memorial [Duncombe and Arbuthnot]):
 * Category Archives: World War I MPs
 * O'Neill
 * Gladstone
 * Esmonde
 * Harold Cawley
 * Agar-Robartes
 * Crichton-Stuart
 * Mills
 * Walrond
 * Hicks-Beach (Quenington)
 * Campbell
 * Kettle
 * Baring
 * Duncombe
 * Arbuthnot
 * Fleming
 * Redmond
 * McLaren
 * Primrose
 * Glazebrook
 * Clive
 * Bennett-Goldney
 * Cawley
 * Thynne
 * Lyell
 * News stories on addition of Arbuthnot to the memorial: Former MP killed in WW1 finally added to Parliament's memorial and WW1: The forgotten hero MP. Check numbers quoted there, plus check status of Duncombe (named as a peer on that part of the memorial) and Sykes (possibly considered outside the period covered). KR's blog post on that is here.
 * Overview of the blog series by KR is here.

Another blog series:
 * http://stephensliberaljournal.blogspot.co.uk/p/we-will-remember-them-mps-who-fell-1914.html
 * O'Neill
 * Gladstone
 * Esmonde

Peers in WWI
24 peers died in WWI and are commemorated on the two main parliamentary memorials.

Twenty peers named on the Westminster Hall memorial.


 * ^ = CWGC reference in article (may need tidying) [11]
 * & = no CWGC reference in article [13]


 * Shelley Scarlett, 5th Baron Abinger (^)
 * Wyndham Knatchbull-Hugessen, 3rd Baron Brabourne (^)
 * Henry Bligh Fortescue Parnell, 5th Baron Congleton - see Baron Congleton (&)
 * Arthur French, 5th Baron de Freyne (^)
 * Gilbert Sackville, 8th Earl De La Warr (&)
 * Charles Duncombe, 2nd Earl of Feversham (&)
 * Henry Barnes, 2nd Baron Gorell (includes headstone) (^)
 * Thomas Carew Trollope, 3rd Baron Kesteven - see Trollope baronets (^)
 * Field Marshal Herbert Kitchener, 1st Earl Kitchener (^)
 * John Rolls, 2nd Baron Llangattock (^)
 * Thomas Pakenham, 5th Earl of Longford (&)
 * Auberon Herbert, 9th Baron Lucas (^)
 * Lionel Petre, 16th Baron Petre (^)
 * William Poulett, 7th Earl Poulett (&)
 * Frederick Roberts, 1st Earl Roberts (&)
 * William Parsons, 5th Earl of Rosse (&)
 * James Ogilvie-Grant, 11th Earl of Seafield (^)
 * Henry Howard, 19th Earl of Suffolk (^)
 * George Francis Augustus Venables-Vernon, 8th Baron Vernon - see Baron Vernon (&)
 * Victor George Henry Francis Conyngham, 5th Marquess Conyngham - see Marquess Conyngham (&)

Four peers only mentioned on the House of Lords memorial (they are there as sons of peers):
 * Francis Annesley, 6th Earl Annesley (&)
 * Richard Bernard Boyle, 7th Earl of Shannon - see Earl of Shannon (&)
 * Robert Cornwallis Maude, 6th Viscount Hawarden - see Viscount Hawarden (&)
 * William Charles Wynn, 4th Baron Newborough - see Baron Newborough (&)

Bereaved MPs in WWI
The following 78 Members of Parliament (or former Members of Parliament who had been made peers) were bereaved by the loss of a son or sons during the war. One (John Joseph Esmonde) predeceased his son.


 * (**) = MP predeceased relative named on memorial
 * £ = no mention of son(s), or no mention of son(s) dying in the war [45]
 * $ = death of son(s) in the war is mentioned [33]
 * ^ = CWGC reference in article (may need tidying) [1]
 * & = no CWGC reference in article [77]


 * 1) William Adamson, MP for West Fife
 * 2) Sir John S. Ainsworth, Bart., MP for Argyllshire
 * 3) George Knox Anderson, MP for Canterbury City (lost two sons)
 * 4) Arthur Annesley, 11th Viscount of Valentia, 1st Baron Annesley (MP for Oxford City)
 * 5) E. M. Archdale, MP for North Fermanagh
 * 6) Herbert Henry Asquith, 1st Earl of Oxford and Asquith (MP for East Fife and Prime Minister 1908-16), his fallen son was Raymond Asquith
 * 7) Sir Robert Balfour, Bart., MP for Partick Division of Glasgow
 * 8) Frederick George Banbury, 1st Baron Banbury of Southam (MP for the City of London)
 * 9) George Nicoll Barnes, MP for Blackfriars Division of Glasgow
 * 10) Sir Rowland Barran, MP for Leeds North
 * 11) Sir Edward Beauchamp, Bart., MP for the Lowestoft Division of Suffolk
 * 12) John Bethell, 1st Baron Bethell, MP for the Romford Division of Essex
 * 13) Lieut-Colonel Sir Dennis F. Boles, MP for West Somerset and MP for Taunton
 * 14) Sir James Boyton, MP for East Marylebone
 * 15) William Brace, MP for Glamorgan South
 * 16) Major Leonard Brassey, MP for the Peterborough Division of Northamptonshire
 * 17) Colonel Charles Burn, MP for the Torquay Division of Devon
 * 18) James H. Campbell, 1st Baron Glenavy, MP for Dublin University
 * 19) Charles R. S. Carew, MP for the Tiverton Division of Devon
 * 20) Colonel Sir Hildred Carlile, Bart., MP for St Albans Division of Hertfordshire
 * 21) Frederick Cawley, 1st Baron Cawley, MP for the Prestwich Division of Lancashire (lost three sons; John fell in the Action at Néry in 1914, Harold fell at Gallipoli in 1915, and Oswald fell near Merville in 1918 and was buried in the same cemetery as his brother John)
 * 22) Lieut-Col Douglas Carnegie, MP for Winchester
 * 23) Richard Chaloner, 1st Baron Gisborough (MP for the Abercromby Division of Liverpool)
 * 24) James Chambers, MP for South Belfast, Solicitor-General for Ireland
 * 25) Sir Edmund Bartley-Denniss, MP for Oldham (two other sons had died before the war)
 * 26) Dr John Joseph Esmonde, MP for North Tipperary (**)
 * 27) Sir Thomas H. Grattan Esmonde, Bart., MP for North Wexford
 * 28) Eustace Fiennes, Bart., MP for the Banbury Division of Oxfordshire
 * 29) John Fitzgibbon, MP for South Mayo (lost two sons)
 * 30) Captain E. A. Fitzroy, MP for the Daventry Division of Northamptonshire
 * 31) H. W. Forster, 1st Baron Forster, MP for the Sevenoaks Division of Kent (lost two sons)
 * 32) Sir John Sutherland Harmood-Banner, MP for the Everton Division of Liverpool
 * 33) Arthur Henderson, MP for Barnard Castle Division of Durham, Widnes Division of Lancashire, and for Burnley
 * 34) Sir Charles S. Henry, Bart., MP for the Wellington Division of Shropshire
 * 35) Robert Hermon-Hodge, 1st Baron Wyfold, MP for South Oxfordshire (lost two sons)
 * 36) Gordon Hewart, 1st Baron Hewart of Bury, MP for Leicester
 * 37) Sir Henry Flemming Hibbert, Bart., MP for Chorley Division of Lancashire
 * 38) John Hinds, MP for West Camarthenshire
 * 39) Edward T. John, MP for East Denbighshire
 * 40) Andrew Bonar Law, MP for the Central Division of Glasgow, Prime Minister 1922 (lost two sons)
 * 41) John W. Logan, MP for the Harborough Division of Leicestershire - his fallen son was Hugh Logan
 * 42) Walter H. Long, 1st Viscount Long, MP for Strand and MP for St George's - his fallen son was Brigadier-General Walter Long, whose son (and the 1st Viscount's grandson) Major Walter Long fell in action in the Second World War.
 * 43) Archie Kirkman Loyd, MP for the Abingdon Division of Berkshire
 * 44) Sir Donald MacMaster, Bart., MP for the Chertsey Division of Surrey
 * 45) Major Gilbert McMicking, MP for Kirkcudbrightshire
 * 46) Sir Charles Nicholson, Bart., MP for Doncaster
 * 47) Sir Herbert Nield, MP for the Ealing Division of Middlesex
 * 48) Harry Nuttall, MP for the Stretford Division of Lancashire
 * 49) William O'Malley, MP for the Connemara Division of Co. Galway
 * 50) Algar Orde-Powlett, 5th Baron Bolton of Bolton Castle, MP for the Richmond Division of Yorkshire
 * 51) Sir William Pearce, MP for Tower Hamlets and MP for Limehouse
 * 52) Herbert Pike Pease, 1st Baron Daryngton, MP for Darlington
 * 53) Sir George Pollard, MP for the Eccles Division of Lancashire
 * 54) Sir Ernest M. Pollock, MP for Warwick and Leamington, Master of the Rolls and 1st Baron Hanworth
 * 55) Rowland E. Prothero, 1st Baron Ernle, MP for the University of Oxford
 * 56) Colonel Edmund Royds, MP for the Sleaford Division of Lincolnshire
 * 57) Sir T. W. Russell, Bart., MP for South Tyrone and for North Tyrone
 * 58) Mr Justice Arthur Salter, MP for the Basingstoke Division of Hampshire
 * 59) Mr Justice Arthur Samuels, MP for Dublin University
 * 60) Sir Charles Seely, Bart., MP for the Mansfield Division of Notts
 * 61) Major-General J. E. B. Seely, MP for Ilkestone Division of Derbyshire, Secretary of State for War 1911-12-14
 * 62) Captain D. D. Sheehan, MP for Mid-Cork (lost two sons)
 * 63) Edward Shortt, MP for Newcastle-upon-Tyne West, Home Secretary 1919-22
 * 64) Edward Smallwood, MP for East Islington (lost two sons)
 * 65) Arthur Wellesley Soames, MP for South Norfolk (lost two sons)
 * 66) Charles Butt Stanton, MP for Merthyr Tydfil
 * 67) Arthur Strauss, MP for North Paddington
 * 68) Harold John Tennant, MP for Berwickshire
 * 69) George Rennie Thorne, MP for East Wolverhampton
 * 70) Will James Thorne, MP for the Plaistow Division of West Ham
 * 71) Sir Edmund R. Turton, Bart., MP for the Thirsk and Malton Division (Yorks. NR)
 * 72) John Wadsworth, MP for the Hallam Division of Sheffield
 * 73) Stephen Walsh, MP for the Ince Division of Lancashire
 * 74) Colonel Sir Courtenay Warner, Bart., MP for the Lichfield Division of Staffordshire
 * 75) Lieut-Colonel Sir Henry Webb, Bart., MP for the Forest of Dean Division of Gloucestershire
 * 76) Colonel Sir Robert Williams, Bart., MP for West Dorset
 * 77) William Young, MP for East Perth 1910, and for the Perth Division of Perth and Kinross
 * 78) George Younger, 1st Viscount Younger of Leckie, MP for Ayr Burghs

Bereaved peers in WWI
Long list from here. The overlap with the other bereaved list is due to the timings of the elevation to the Lords and whether or not a peer had previously been an MP. There are 239 people on the Royal Gallery memorial panels for WWI named as deceased relatives of a peer. Accounting for sons from the same family, there are 206 entries in the following list.


 * (**) = peer predeceased relative named on memorial
 * £ = no mention of son(s), or no mention of son(s) dying in the war [110]
 * $ = death of son(s) in the war is mentioned [96]
 * ^ = CWGC reference in article (may need tidying) [10]
 * & = no CWGC reference in article [196]


 * Hallyburton George Campbell, 3rd Baron Stratheden and Campbell - see Baron Stratheden (lost son and grandson, both as heirs)
 * John Thynne, 4th Marquess of Bath (**)
 * Edward O'Neill, 2nd Baron O'Neill
 * Leonard Lyell, 1st Baron Lyell
 * Charles Mills, 2nd Baron Hillingdon
 * Charles McLaren, 1st Baron Aberconway
 * Alexander Baring, 4th Baron Ashburton (**)
 * Michael Hicks Beach, 1st Earl St Aldwyn
 * Archibald Primrose, 5th Earl of Rosebery
 * John Crichton-Stuart, 3rd Marquess of Bute (**)
 * Frederick Cawley, 1st Baron Cawley (lost three sons)
 * Thomas Agar-Robartes, 6th Viscount Clifden
 * William Walrond, 1st Baron Waleran
 * Alexander Charles Hamilton, 10th Lord Belhaven and Stenton - see Lord Belhaven and Stenton
 * Francis Chavasse, Bishop of Liverpool (lost two sons)
 * William Barnard de Blaquiere, 6th Baron de Blaquiere - see Baron de Blaquiere (lost two sons)
 * Edward Douglas-Pennant, 3rd Baron Penrhyn
 * Arnold Keppel, 8th Earl of Albemarle
 * Charles Wynn-Carington, 1st Marquess of Lincolnshire
 * Victor Bruce, 9th Earl of Elgin (**)
 * Walter George Hepburne-Scott, 9th Lord Polwarth - see Lord Polwarth
 * Hallam Tennyson, 2nd Baron Tennyson (lost two sons, see here and here)
 * Henry Browne, 5th Marquess of Sligo
 * Frederick Henry Maitland, 13th Earl of Lauderdale - see Earl of Lauderdale
 * Thomas Shaughnessy, 1st Baron Shaughnessy
 * Charles Hanbury-Tracy, 4th Baron Sudeley (two sons)
 * Henry Cubitt, 2nd Baron Ashcombe (lost three sons)
 * Henry Mulholland, 2nd Baron Dunleath
 * Andrew John Stuart, 6th Earl Castle Stewart - see Earl Castle Stewart (lost two sons)
 * Robert Windsor-Clive, 1st Earl of Plymouth
 * Archibald Robert Hewitt, 6th Viscount Lifford - see Viscount Lifford
 * Archibald Corbett, 1st Baron Rowallan
 * Thomas Coke, 3rd Earl of Leicester
 * John Percival the Bishop of Hereford
 * James Hamilton, 2nd Duke of Abercorn (**) (deceased was Lord Arthur Hamilton)
 * Arthur Kinnaird, 11th Lord Kinnaird (lost two sons)
 * Cecil Weld-Forester, 5th Baron Forester
 * Rowland Clegg-Hill, 3rd Viscount Hill (**)
 * William Hay, 10th Marquess of Tweeddale (**)
 * Charles Gordon-Lennox, 7th Duke of Richmond (deceased was Lord Bernard Gordon-Lennox)
 * Joseph Russell Bailey, 2nd Baron Glanusk (lost two sons)
 * John Vansittart Danvers Butler-Danvers, 6th Earl of Lanesborough - see Earl of Lanesborough (**)
 * Byron Plantagenet Cary, 12th Viscount Falkland - see Viscount Falkland
 * William Edwardes, 4th Baron Kensington (**)
 * Osbert Molyneux, 6th Earl of Sefton
 * Thomas Lister, 4th Baron Ribblesdale
 * George Douglas-Pennant, 2nd Baron Penrhyn (two sons) (**)
 * Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice, 5th Marquess of Lansdowne (deceased was Lord Charles Petty-Fitzmaurice)
 * Charles William St Clair, 15th Lord Sinclair - see Lord Sinclair
 * Henry Power Charles Stanley Monck, 5th Viscount Monck - see Viscount Monck
 * Charles Chetwynd-Talbot, 20th Earl of Shrewsbury
 * Charles Pelham, 4th Earl of Yarborough (deceased was Charles Pelham, Lord Worsley)
 * George Bagot Molesworth, 9th Viscount Molesworth - see Viscount Molesworth
 * Claud Schuster, 1st Baron Schuster
 * Henry Meysey-Thompson, 1st Baron Knaresborough
 * Algernon Freeman-Mitford, 1st Baron Redesdale
 * John Philipps, 1st Viscount St Davids (lost two sons, one was Roland Philipps)
 * Hamilton Matthew Tilson Fitzmaurice Deane-Morgan, 4th Baron Muskerry - see Baron Muskerry
 * William Fellowes, 2nd Baron de Ramsey
 * Edward Ponsonby, 8th Earl of Bessborough
 * Sydney Buxton, 1st Earl Buxton
 * Gerald FitzGerald, 5th Duke of Leinster (**)
 * Edward O'Brien, 14th Baron Inchiquin (**)
 * Joseph Paton Maclay, 1st Baron Maclay (lost two sons)
 * William Pery, 4th Earl of Limerick
 * Charles Hardinge, 1st Baron Hardinge of Penshurst
 * Arthur French, 4th Baron de Freyne - see Baron de Freyne (**) (four sons, Arthur French, 5th Baron de Freyne and three younger half-brothers)
 * Ughtred Kay-Shuttleworth, 1st Baron Shuttleworth (lost two sons)
 * John St Aubyn, 1st Baron St Levan (two sons) (**)
 * John Wodehouse, 2nd Earl of Kimberley (lost two sons, third son died in WWII)
 * Edward Tennant, 1st Baron Glenconner (the deceased was Edward Wyndham Tennant)
 * Ivor Herbert, 1st Baron Treowen
 * Henry Edward Montagu Dorington Clotworthy Upton, 4th Viscount Templetown - see Viscount Templetown
 * John Lubbock, 1st Baron Avebury (two sons, one of whose son later became 3rd Baron Avebury) (**)
 * Frederick Campbell, 3rd Earl Cawdor (**)
 * Reginald Brabazon, 12th Earl of Meath
 * Claude Bowes-Lyon, 14th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne (the deceased was Fergus Bowes-Lyon, older brother of the future Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother)
 * George Forbes, 7th Earl of Granard (**)
 * Weetman Pearson, 1st Viscount Cowdray
 * Godfrey Ernest Percival Willoughby, 10th Baron Middleton - see Baron Middleton (lost two sons, the deceased's younger brother became 11th Baron Middleton)
 * George Lambton, 2nd Earl of Durham (**)
 * Henry Prittie, 4th Baron Dunalley
 * Frederic Thesiger, 1st Viscount Chelmsford
 * Frederick Trench, 3rd Baron Ashtown
 * Gilbert Elliot-Murray-Kynynmound, 4th Earl of Minto (**)
 * George Baillie-Hamilton-Arden, 11th Earl of Haddington (the deceased was George Baillie-Hamilton, Lord Binning)
 * Hercules Edward Rowley, 4th Baron Langford - see Baron Langford
 * Evelyn Boscawen, 7th Viscount Falmouth (lost two sons)
 * Michael Morris, 1st Baron Killanin (**) (the deceased was George Henry Morris)
 * George Goschen, 2nd Viscount Goschen
 * Ernest Cable, 1st Baron Cable
 * George Lionel Henry Seymour Dawson-Damer, 5th Earl of Portarlington - see Earl of Portarlington (**)
 * John Stewart-Murray, 7th Duke of Atholl
 * William Ward, 1st Earl of Dudley (**)
 * Marcus Samuel, 1st Viscount Bearsted
 * William Legge, 6th Earl of Dartmouth
 * Maurice John George Ponsonby, 4th Baron de Mauley - see Baron de Mauley
 * Humphrey Sturt, 2nd Baron Alington
 * William Grenfell, 1st Baron Desborough (lost two sons, one was Julian Grenfell)
 * Freeman Freeman-Thomas, 1st Marquess of Willingdon
 * Edward Stuart Talbot, the Bishop of Winchester (see his son's gravestone)
 * Carlo Giustiniani-Bandini, 2nd Prince Bandini-Giustiniani and 9th Earl of Newburgh - see Earl of Newburgh
 * Ronald Archibald Bosville-Macdonald, 6th Baron Macdonald - see Baron Macdonald (lost two sons)
 * Harold Harmsworth, 1st Viscount Rothermere (lost two sons)
 * Charles Ritchie, 1st Baron Ritchie of Dundee (**)
 * John Atkinson, Baron Atkinson (life peer, non-hereditary)
 * Ailwyn Fellowes, 1st Baron Ailwyn
 * Charles Wightwick Finch, 8th Earl of Aylesford - see Earl of Aylesford
 * Ethel Eveleen Gray-Campbell, 19th Lady Gray - see Lord Gray
 * Henry de Vere Vane, 9th Baron Barnard (deceased was Henry Cecil Vane)
 * Alfred Edwards the Bishop of St Asaph
 * Henry Bruce, 2nd Baron Aberdare
 * Henry Charles Hardinge, 3rd Viscount Hardinge - see Viscount Hardinge
 * Rudolph Feilding, 9th Earl of Denbigh (lost two sons)
 * John Crichton, 4th Earl Erne
 * Francis Pelham, 5th Earl of Chichester (**)
 * Hercules Arthur Temple Robinson, 2nd Baron Rosmead - see Baron Rosmead
 * Francis Wheler Hood, 4th Viscount Hood - see Viscount Hood (**) (deceased was Horace Lambert Alexander Hood)
 * Edmund Allenby, 1st Viscount Allenby
 * Francis Stonor, 4th Baron Camoys (**)
 * Hugh Dawnay, 8th Viscount Downe
 * Simon Fraser, 13th Lord Lovat (**)
 * Hugh Grosvenor, 1st Duke of Westminster (**) (deceased was Hugh William Grosvenor)
 * Hugo Charteris, 11th Earl of Wemyss (two sons)
 * Charles Leigh Adderley, 2nd Baron Norton - see Baron Norton
 * Frederick Hamilton-Temple-Blackwood, 1st Marquess of Dufferin and Ava (**) (deceased was Ian Basil Gawaine Temple Hamilton-Temple-Blackwood)
 * George Manners Astley, 20th Baron Hastings (**)
 * David Boyle, 7th Earl of Glasgow
 * Thomas Thynne, 5th Marquess of Bath
 * Lord William Cecil, the Bishop of Exeter (lost three sons)
 * Charles Hepburn-Stuart-Forbes-Trefusis, 20th Baron Clinton (**) (deceased was John Frederick Hepburn-Stuart-Forbes-Trefusis)
 * Joseph Russell Bailey, 1st Baron Glanusk (**)
 * John Manners-Sutton, 3rd Baron Manners (deceased was John Nevile Manners)
 * Arthur Bigge, 1st Baron Stamfordham
 * Spencer Cavendish, 8th Duke of Devonshire (**)
 * Cecil Foljambe, 1st Earl of Liverpool (**)
 * Randolph Henry Stewart, 11th Earl of Galloway - see Earl of Galloway
 * Charles Saunders Dundas, 6th Viscount Melville - see Viscount Melville
 * Lawrence Hesketh Palk, 2nd Baron Haldon - see Baron Haldon (**)
 * Leonard Burrows, the Bishop of Sheffield
 * Shelley Scarlett, 5th Baron Abinger (bereaved by loss of his brother, later died himself)
 * John Hamilton, 1st Baron Hamilton of Dalzell (**)
 * Henry Shore, 5th Baron Teignmouth - see Baron Teignmouth
 * Hugh Seymour, 6th Marquess of Hertford (**)
 * George James Playfair, 2nd Baron Playfair - see Baron Playfair
 * Arthur Peel, 1st Viscount Peel (**)
 * Valentine Browne, 5th Earl of Kenmare
 * Arthur Hood, 2nd Viscount Bridport
 * George Howard, 9th Earl of Carlisle (**)
 * Tonman Mosley, 1st Baron Anslow
 * Pritchard Hughes, Bishop of Llandaff
 * David Ogilvy, 11th Earl of Airlie (**)
 * William Charles Evans-Freke, 8th Baron Carbery - see Baron Carbery
 * George Herbert, 4th Earl of Powis (a second son died in WWII)
 * Gilbert Heathcote-Drummond-Willoughby, 1st Earl of Ancaster (**)
 * Francis Edward Fitzalan-Howard, 2nd Baron Howard of Glossop - see Baron Howard of Glossop
 * Robert Chalmers, 1st Baron Chalmers (lost two sons)
 * Charles Aloysius Barnewall, 18th Baron Trimlestown - see Baron Trimlestown
 * Arthur Henry Chichester, 3rd Baron Templemore - see Baron Templemore
 * Richard Grosvenor, 1st Baron Stalbridge (**)
 * Mary Morgan-Grenville, 11th Lady Kinloss
 * John Bingham, 5th Baron Clanmorris (**)
 * George Bridgeman, 4th Earl of Bradford (**)
 * Arthur Stanhope, 6th Earl Stanhope (**)
 * Arthur Wellesley, 4th Duke of Wellington
 * William Forbes-Sempill, 17th Lord Sempill (**)
 * Alexander Bruce, 6th Lord Balfour of Burleigh
 * Robert Nivison, 1st Baron Glendyne
 * Walter Phillimore, 1st Baron Phillimore
 * Charles Noel, 3rd Earl of Gainsborough
 * Margaret Charlotte Howard, 2nd Baroness Strathcona and Mount Royal - see Baron Strathcona and Mount Royal
 * Henry Ryder, 4th Earl of Harrowby (**)
 * William Palmer, 2nd Earl of Selborne
 * John Manners, 7th Duke of Rutland
 * Sholto Douglas, 19th Earl of Morton
 * Luke Paget, the Bishop of Chester
 * Mark McDonnell, 5th Earl of Antrim - see Earl of Antrim (**) (deceased was Schomberg Kerr McDonnell)
 * Alexander Fraser, 19th Lord Saltoun
 * William Compton, 5th Marquess of Northampton (**)
 * James Joicey, 1st Baron Joicey
 * Dudley Stanhope, 9th Earl of Harrington
 * Thomas Fremantle, 3rd Baron Cottesloe
 * Uchter Knox, 5th Earl of Ranfurly
 * Henry Parnell, 4th Baron Congleton - see Baron Congleton (**)
 * William Moreton Eden, 5th Baron Auckland - see Baron Auckland
 * Mary Rothes Margaret Cecil, 2nd Baroness Amherst of Hackney - see Baron Amherst of Hackney
 * William St George Nugent, 10th Earl of Westmeath (**)
 * George Bridges Harley Dennett Rodney, 7th Baron Rodney - see Baron Rodney (**)
 * George Cadogan, 5th Earl Cadogan (the deceased was William George Sydney Cadogan)
 * Alfred FitzRoy, 8th Duke of Grafton
 * Henry Hodgson, the Bishop of St. Edmundsbury and Ipswich (the deceased was William Noel Hodgson)
 * Henry Wyndham, 2nd Baron Leconfield (**)
 * Henry Forster, 1st Baron Forster (lost two sons)
 * Arthur Annesley, 11th Viscount Valentia
 * George Younger, 1st Viscount Younger of Leckie
 * Frederick Banbury, 1st Baron Banbury of Southam
 * John Bethell, 1st Baron Bethell
 * Robert Hermon-Hodge, 1st Baron Wyfold (lost two sons)
 * Gordon Hewart, 1st Viscount Hewart
 * James Campbell, 1st Baron Glenavy
 * Herbert Henry Asquith (deceased was Raymond Asquith)
 * Richard Chaloner, 1st Baron Gisborough
 * Herbert Pease, 1st Baron Daryngton
 * Rowland Prothero, 1st Baron Ernle
 * Walter Long, 1st Viscount Long (deceased was Walter Long)
 * Algar Orde-Powlett, 5th Baron Bolton

MPs in WWII
23 MPs who died in WWII are commemorated on the memorial window in Westminster Hall. One (Keyes) was both an MP and a peer.


 * ^ = CWGC reference in article (may need tidying) [17]
 * & = no CWGC reference in article [6]


 * John Percival Whiteley (&)
 * Stuart Hugh Minto Russell (^)
 * Anthony John Muirhead (^)
 * Frank Frederick Alexander Heilgers (^)
 * Dudley Jack Barnato Joel (^)
 * Allen Algernon Bathurst (^)
 * Patrick Munro (^)
 * James Archibald Saint George Fitzwarenne-Despencer-Robertson (&)
 * James Baldwin-Webb (^)
 * Robert Hamilton Bernays (^)
 * Victor Alexander Cazalet (&)
 * John Dermot Campbell (^)
 * Peter Thorp Eckersley (&)
 * Roger John Brownlow Keyes (&)
 * John Robert Jermain Macnamara (^)
 * George Charles Grey (&)
 * Arnold Talbot Wilson (^)
 * Rupert Arnold Brabner (^)
 * John Ronald Hamilton Cartland (^)
 * John Rankin Rathbone (^)
 * Edward Orlando Kellett (^)
 * Richard Whitaker Porritt (^)
 * Somerset Arthur Maxwell (^)

Peers in WWII
34 peers died in WWII. One (Baron Keyes) was an MP as well. Not all were serving in the military; Baron Moyne was a minister of state in the Middle East who was assassinated by a Zionist paramilitary group. At least two immediate members of the royal family are included here (the Duke of Kent and the Duke of Connaught and Strathearn). These names (with others) appear on the panels in the Royal Gallery. A number are civilian war dead, with CWGC records but recorded in the Civilian War Dead Roll of Honour in Westminster Abbey.


 * ^ = CWGC reference in article (may need tidying) [11]
 * & = no CWGC reference in article [22]
 * n/a = no CWGC record [1]


 * Frederick Colvin George Eden, 6th Baron Auckland - see Baron Auckland (&)
 * William Tatem, 1st Baron Glanely (^)
 * Napier Sturt, 3rd Baron Alington (^)
 * Charles Alexander Colville, 3rd Viscount Colville of Culross - see Viscount Colville of Culross (&)
 * Alastair Windsor, 2nd Duke of Connaught and Strathearn (&)
 * Roger Keyes, 1st Baron Keyes (&)
 * Edward Claud Berkeley Portman, 5th Viscount Portman - see Viscount Portman (&)
 * Josiah Stamp, 1st Baron Stamp also his wife and his son Wilfred Stamp, 2nd Baron Stamp (^ - Stamp) (^ - wife) (^ - son)
 * John Wodehouse, 3rd Earl of Kimberley (^)
 * Richard Algernon Frederick Hanbury-Tracy, 6th Baron Sudeley - see Baron Sudeley (&)
 * Ronald Arthur Somerset Gough-Calthorpe, 9th Baron Calthorpe - see Gough-Calthorpe family (&)
 * Charles Howard, 20th Earl of Suffolk (&)
 * Prince George, Duke of Kent (&)
 * Walter Guinness, 1st Baron Moyne (n/a)
 * John Arundell, 16th Baron Arundell of Wardour (^)
 * Norton Knatchbull, 6th Baron Brabourne (^)
 * John Pelham, 8th Earl of Chichester (^)
 * Walter Long, 2nd Viscount Long (&)
 * Shane O'Neill, 3rd Baron O'Neill (&)
 * Heneage Michael Charles Finch, 9th Earl of Aylesford - see Earl of Aylesford (&)
 * John Crichton, 5th Earl Erne (&)
 * Mervyn Herbert, Viscount Clive (^)
 * Jenico William Richard Preston, 16th Viscount Gormanston - see Viscount Gormanston (&)
 * Richard Henry Cornwallis Neville, 8th Baron Braybrooke - see Baron Braybrooke (&)
 * George William Reginald Victor Coventry, 10th Earl of Coventry - see Earl of Coventry (&)
 * Henry Percy, 9th Duke of Northumberland (^)
 * Henry Wellesley, 6th Duke of Wellington (&)
 * Charles Petty-Fitzmaurice, 7th Marquess of Lansdowne (&)
 * Basil Hamilton-Temple-Blackwood, 4th Marquess of Dufferin and Ava (^)
 * John Dudley North, 13th Baron North - see Baron North (&)
 * Richard Ughtred Paul Kay-Shuttleworth, 2nd Baron Shuttleworth - see Baron Shuttleworth (&)
 * Ronald Orlando Lawrence Kay-Shuttleworth, 3rd Baron Shuttleworth - see Baron Shuttleworth (&)
 * David Davies, 2nd Baron Davies - see Baron Davies (&)
 * Charles Lyell, 2nd Baron Lyell (^)

Bereaved MPs in WWII
It appears that a decision was made to commemorate the MPs and peers and officers of parliament that died in the war on the memorial window in Westminster Hall, but for the MP sons (and one daughter) who died in the war to be commemorated only in the book of remembrance that was compiled for the House of Commons following WWII (see here and here). The sons and other relatives of peers that died in WWII are commemorated in the Royal Gallery. Again, some overlap with other lists where the parent was an MP and later a peer. 33 entries in this list. There may be one grandson. There is also a child commemorated here (a civilian casualty), the nine-year-old Clive Graham Lawson. One casualty is the son of two MPs (husband and wife). The unveiling of this book of remembrance in 1949 was reported in The Times.


 * £ = no mention of relative(s), or no mention of relative(s) dying in the war [23]
 * $ = death of relatives(s) in the war is mentioned [10]
 * ^ = CWGC reference in article (may need tidying) [1]
 * & = no CWGC reference in article [32]


 * Captain John Otway Hamilton Beamish, Royal Artillery. Son of Rear-Admiral Tufton Percy Hamilton Beamish (£&)
 * Captain Malcolm Reginald Blair, The Royal Fusiliers. and Second-Lieutenant Walter MacLellan Blair, The Royal Fusiliers.  Sons of Sir Reginald Blair, 1st Baronet (lost two sons)  ($&) and (£&)
 * Lieutenant Geraint Clement Davies, Welsh Guards. and Lance-Corporal Mary Eluned Clement Davies, Auxiliary Territorial Service.  Son and daughter of the Right Honourable Clement Davies ($&) and ($&)
 * Lieutenant Ronald Leslie Davies, Royal Navy. Son of George F. Davies (£&)
 * Sergeant Dennis Charles Alfred Denville, Royal Air Force. Son of Charles Denville and grandson of Alfred Denville Death notice on p.4 of The Stage (17 September 1942), stating that Dennis was "a grandson of Alfred Denville, M.P.". (£&)
 * Second-Lieutenant George Rae Duncan, The Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry. Son of Rt. Hon Sir Andrew Rae Duncan (£&)
 * Pilot Officer Simon Gascoigne Eden, Royal Air Force. Son of the Rt. Hon. Sir Robert Anthony Eden ($^)
 * Signalman Edward Edwards, Royal Corps of Signals. Son of Walter James Edwards ($&)
 * Captain Francis Albert Neville Elliston, Parachute Regiment. Son of Sir George Sampson Elliston (£&)
 * Corporal Francis Ronald Emery, Royal Air Force. Son of James Frederick Emery (£&)
 * Lieutenant the Honourable Alistair Robert Hervey Erskine, M.C., Scots Guards. Son of John Francis Ashley, Lord Erskine ($&)
 * Lieutenant Henry Arthur Evans, Welsh Guards. Son of Colonel Sir Arthur Evans (£&)
 * Lieut. William Brodie Galloway Galbraith, Royal Navy. Son of Captain Thomas Dunlop Galbraith ($&)
 * Lieut. William Alexander Achard Gibbons, Royal Engineers. Son of William Ernest Gibbons (£&)
 * Flying Officer Esmond Birch Graham-Little, Royal Air Force. Son of Sir Ernest Gordon Graham-Little (£&)
 * Captain John St. George Gunston, Irish Guards. No family details provided by the CWGC. Son of Derrick Gunston. Parentage confirmed with the death notice in The Times (London, England), Saturday, Nov 10, 1945; pg. 1; Issue 50296. (£&)
 * Sub-Lieutenant Bruce Hall, Royal Navy. Son of George Henry Hall (£&)
 * Major Robert Alexander Hambro, Reconnaissance Corps. Son of Angus Valdemar Hambro (£&)
 * Captain Christopher John Darell Jeffreys, M.V.O., Grenadier Guards. Son of General George Darell Jeffreys, First Baron Jeffreys ($&)
 * Clive Graham Lawson. Son of John James Lawson (who had lost a brother in WWI) ($&)
 * Sub-Lieutenant (A) David Lees-Jones, D.S.C., Royal Navy. Son of John Lees-Jones (£&)
 * Lieutenant Julian Lyttelton, Grenadier Guards. Son of Capt. the Rt. Hon. Oliver Lyttelton (£&)
 * Major Geoffrey Ernest Makins, M.C., The Royal Dragoons. Son of Brigadier General Sir Ernest Makins (£&)
 * Flying Officer Cecil Walter Alvin Manning, Royal Air Force. No family details provided by the CWGC. Could be son of Cecil Manning, though another MP with the surname Manning also exists: Leah Manning. (£&)
 * Captain Alexander Henry Richard Maule Ramsay, Scots Guards. Son of Capt. Archibald Henry Maule Ramsay ($&)
 * Captain Richard Douglas Schuster, The Middlesex Yeomanry. Son of Sir George Ernest Schuster (£&)
 * Major Robert Henry Richard Tasker, Royal Engineers. Son of Maj. Sir Robert Inigo Tasker (£&)
 * Lieut-Commander Christopher Hayward Wells, Royal Navy. and Squadron Leader James Michael Wells, Royal Air Force.  and Major Thomas Capper Wells, The Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire Regiment.  Sons of Sydney Richard Wells (lost three sons) (£&)
 * Captain John Walter Womersley, The Royal Lincolnshire Regiment. Son of the Rt. Hon. Sir Walter James Womersley, 1st Baronet (£&)
 * Flying Officer Thomas Johnston Adamson, D.F.M., Royal Air Force. Son of William Murdoch Adamson and Jennie Laurel Adamson (£&)
 * Flight Lieutenant Gillian Lorne Campbell, D.F.C., Royal Air Force. Son of Sir Edward Taswell Campbell, 1st Baronet (£&)
 * Lt.-Colonel Geoffrey Charles Tasker Keyes, V.C., M.C., The Royal Scots Greys. Son of Admiral of the Fleet Roger John Brownlow Keyes, 1st Baron Keyes ($&)

Bereaved peers in WWII
Those peers who lost sons, daughters, brothers and wives in WWII. Those who died are commemorated in the Royal Gallery. 104 casualties listed as relatives of a peer, some from the same family. The fallen relative is a son unless otherwise stated. Accounting for relatives from the same family, the following list has 98 entries.


 * (**) = peer predeceased relative named on memorial
 * £ = no mention of relative(s), or no mention of relative(s) dying in the war [50]
 * $ = death of relative(s) in the war is mentioned [48]
 * ^ = CWGC reference in article (may need tidying) [2]
 * & = no CWGC reference in article [96]


 * Shane O'Neill, 3rd Baron O'Neill (bereaved by loss of his brother, later died himself)
 * William Alexander Evering Cecil, 3rd Baron Amherst of Hackney - see Baron Amherst of Hackney (lost his brother)
 * Robert Charles Henry Darling, 2nd Baron Darling - see Baron Darling (lost his brother)
 * Anthony Hugh Francis Harry St Clair-Erskine, 6th Earl of Rosslyn - see Earl of Rosslyn (lost his brother)
 * John Goschen, 3rd Viscount Goschen (lost his brother)
 * Charles Campbell, 2nd Baron Glenavy (lost his daughter)
 * Patrick Boyle, 8th Earl of Glasgow (lost a son and a daughter)
 * Christian Arthur Wellesley, 4th Earl Cowley - see Earl Cowley (lost his daughter)
 * Walter Runciman, 1st Viscount Runciman of Doxford (lost his daughter)
 * Seymour Bathurst, 7th Earl Bathurst (deceased was MP Allen Algernon Bathurst)
 * Arthur Maxwell, 11th Baron Farnham (deceased was MP Somerset Maxwell)
 * Richard Parsons, the Bishop of Hereford
 * Henry Mosley, the Bishop of Southwell
 * Charles Carr, the Bishop of Hereford (**)
 * Malcolm Hailey, 1st Baron Hailey
 * Alexander Hore-Ruthven, 1st Earl of Gowrie (deceased was Alexander Hardinge Patrick Hore-Ruthven)
 * Alexander Fraser, 20th Lord Saltoun
 * Godfrey Walter Phillimore, 2nd Baron Phillimore - see Baron Phillimore
 * Rowland Winn, 2nd Baron St Oswald (**)
 * Francis Grenfell, 1st Baron Grenfell (**)
 * Rupert Guinness, 2nd Earl of Iveagh
 * Arthur Chichester, 4th Baron Templemore
 * James Grimston, 4th Earl of Verulam (lost two sons)
 * William Plunket, 5th Baron Plunket (**)
 * Ralph Beckett, 3rd Baron Grimthorpe
 * Charles FitzRoy, 10th Duke of Grafton
 * Marmaduke Furness, 1st Viscount Furness (deceased was Victoria Cross-recipient Christopher Furness)
 * Thomas Coke, 4th Earl of Leicester (deceased was David Arthur Coke)
 * Alfred Douglas-Hamilton, 13th Duke of Hamilton (**) (deceased was David Douglas-Hamilton)
 * Hugh Edward Joicey, 3rd Baron Joicey - see Baron Joicey
 * Arthur Stuart, 7th Earl Castle Stewart (lost 2 sons)
 * Henry Mond, 2nd Baron Melchett
 * Gustavus William Hamilton-Russell, 9th Viscount Boyne - see Viscount Boyne (lost 3 sons, predeceased two of them)
 * George Montagu, 9th Earl of Sandwich
 * Alexander Murray, 8th Earl of Dunmore
 * William Hay, 10th Marquess of Tweeddale (**)
 * Thomas Edward Anson, 4th Earl of Lichfield - see Earl of Lichfield
 * Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice, 6th Marquess of Lansdowne (**)
 * Evelyn Hugh John Boscawen, 8th Viscount Falmouth - see Viscount Falmouth
 * Edward Wood, 1st Earl of Halifax
 * St John Brodrick, 1st Earl of Midleton (**) (lost two sons)
 * Clive Wigram, 1st Baron Wigram
 * Adolphus Cambridge, 1st Marquess of Cambridge (deceased was Frederick Charles Edward Cambridge)
 * Ada Edwina Stewart Lewin, 3rd Countess Roberts - see Earl Roberts and also Aileen Roberts, 2nd Countess Roberts
 * Alfred Blunt, the Bishop of Bradford
 * Roger Keyes, 1st Baron Keyes (deceased was Victoria Cross-recipient Geoffrey Keyes)
 * Arthur Stanley Byng, 10th Viscount Torrington - see Viscount Torrington
 * Charles Douglas-Home, 13th Earl of Home
 * Nellie Lisa Melles, 2nd Baroness Burton - see Baroness Burton
 * Lionel Arthur Henry Seymour Dawson-Damer, 6th Earl of Portarlington - see Earl of Portarlington
 * Henry Neville, 7th Baron Braybrooke - see Baron Braybrooke (**) (two sons died after him, one as the 8th Baron)
 * George Bridges Harley Guest Rodney, 8th Baron Rodney - see Baron Rodney
 * Robert Hugh Cawley, 2nd Baron Cawley - see Baron Cawley
 * John Edward Deane Browne, 5th Baron Kilmaine - see Baron Kilmaine
 * Hugh Fortescue, 5th Earl Fortescue
 * Hugh Trenchard, 1st Viscount Trenchard (also two step-sons)
 * Henry Beresford, 6th Marquess of Waterford (**)
 * Wilfred Cairns, 4th Earl Cairns
 * Edith Abney-Hastings, 12th Countess of Loudoun
 * Ian Maitland, 15th Earl of Lauderdale
 * Leopold Greville, 6th Earl of Warwick (**)
 * Robert Soame Jocelyn, 8th Earl of Roden - see Earl of Roden
 * Gomer Berry, 1st Viscount Kemsley
 * Patrick Bowes-Lyon, 15th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne
 * Thomas Corbett, 2nd Baron Rowallan
 * Gavin Simonds, 1st Viscount Simonds
 * Arthur Robert Pyers Southwell, 5th Viscount Southwell - see Viscount Southwell (**)
 * Montague Waldegrave, 5th Baron Radstock (deceased was John Waldegrave)
 * Philip Cunliffe-Lister, 1st Earl of Swinton
 * Victor Bulwer-Lytton, 2nd Earl of Lytton
 * Frederick Lambart, 9th Earl of Cavan (**)
 * Hugh Aglionby Shore, 6th Baron Teignmouth - see Baron Teignmouth
 * Lawrence Dundas, 2nd Marquess of Zetland
 * Michael William Robert de Courcy, 34th Baron Kingsale - see Baron Kingsale
 * William Wedgwood Benn, 1st Viscount Stansgate
 * Algernon Strutt, 3rd Baron Belper
 * Henry Cavendish Butler, 8th Earl of Lanesborough - see Earl of Lanesborough
 * Kenelm William Edward Edgcumbe, 6th Earl of Mount Edgcumbe - see Earl of Mount Edgcumbe
 * Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 5th Marquess of Salisbury
 * George Bowyer, 1st Baron Denham
 * Richard Assheton Cross, 2nd Viscount Cross (**)
 * John Baird, 1st Viscount Stonehaven (**)
 * Bertram Gurdon, 2nd Baron Cranworth
 * Robert Collier, 3rd Baron Monkswell
 * Robert Brand, 1st Baron Brand
 * Henry Charles Clement Dundas, 7th Viscount Melville - see Viscount Melville (**)
 * Charles Wilson, 2nd Baron Nunburnholme (**)
 * Jenico Edward Joseph Preston, 15th Viscount Gormanston - see Viscount Gormanston (**) (two of his sons died, Jenico William Richard Preston, listed here as 16th Viscount, and Stephen Edward Thomas Preston, listed here as son of a peer though he was at the time of his death uncle to the 17th Viscount)
 * David Freeman-Mitford, 2nd Baron Redesdale
 * Mary Cecil Frankland, 17th Baroness Zouche - see Frankland baronets and Baron Zouche
 * Walter Gibbs, 4th Baron Aldenham
 * Leopold Ernest Stratford George Canning, 4th Baron Garvagh - see Baron Garvagh
 * Richard Long, 3rd Viscount Long
 * Edward Cavendish, 10th Duke of Devonshire (deceased was William Cavendish, Marquess of Hartington)
 * George Parker, 7th Earl of Macclesfield
 * Samuel Vestey, 2nd Baron Vestey
 * William Legge, 7th Earl of Dartmouth
 * Roundell Palmer, 3rd Earl of Selborne

Notes and thoughts
The lists above can be arranged in tables with additional information included.

The table for the MPs that died in WWI has been done. This could be split into three separate tables to make it easier to navigate: (i) political career; (ii) military career (including cause of death); (iii) memorials (including place of burial/memorial). More details could be added like political roles (some were ministers, others were not), the first commission and regiment (if different from the last), military awards and medals, more on the military context of the battles and actions the MPs fought in, and so on (emphasise and explain why they are all officers). Downside is that some had a very limited political career, some had a very short military career, and some have not much more than the parliamentary memorials, but this approach would mean less of a feel that things are being crammed in. All the tables would have the names in common. The burial place and age at death could be in both (ii) and (iii). Age when first elected an MP would be in (i). If more images appear later, then columns could be added for those, rather than using a gallery. The political table might use the correct form of address for them as an MP, and would give details of their successor (sometimes a family member became the MP in an uncontested election). The military table would use their rank at time of death. The memorial table might just use their name (or what appears on their gravestone).

Need to find out why Kettle (a former MP) was included on the memorials (he remained very active in Irish politics) and other former MPs (some other former MPs died in WWI) were not included. The whole reaction to the deaths of Redmond and Kettle has had lots written about it. Ditto Gladstone (the whole repatriation of the body issue) and others with political connections (e.g. Primrose was a son of Lord Rosebery the former Prime Minister). Mention in this context other MPs and peers that lost sons (and give numbers). Note the peerage connections and how deaths of an eldest son impacted on the succession. Also, give total number of MPs, numbers of fighting age, numbers that served and that they didn't have to serve but many chose to do so (some sources do discuss this). Cover reaction to deaths from the military, from fellow politicians, from family, and from the wider public. Note reaction and commemoration in the present day (e.g. centenaries being marked). Also need to say how wartime politics worked, the suspension of some political activities (but also the continuation of some politics), the postponement of the scheduled general elections, the by-elections and wartime electoral pacts.

For memorials, can give details of planning, committees, mention the other parliamentary memorials, debates in the Houses, unveiling ceremonies, quotes from contemporary reports, quotes from the book of remembrance. Can give gravestone quotes as well. For the other memorials, focus mostly on the individual memorials, but also mention the group memorials. If no grave photo, use one of the cemetery or memorial. Ideally, different photos will be available of them as politicians and in uniform, but this is unlikely. Only likely to get one photo of each, if that. Use statues if pictures not available. Better pictures of the Westminster Hall memorial would be nice (wide shot and ones of each panel, with Panels 1 and 8 relevant here). Photos of the books of remembrance and the heraldic shields and the Royal Gallery memorial would also be nice, but harder to get.

List of MPs who died in WWI
Twenty-two MPs and former MPs listed here who died in the First World War. All except Kettle were members of the 30th UK Parliament (December 1910 to December 1918). One (Lyell) had resigned as an MP before his death. Five of these MPs were elected in by-elections to the 30th UK Parliament; and another four had been elected for the first time in the December 1910 general election. Fourteen (including Kettle) had been elected to Parliament at earlier dates. The length of service as an MP for the twenty-two listed here ranges from 34 years (Redmond) to 7 months (Oswald Cawley). All twenty-two are listed on the Westminster Hall memorial; nineteen on Panel 8, and three (Lyell, Kettle and Esmonde) on Panel 1. The nineteen listed on Panel 8 of the Westminster Hall memorial also have heraldic shields in the Commons Chamber. Thirteen of those listed here are also included on the Royal Gallery memorial in the House of Lords, as they are sons of peers. All twenty-two listed here appear in the House of Commons WWI Book of Remembrance. The thirteen that are also on the Royal Gallery memorial are included in the House of Lords WWI Book of Remembrance.

Parliamentary memorials
The external links in this table are from the UK Parliament website (www.parliament.uk), and are to webpages displaying images of the relevant parts of the memorials, or to pages of the books of remembrance in online viewers hosted at the digital archives of the UK Parliament website (digitalarchive.parliament.uk).

HoC = House of Commons. HoL = House of Lords.

Family connections
This table summarises the immediate family connections (parents, siblings, wife, children) where known, as well as other connections such as grandparents or more distant relatives, though not all these are listed. Some of those listed here had connections to the peerage on both sides of their family.

MPs death timelines
This table summarises the known dates of death, dates of newspaper reports, dates of funerals/memorial services, dates of issuing of by-election writs, and by-election dates, for the Members of Parliament (or former MPs) that died in the First World War.

MPs portraits
This table summarises the available portraits and other known published images available for the Members of Parliament (or former MPs) that died in the First World War. The asterisked images (*) are the ones used in the table.

Memorial publications
The memorial publications listed below range from commercial publications sold to the general public with a full print run, to privately printed or prepared volumes intended for institutional archives or libraries and/or for display with an associated memorial. Where such publications were also displayed with an associated memorial, they are listed in the following section ('Books of remembrance') as well.

Books of remembrance
This list covers books of remembrance and rolls of honour in book form that are on permanent (or sometimes temporary) display in churches, schools and other locations where memorials were erected to the dead of the First World War. Some books of remembrance were installed in pre-existing buildings. Others were installed in memorials specially erected for the purpose. Rolls of honour in the form of framed displays, panels and wall-mounted memorials are listed separately with the other memorials.

Group memorials
This list covers memorials erected by organisations to commemorate more than one fallen soldier. Excluded from this list are the memorials erected by local parishes, towns, villages and councils to commemorate their dead (these are covered in a separate list). Also excluded are memorials to a small number of individuals (such as family members); these are covered in a separate list covering memorials to individuals.

Other notes
THE HOUSE OF COMMONS BOOK OF REMEMBRANCE 1914-1918
 * Military awards and mentions: DSO (Campbell [Boer Wars], Fleming, Glazebrook, Thynne); MC (Primrose); Legion of Honour (Clive, Redmond); Croix de Guerre (Clive, Thynne); mentioned in despatches (Agar-Robartes, Baring [twice], Campbell [twice], Clive [twice], Fleming [twice], Lyell, Hicks-Beach, Redmond, Thynne [twice], Primrose [twice]); recommended for Victoria Cross (Agar-Robartes).
 * Military awards and medals prior to WWI: Baring, Campbell, Clive, O'Neill, Hicks-Beach, Thynne.
 * Parliamentary and government positions: Harold Cawley (Parliamentary Private Secretary), Clive (Parliamentary Private Secretary), Lyell (Parliamentary Private Secretary), McLaren (Parliamentary Private Secretary), Primrose (Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, Parliamentary Military Secretary to the Ministry of Munitions, joint Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasury, Privy Councillor), Walrond (Parliamentary Private Secretary).
 * Parliamentary tributes: McLaren, Redmond.
 * By-elections: of note is that Redmond's seat in the by-election following his death (East Clare by-election, 1917) was won by Éamon de Valera for Sinn Féin, against the Irish Parliamentary Party candidate. The instances where a relative was returned unopposed to the deceased MP's seat (due to the war-time electoral pact) are: William Frederick Hicks-Beach (uncle of Michael Hugh Hicks-Beach - Tewkesbury by-election, 1916); Arthur Robert Mills (brother of Charles Thomas Mills - Uxbridge by-election, 1915); Hugh O'Neill (brother of Arthur O'Neill - Mid Antrim by-election, 1915); and John Lymbrick Esmonde (son of John Joseph Esmonde - North Tipperary by-election, 1915).
 * 20,615 names on the Loos Memorial. 34,764 names on the Arras Memmorial. 72,244 names on the Thiepval Memorial. 54,399 names on the Menin Gate.
 * Other former MPs who died on active service in WWI, and a serving MP who died before the official peace and during the CWGC period for war casualties: Charles Duncombe, 2nd Earl of Feversham; Gerald Arbuthnot; Mark Sykes.
 * During the Second World War, the heraldic shields in the Commons Chamber were destroyed along with the chamber during enemy bombing. These heraldic shields were replaced and the WWII shields installed, when the chamber was rebuilt after the war. The parliamentary memorial in Westminster Hall was damaged by bombing, with the stained glass window above it destroyed and some of the damage still visible. The replacement stained glass window became the WWII memorial to MPs and officers of the House of Commons who died in that war. The WWII deaths of relatives of MPs and officers of the House of Commons are commemorated in the WWII House of Commons book of remembrance. The memorial panels in the House of Lords were extended to cover WWII casualties, and a House of Lords book of remembrance was also prepared for WWII.
 * The numbers on the Westminster Hall memorial are: 22 members of the House of Commons, 20 members of the House of Lords, 9 senior members of staff [2 from HoL and 7 from HoC], and 94 sons of members and officers of the House of Commons [86 were sons of MPs; 8 were sons of officers of the HoC] (TOTAL: 145). Of these 145, a total of 123 biographies are in the House of Commons Book of Remembrance (the 20 peers and 2 officers of the House of Lords are listed at the front of the book, with their biographies in the House of Lords Book of Remembrance; volume 1 is the 22 MPs, the 7 officers of the HoC and the 8 sons of officers of the HoC; volume 2 is the 86 sons of MPs). The WWI numbers on the Royal Gallery memorial total 266 (24 peers, 239 sons of peers [some of those included in the number of peers were also sons of peers, but are not listed as such], 2 officers of the House of Lords, and 1 son of a member of staff). In the House of Lords Book of Remembrance, there are 132 biographies in volume 1 and 134 biographies in volume 2, with the total being 266. For the WWII memorials, the numbers are 61 on the Commons Westminster Hall stained glass memorial (23 MPs, 34 peers, 2 Lords staff, 1 Commons staff, 2 police constables - the total of 62 is because one person is counted twice as both a peer and an MP), and 142 on the House of Lords Royal Gallery panels (35 peers, 2 staff, 105 relatives of peers - in this count, the son of the 1st Baron Stamp is included as a peer and his wife as a relative (all three died in the same air raid); other counts give 34 peers and 106 relatives). The House of Commons WWII book of remembrance does not include biographies, but lists 23 MPs, 35 sons of MPs, 1 daughter of an MP, and 3 servants of the House Commons (TOTAL: 62 names). The House of Lords WWII book of remembrance has 142 brief biographies. [Main numbers are for HoC. HoL numbers only for comparison. Name the HoC officers. Point to separate lists for sons of MPs and sons of HoC officers and for the HoL memorials.]
 * Parliamentary memorial inscriptions:"TO THE MEMBERS AND OFFICERS OF BOTH HOUSES OF PARLIAMENT AND SONS OF MEMBERS AND OFFICERS OF THE HOUSE OF COMMONS WHO IN THE GREAT WAR CONSUMMATED WITH THEIR LIVES THE TRADITIONS OF PUBLIC SERVICE IN THE CAUSE OF RIGHT AND LIBERTY, THIS MEMORIAL IS DEDICATED IN HOMAGE AND AFFECTION" "O FORTUNATA MORS. QUAE NATURAE DEBITA PRO PATRIA EST POTISSUM REDDITA. EST ERGO EXSTRUCTA MOLES INCISAEQUE LITTERAE. VIRTUTIS TESTES SEMPITERAE NUNQUAM DE VOBIS EORUM QUI VESTRUM VIDEBUNT MONUMENTUM GRATISSIMUS SERMO CONTICESCET. ITA PRO MORTALI CONDITIONE VITAE IMMORTALITEM CONSECUTI. 'CICERO XIV PHILLIPIC'"
 * House of Commons Book of Remembrance:"Happy was your death. You paid for your fatherland the common debt that all men owe to nature. So this memorial is set up, and the letters inscribed upon it, as eternal testimonies of your valour. Those who look upon your monument will never cease to tell of your deeds in words of gratitude. And so instead of the mortality of human life you have obtained Immortality. (Cicero 14th Philippics)" "The members were of all political parties and creeds, but when the call of duty came they forgot the one and set aside the other. Private interests, domestic ties, professional occupations, and legitimate ambitions vanished. None were for a party and all were for the Nation. [...] 'Of conspicuous men the whole world is the tomb and it is not only inscriptions on tablets which chronicle their fame, but rather unwritten memorials living for ever not upon visible monuments but in the heart of mankind.' So we read in the funeral oration of Pericles, and so with our lost friends. Their memorial is inscribed in the hearts of their fellow members and acquaintances. 'Aere perennius.' The memory of the part they played in the great comradeship of the House of Commons and the greater comradeship of the battlefield will be with us while life lasts and, when we are no more, will be a precious relic and a noble incentive to the great call of duty. (James Lowther, Speaker of the House of Commons, 1905-1921)"
 * Heraldic shields memorial:"THESE XIX SHIELDS COMMEMORATE THE MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE WHO FELL IN THE WAR OF 1914-1918"
 * Front material for the House of Commons Book of Remembrance 1914-1918:

Collated, written, and arranged by

EDWARD WHITAKER MOSS-BLUNDELL

The Parliamentary War Memorial Committee The Right Honourable the Lord Banbury of Southam The Right Honourable the Lord Daryngton The Right Honourable Sir Samuel Roberts Bart. M.P. (deceased) The Right Honourable Sir Herbert Nield K.C., M.P. Colonel Sir Charles Rosdew Forbes-Leith Bart. (deceased) Sir James Boyton M.P. (deceased) The thundering line of battle stands, And in the air death moans and sings; But Day shall clasp him with strong hands, And Night shall fold him in soft wings.
 * The committee members:
 * House of Lords Book of Remembrance quotes the last stanza of 'Into Battle' by Julian Grenfell, son of Lord Desborough:
 * Unveiling dates and ceremonies: Commons Chamber heraldic shields (probably February 1921); Westminster Hall memorial (22 November 1922, unveiled by HRH Prince of Wales); House of Commons Book of Remembrance (5 Feb 1932, unveiled by the Speaker of the House of Commons); Royal Gallery panels and House of Lords Book of Remembrance (10 March 1932, unveiled by HRH Prince of Wales, dedicated by Archbishop of Canterbury). New heraldic shields unveiling with new Commons Chamber (26 October 1950).
 * A large proportion of the MPs named here (and MPs in general at the time) were educated at Eton and then Oxford. Most soldiers who died on active service in the First World War are also commemorated on memorials set up by schools to remember their students and ex-students, and especially in the case of officers, on memorials and rolls of honour established by universities or (in the case of Oxford) the constituent colleges of a university. Large numbers of Old Etonians and students and alumni of the colleges of the University of Oxford served in the First World War, and those that died are commemorated on memorials at those institutions.
 * Of the MPs named here, 13 were educated at Eton. The Cawley brothers were educated at Rugby, and Crichton-Stuart at Harrow. The three southern Irish MPs (Kettle, Esmonde, Redmond) were all educated at Clongowes Wood College (and are also remembered on the memorial to Old Clongowians established at Portora Royal School). The three remaining MPs: Bennett-Goldney (educated "privately"); Walrond (educated "privately and abroad"); and Campbell (born in Canada, educated at Trinity College School).
 * Of the MPs named here, 13 were educated at colleges of the University of Oxford. Six at New College (the Cawleys, Glazebrook, Gladstone, Primrose and Lyell), three at Christ Church (Agar-Robartes, Crichton-Stuart and Hicks-Beach), two at Magdalen (Fleming and Mills), and two at Balliol (McLaren and Thynne). From Ireland, Kettle attended University College Dublin, and Esmonde attended Stonyhurst and St Mary's College, Oscott, followed by further (medical) studies in Dublin. Baring and Clive went to Sandhurst (with First World War regimental cadet memorial panels in the Royal Memorial Chapel). Campbell attended Trinity College at the University of Toronto.
 * Two of the MPs commemorated on the parliamentary memorial (Agar-Robartes and Hicks-Beach [Viscount Quenington]) are also commemorated on the memorial erected at the Bachelors' Club in Mayfair.
 * Three of the Irish MPs (both southern and northern: Kettle, Redmond and O'Neill) were among those commemorated in the 1923 publication Ireland's Memorial Records, an 8-volume work prepared by the Committee of the Irish National War Memorial and recording some 49,000 names of Ireland's war dead. Esmonde does not appear to be in this work, though his son Geoffrey (who died after him in the war) is included. The original is held at the Irish National War Memorial Gardens, with copies held at several other locations, including the Island of Ireland Peace Park and the In Flanders Fields Museum.
 * Other national memorials include the Scottish National War Memorial, and the Welsh National War Memorial, with the Welsh National Book of Remembrance for the First World War held in the crypt at the Temple of Peace and Health.
 * At least one of the memorials is listed. The headboard marking the grave of Francis McLaren at Busbridge in Surrey, designed by Edwin Lutyens, was designated with a Grade II listing in 1991.
 * Many of those listed here had their deaths noted in The Illustrated London News under headings such as 'For King and Country: Officers on the Roll of Honour' and 'Dead on the Field of Honour: Officers Killed in Action'.
 * Some of those listed here (or their families) lived in country houses (sometimes more than one country house), some of which have articles or photos: Abbots Barton (Bennett-Goldney), Biddesden House (Baring), Lanhydrock House (Agar-Robartes), Berrington Hall (Cawleys), Twemlow Hall (Glazebrook), Overstrand Hall (Mills), Dalmeny House (Primrose). Others have connections to the following places (some are remote locations or very rural villages or parishes): Caus Castle (Thynne), Stewarton (Campbell), Sudeley Castle (Hicks-Beach), Coreley (Thynne), Coln St. Aldwyns (Hicks-Beach), Kingarth, Isle of Bute (Crichton-Stuart), Temple (Primrose), Kirriemuir (Lyell).
 * Six of the MPs listed here were freemasons (Fleming, Glazebrook, Hicks-Beach, Mills, Thynne, Walrond) and as such would have been commemorated on the Masonic Roll of Honour 1914–1918 (1921), with the original held at Freemasons' Hall (itself a war memorial, completed in 1933 and originally called the Masonic Peace Memorial), Great Queen Street, London, UK. Memorials were also erected by local freemason lodges.
 * The service and death of Willie Redmond generated a lot of newspaper coverage at the time.
 * Burials and memorials: The process of designing, constructing and unveiling the cemeteries and memorials for the British Empire dead of the First World War started early on, but in many cases the process did not finish until many years had passed. In some cases, the original grave marker was returned to, or retrieved by, the family of the deceased. Some graves were moved from their original location into what were called 'concentration' cemeteries (concentrating the burials); the grave of Valentine Fleming was moved in this fashion. Where a burial location was marked with a headstone erected by the Commission, the next-of-kin of the deceased were able to request an inscription to be included; where records of these inscriptions exist, they are given below. The tablets used to mark the graves in Gallipoli (such as that for the grave of Harold Cawley) did not include inscriptions. Similarly, no inscriptions were used for those whose bodies were not found or not identified (Clive, Mills, O'Neill, and Kettle), and these were commemorated on the memorials to the missing. Oswald Cawley, who fell towards the end of the war, was buried in the cemetery where his brother (John S. Cawley) had been buried near the start of the war. The names of the two brothers are included on the headstones and obelisk erected over the burial vault of the officers (including John S. Cawley) who fell in the Action at Néry. Willie Redmond's wife requested that his grave be left in the care of the nuns of Loker, rather than moved to the nearby Locre Hospice Cemetery. Sometimes burial abroad occurred in a local (communal) cemetery, rather than a dedicated military cemetery. Benett-Goldney was buried in Saint-Germain-en-Laye Old Communal Cemetery. Lyell was buried in Arlington National Cemetery. Lyell's original gravestone was later replaced.
 * CWGC inscriptions
 * Agar-Robartes: "be thou faithful unto death and I will give thee a crown of life" (Revelation 2:10)
 * Baring: "blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see god" (Matthew 5:8)
 * Crichton-Stuart: "they may rest from their labours for their works do follow them"
 * Fleming: "the heights hold peace"
 * Glazebrook: "all that he hoped for and all that he had he gave"
 * Primrose: "he lives by love"
 * Thynne: "the gift of god is eternal life" (Romans 6:23)
 * The case of William Glynne Charles Gladstone was an exception to the rule that all those who died overseas during the war would be buried there, rather than the bodies being repatriated. Those who died on home soil (Campbell, McLaren, Walrond, and Esmonde) were buried by their families. In such cases, the families could carry out their own burial arrangements, rather than have a Commission headstone erected. This is what was done in these five cases, with Esmonde interred in his family vault.
 * Non-CWGC inscriptions
 * Campbell: "In Memory of [...] Erected By His Friends And Supporters"
 * Gladstone: "'He being made perfect in a short time, fulfilled a long time; for his soul pleased the Lord.' – Wisdom IV-13"; "'It is not the length of existence that counts, but what is achieved during that existence, however short.' – W.G.C.G., 23rd. March 1915."
 * McLaren: "He died in the service of his country [...] per ardua ad astra"
 * Esmonde: "In loving memory of [...] John, died 1915"
 * Hansard quotes
 * Tom Kettle quoted by John Dillon in column 686 in:
 * Oswald Cawley sworn as an MP:
 * The centenary of the deaths of several of the MPs listed here were marked from 2014 onwards, with the form of commemoration ranging from formal ceremonies to news articles.
 * A range of other accounts have been published relating to the MPs listed here, ranging from journal articles and extensive accounts, to historical research and commemorative biographies, as well as blogs and other publications.
 * A wide range of inscriptions are used on the memorials.
 * The centenary of the deaths of several of the MPs listed here were marked from 2014 onwards, with the form of commemoration ranging from formal ceremonies to news articles.
 * A range of other accounts have been published relating to the MPs listed here, ranging from journal articles and extensive accounts, to historical research and commemorative biographies, as well as blogs and other publications.
 * A wide range of inscriptions are used on the memorials.

Other memorials

 * Thomas Agar-Robartes: Eton War Memorial, List of Etonians Who Fought in the Great War, 1914–1919, Christ Church College War Memorial (Oxford),   Cambridgeshire Regimental Memorial in Ely Cathedral, Truro Cathedral (wall tablet), Wimpole Parish Church (window), St Wilfrid's Chapel (Church Norton, window), memorial seat (St Austell), Holy Trinity Church (St Austell, brass plaque), St Hydroc Church (Lanhydrock, window), St Hydroc Church (Lanhydrock, battlefield cross conserved in 2010 and mounted on wall),, St Hydroc Church (Lanhydrock, individual marble wall tablet), St Hydroc Church (Lanhydrock, group memorial wall tablet), parish roll of honour at St Hydroc Church (Lanhydrock), Lanhydrock Memorial Hall (Lanhydrock War Memorial Club), Lanhydrock House (museum room), a poem by his brother Alexander George Agar-Robartes, the Bachelors' Club memorial.
 * Guy Baring: Eton War Memorial, List of Etonians Who Fought in the Great War, 1914–1919, Coldstream Guards Regimental Panel in Royal Memorial Chapel (Sandhurst),   Memorial at Peter Symonds School, Winchester Cathedral, Ludgershall War Memorial, Salisbury Cathedral Book of Remembrance, original grave cross at Northington Church, brass plaque at Northington Church, framed service roll at Northington Church,  stone plaque on wall in Northington Church, war memorial plaque added to Ashburton memorial cross outside Northington Church.
 * Francis Bennett-Goldney: Bennett-Goldney's name is inscribed on the main Canterbury war memorial.
 * Duncan Campbell: The Lancashire Fusiliers' Annual 1916, Stewarton War Memorial, Hamilton Club memorial (Hamilton, Ontario), First World War Book of Remembrance in the Memorial Chamber of the Peace Tower in Ottawa, name inscribed on the memorial panels at Soldiers' Tower in Toronto, the combined Roll of Service and Roll of Honour for the University of Toronto (in Soldiers' Tower), the War Memorial Volume of Trinity College at the University of Toronto (also in Soldiers' Tower), the wall tablet in the memorial chapel at Trinity College at the University of Toronto, the honour roll as a triptych illuminated manuscript in three frames at Trinity College Chapel, the roll of honour at Trinity College School in Toronto, the memorial chapel at Trinity College School in Toronto, the memorial cross at Trinity College School in Toronto, the Scottish National War Memorial (twice).
 * Harold Cawley: New College War Memorial (Oxford), Memorials of Rugbeians Who Fell in The Great War,  Rugby School Memorial Chapel,   Museum room at Berrington Hall, Heywood War Memorial, Manchester Reform Club, wall tablet at St Peter and St Paul Church (Eye, Herefordshire), lychgate parish memorial at St Peter and St Paul Church (Eye, Herefordshire),  interior parish memorial at St Peter and St Paul Church (Eye, Herefordshire),  ward at Ancoats Hospital (Manchester), memorial booklet, framed display of commemorative certificates.
 * Oswald Cawley: New College War Memorial (Oxford), Memorials of Rugbeians Who Fell in The Great War,  Rugby School Memorial Chapel,   Museum room at Berrington Hall, name inscribed on obelisk at Nery Communal Cemetery, Manchester Reform Club,  wall tablet at St Peter and St Paul Church (Eye, Herefordshire),   lychgate parish memorial at St Peter and St Paul Church (Eye, Herefordshire),   interior parish memorial at St Peter and St Paul Church (Eye, Herefordshire),  ward at Ancoats Hospital (Manchester), memorial booklet, framed display of commemorative certificates.
 * Percy Clive: Eton War Memorial, List of Etonians Who Fought in the Great War, 1914–1919, Grenadier Guards Regimental Panel in Royal Memorial Chapel (Sandhurst),   St Peters Church (Wormbridge, Herefordshire), Hereford Cathedral, Old Gore War Memorial.
 * Ninian Crichton-Stuart: Christ Church College War Memorial (Oxford),  Harrow Memorials of the Great War, Harrow School memorial shrine and names in the portico of Harrow School's War Memorial Building,  dedication panel and name panels in the Crypt Chapel area of Harrow School's Chapel, statue in Gorsedd Gardens (Cardiff), Grangetown war memorial, unfinished chapel in Falkland (Falkland House), church parish memorial in Falkland, Falkland War Memorial Institute and associated plaque, Falkland War Memorial (Brunton Green), Kingarth War Memorial (Isle of Bute), Rothesay and Bute Roll of Honour, Welsh National Book of Remembrance,   the Scottish National War Memorial.
 * Valentine Fleming: Eton War Memorial, List of Etonians Who Fought in the Great War, 1914–1919, Magdalen College War Memorial (Oxford),  Glenelg War Memorial, individual tablet at St Bartholomew's Church (Nettlebed), joint memorial window at St Bartholomew's Church (Nettlebed), group memorial on lychgate at St Bartholomew's Church (Nettlebed),  inscribed on main Henley-on-Thames memorial, inscribed on panels at Townlands Hospital (the original Henley and District War Memorial Hospital closed in 1985 and was demolished), on the Masonic Roll of Honour 1914-1918 (1921),     the Scottish National War Memorial.
 * William Gladstone: Eton War Memorial, List of Etonians Who Fought in the Great War, 1914–1919, New College War Memorial (Oxford),  The Bond of Sacrifice, Rood and memorial tablet at St Deiniol's (Hawarden), Gladstone family memorial and sanctuary lamp at St Deiniols (Hawarden), theatre and wards at Chester Royal Infirmary, Queensferry War Memorial Institute and associated memorial panels, plaque in St Andrew's Church (Garden City), Hawarden War Memorial, Hawarden book of remembrance and associated tablet (St Deiniols Church), portrait gifted to the Oxford Union, photograph at the Canon Drew VP Memorial School (demolished) in Hawarden, memoir published by his uncle, Welsh National Book of Remembrance.
 * Philip Glazebrook: Eton War Memorial, List of Etonians Who Fought in the Great War, 1914–1919, New College War Memorial (Oxford),  Goostrey War Memorial, St Luke's Church (Goostrey, wall tablet), on the Masonic Roll of Honour 1914-1918 (1921),     the Scottish National War Memorial.
 * Michael Hicks-Beach: Eton War Memorial, List of Etonians Who Fought in the Great War, 1914–1919, Christ Church College War Memorial (Oxford),   Hicks-Beach family wall tablet at All Saints Church Fittleton, combined lectern and parish war memorial at All Saints Church Fittleton, Lloyds Bank Lombard Street memorial (now in Canons House, Bath), Lloyds TSB Bank Gresham Street memorial (marking previous site of Lombard Street memorial), Lloyds TSB Bank Gresham Street book of remembrance, Cirencester War Memorial, Gloucester Cathedral freemasons memorial, Gloucester Cathedral Royal Gloucestershire Hussars memorial, Royal Gloucestershire Hussars book of remembrance in Gloucester Cathedral, St Mary's Church (Sudeley, plaque), Coln St Aldwyn War Memorial, on the Masonic Roll of Honour 1914-1918 (1921),     the Bachelors' Club memorial.
 * Francis McLaren: Eton War Memorial, List of Etonians Who Fought in the Great War, 1914–1919, Balliol College War Memorial (Oxford),   Balliol College War Memorial Book 1914–1919 (1924), Spalding War Memorial, 'The Poem' family mausoleum (Bodnant Garden), name on war memorial wall in Busbridge Church (war memorial without names in churchyard), book of remembrance in Busbridge Church, Eglwysbach War Memorial, the Scottish National War Memorial (twice).
 * Charles Mills: Eton War Memorial, List of Etonians Who Fought in the Great War, 1914–1919, Magdalen College War Memorial (Oxford),  Private Banks Cricket and Athletic Club (Catford), Glyn, Mills, Currie & Co. Record of Services In the Great War 1914–1919, churchyard memorial at St Martin's Church (Overstrand), wooden panel at St Martin's Church (Overstrand), book of remembrance at St Martin's Church (Overstrand), individual brass tablet in SS Peter and Paul Church (Seal), brass tablet and lectern for three grandsons in SS Peter and Paul Church (Seal), Roll of Honour in SS Peter and Paul Church (Seal), calvary memorial in churchyard of SS Peter and Paul Church (Seal), triptych panels in village hall (Seal), St John the Baptist Church individual tablet (Hillingdon), St John the Baptist Church triptych panel (Hillingdon), St John the Baptist Church Lady Chapel restoration tablet (Hillingdon), on the Masonic Roll of Honour 1914-1918 (1921),     the Scottish National War Memorial.
 * Arthur O'Neill: Eton War Memorial, List of Etonians Who Fought in the Great War, 1914–1919, on wife's memorial at St Bertoline Churchyard (Bartholmey, Cheshire), Orange Hall (Fenagh), The Bond of Sacrifice, Ballymena War Memorial, the Scottish National War Memorial,   Ireland's Memorial Records (1923).
 * Neil Primrose: Eton War Memorial, List of Etonians Who Fought in the Great War, 1914–1919, New College War Memorial (Oxford),  St. Giles' Cathedral (Edinburgh), Postwick church cemetery memorial (Norfolk), Postwick church memorial plaque (Norfolk), St Mary the Virgin (Mentmore) tablet, St Mary the Virgin (Mentmore) churchyard memorial, Christ Church (Epsom) wall memorial, Christ Church (Epsom) roll of honour, Epsom War Memorial (Ashley Road), Memorial window at St Mary's Church (Knowsley), on memorial in churchyard in Temple, Midlothian, the Scottish National War Memorial.
 * Willie Redmond: Clongowes Great War Memorial, Portora Royal School memorial to Old Clongownians, Memorial Park (Wexford), and bust in memorial park (Wexford), plaque on Redmond monument (Wexford), Four Courts of Justice plaque (Dublin), plaque at St Patrick's Church (Kilquade), Digby Stuart College (Roehampton, wall tablet), Woodenbridge Memorial, Ireland's Memorial Records (1923).
 * Alexander Thynne: Eton War Memorial, List of Etonians Who Fought in the Great War, 1914–1919, Balliol College War Memorial (Oxford),   Balliol College War Memorial Book 1914–1919 (1924), lectern in memorial Chapel in Bath Abbey, Norton war memorial, name inscribed on main Bath war memorial, Coreley Village Hall Roll of Honour, on the Masonic Roll of Honour 1914-1918 (1921).
 * William Walrond: Uffculme village war memorial, Uffculme church tablet memorial, on the Masonic Roll of Honour 1914-1918 (1921).
 * Charles Lyell: Eton War Memorial, List of Etonians Who Fought in the Great War, 1914–1919, New College War Memorial (Oxford),  Brass plaque at St Mary's Episcopal Church (Kirriemuir),  east window at St Mary's Episcopal Church (Kirriemuir),  Kirriemuir War Memorial, Mortonhall Golf Club Memorial, public baths at Kirriemuir, the Scottish National War Memorial.
 * Tom Kettle: Clongowes Great War Memorial, Portora Royal School memorial to Old Clongownians, memorial bust (Dublin) with quote from poem on base, Four Courts of Justice plaque (Dublin), quote from poem on tablet at Island of Ireland Peace Park, memorial in St Mary's Church (Ballsbridge, Dublin), Milltown Golf Club Roll of Honour (Dublin), Ireland's Memorial Records (1923).
 * John Esmonde: Clongowes Great War Memorial, Portora Royal School memorial to Old Clongownians, Stonyhurst War Record (1927), plaque in St Mary's Church (Terryglass).

Newspaper reports

 * Obituaries or death notices in The Times


 * Roll of honour portraits in The Illustrated London News


 * Funerals or memorial services reported in The Times


 * By-election writs reported in The Times


 * By-election writs reported in Hansard

Parliamentary memorials

 * Commons Chamber heraldic shields


 * Westminster Hall memorial


 * Royal Gallery panels


 * House of Commons Book of Remembrance


 * House of Lords Book of Remembrance

Memorial databases

 * The War Graves Photographic Project


 * Imperial War Musuem: War Memorials Register


 * Irish War Memorials


 * Canadian War Memorials


 * War Memorials Online


 * The Masonic Great War Project

Other portraits

 * The National Portrait Gallery


 * The Imperial War Museum

General memorial sources

 * Memorials (named individuals)


 * Memorials (general)


 * UK Parliament memorials

TWGPP
Pages from The War Graves Photographic Project (TWGPP) on the CWGC graves and memorials (other memorials are detailed in a separate section). All the following links include photographs of the graves, except for the three commemorated on memorials to the missing (Clive, Mills, O'Neill, Kettle):
 * Agar-Robartes:
 * Baring:
 * Bennett-Goldney:
 * Campbell:
 * Harold Cawley:
 * Oswald Cawley:
 * Clive:
 * Crichton-Stuart:
 * Fleming:
 * Gladstone:
 * Glazebrook:
 * McLaren:
 * Mills:
 * O'Neill:
 * Primrose:
 * Thynne:
 * Walrond:
 * Lyell:
 * Kettle:
 * Esmonde:
 * Glazebrook:
 * McLaren:
 * Mills:
 * O'Neill:
 * Primrose:
 * Thynne:
 * Walrond:
 * Lyell:
 * Kettle:
 * Esmonde:
 * Thynne:
 * Walrond:
 * Lyell:
 * Kettle:
 * Esmonde:
 * Kettle:
 * Esmonde:
 * Esmonde:
 * Esmonde:

Images
National Trust: Agar-Robartes and the Cawley brothers feature in the exhibits at the UK's National Trust collections at Lanhydrock House and Berrington Hall, with a number of the images available in the National Trust's online collections database.
 * Agar-Robartes:
 * Captain, The Hon. Thomas Charles Reginald Agar-Robartes, MP (1880-1915): Agar-Robartes in uniform in 1914. Lanhydrock, Cornwall (National Trust Collections). Object 889592.
 * Captain, The Hon. Thomas Charles Reginald Agar-Robartes, MP (1880-1915): Agar-Robartes in uniform in 1914. Lanhydrock, Cornwall (National Trust Collections). Object 889595.
 * Captain, The Hon. Thomas Charles Reginald Agar-Robartes, MP (1880-1915): Agar-Robartes in 1905 by portrait photographer Alexander Bassano. Lanhydrock, Cornwall (National Trust Collections). Object 885042.
 * Group of Officers, Captain, The Hon. Thomas Charles Reginald Agar-Robartes, MP (1880-1915) middle row third from left: Agar-Robertes in uniform with fellow officers circa 1914. Lanhydrock, Cornwall (National Trust Collections). Object 885084.
 * The Devon Yeomanry: Cherne Down in 1914: Agar-Robartes in 1914 as a 2nd Lieutenant in the uniform of the Devon Yeomanry, with his regimental unit and goat mascot. Lanhydrock, Cornwall (National Trust Collections). Object 882200.
 * The Hon. Thomas Charles Reginald Robartes MP (1880-1915): Agar-Robartes "wearing morning dress, addressing the House of Commons [...] presenting the first reading of the Land Tenure Bill". 1907 Oil painting portrait by Richard Jack. Lanhydrock, Cornwall (National Trust Collections). Object 884929.
 * The Four Elder Agar-Robartes Children: Agar-Robartes as a child with three of his siblings in an 1885 portrait painting by Anna Lea Merritt. Lanhydrock, Cornwall (National Trust Collections). Object 884926.
 * The Hon. Thomas Charles Reginald Robartes (1880-1915) as a boy: Agar-Robartes in an Eton suit in an 1894 portrait by John Hanson Walker. Lanhydrock, Cornwall (National Trust Collections). Object 884928.
 * The War Illustrated. 13th November 1915. 'Britain's Roll of Honoured Dead'.: Agar-Robartes among the dead featured in a roll of honour in The War Illustrated in November 1915. Lanhydrock, Cornwall (National Trust Collections). Object 885118.
 * Agar-Robartes with fellow Liberal Party MPs: Agar-Robartes in 1906 with H. H. Asquith, George Hay Morgan and Sir Clifford John Cory. Lanhydrock, Cornwall (National Trust Collections). Object 888041.
 * Cawley brothers:
 * Captain Harold Thomas Cawley MP (1878-1915), Major John Stephen Cawley (1879-1914) Captain, The Hon. Oswald Cawley MP (1882-1918): Triple photograph of the three Cawley brothers killed in the First World War. Berrington Hall, Herefordshire (National Trust Collections). Object 617529.
 * Oswald Cawley:
 * Captain, The Hon. Oswald Cawley MP (1882-1918): Photograph of Oswald Cawley in uniform. Berrington Hall, Herefordshire (National Trust Collections). Object 617527.
 * Harold Cawley:
 * Captain Harold Thomas Cawley MP (1878-1915): Portrait photograph of Harold Cawley. Berrington Hall, Herefordshire (National Trust Collections). Object 617524.
 * Captain Harold Thomas Cawley MP (1878-1915): Cartoon by Matthew Sandford 'Matt', showing Harold Cawly "improving Rotten Row". Berrington Hall, Herefordshire (National Trust Collections). Object 617526.
 * Captain Harold Thomas Cawley MP (1878-1915): Photograph of Harold Cawley on horseback. Berrington Hall, Herefordshire (National Trust Collections). Object 617525.

Other images

 * University of Roehampton on Instagram (BHUTHK9jRON): Digby Stuart College (Sacred Heart) War Memorial
 * Trinity College School Memorial Cross: the inscribed names seen here include Duncan Frederick Campbell.
 * Fittleton memorial plaque: with Michael Hugh Hicks-Beach named in the inscription.
 * Seal brass plaque: inscription names Charles Thomas Mills.
 * The Action of El Maghar, 13 November 1917 "Horses of the 6th Mounted Brigade, Yeomanry Division caught by machine gun fire while charging the Turkish positions. Major Neil Primrose died of wounds received during the action." (Imperial War Museum)
 * Major Redmond's Grave (Imperial War Museum)
 * Visit to Redmond's grave (1): photograph of a visit of a deputation from Ireland to the grave of Major William Redmond, 6th Battalion, Royal Irish Regiment, at Locre (Loker), 21st September 1917. (Imperial War Museum)
 * Visit to Redmond's grave (2): photograph of a visit of a deputation from Ireland to the grave of Major William Redmond, 6th Battalion, Royal Irish Regiment, at Locre (Loker), 21st September 1917. (Imperial War Museum)
 * Film of a visit to Redmond's grave: record of film of the visit of a deputation from Ireland to the grave of Major William Redmond, 6th Battalion, Royal Irish Regiment, at Locre (Loker), 21st September 1917. (Imperial War Museum)

Flickr images

 * Baz Manning (72157640555240074): House of Commons Chamber heraldic shield memorials [2014]
 * Tranter Dewy (25307056393): Agar-Robartes returned cross (wall mounted) [9 April 2013]
 * Nic Barfield (15006460507): Headlines of newspaper clipping; death of Agar-Robartes [19 July 2014]
 * Robert Slack (20983622933): Agar-Robartes tablet (St Hydroc Church) and returned cross [5 September 2015]
 * Arthur Jordan (28133391843): Agar-Robartes CWGC headstone [9 April 2012]
 * Cameron McMaster (3439018597): Trinity College Chapel memorial (Campbell) [19 May 2007]
 * Arthur Jordan (8723770996): CWGC headstone for three soldiers at Nery Cemetery (J. S. and O. Cawley) [5 May 2013]
 * Arthur Jordan (8722647849): CWGC obelisk for the officers killed in the Action at Nery (J. S. Cawley) [5 May 2013]
 * Arthur Jordan (8722650139): Main inscription on the CWGC obelisk at Nery Cemetery (J. S. Cawley) [5 May 2013]
 * Arthur Jordan (8722646855): Name inscription on the CWGC obelisk at Nery Cemetery (J. S. and O. Cawley) [5 May 2013]
 * AndyBailey (13355669334): Crichton-Stuart CWGC headstone [4 March 2014]
 * Curmo (14519862745): Viscount Quenington (Hicks-Beach) at Gresham Street memorial [1 June 2014]
 * Curmo (14491034874): Gresham Street memorial (Hicks-Beach) [19 June 2014]
 * Moominpappa06 (12248763765): Overstrand War Memorial name inscriptions (Mills) [24 November 2013]
 * Moominpappa06 (3707016421): Postwick War Memorial (Primrose) [20 May 2009]
 * Moominpappa06 (3707805798): Postwick War Memorial name inscriptions (Primrose) [1 July 2009]
 * Richard Crockett (18424155060): Redmond's grave marker in 1991 near Locre Hospice Cemetery [17 June 1991]
 * Michael Day (24076095081): Thynne name inscription on Bath War Memorial [29 December 2015]
 * Moominpappa06 (12076855383): Mills entry in Overstrand book of remembrance [24 November 2013]
 * Snapshooter46 (13303562565): Primrose wall tablet (St Mary the Virgin, Mentmore) [22 August 2013]
 * Cthonus (6920847177): Lord Ninian Crichton Stuart Memorial Chapel [12 February 2012]
 * jackdeightonsf (25820443685): Front of Falkland War Memorial on Brunton Green [17 September 2015]
 * jackdeightonsf (25190056024): Rear of Falkland War Memorial on Brunton Green [17 September 2015]
 * Brownie Bear (5030213835): parish wall tablet memorial in St Hydroc Church [14 September 2010]
 * Joe (8120309689): Hamilton Club memorial (includes Campbell) [23 October 2012]
 * Manchester Regiment Group (10271850463): Grave marker tablet for Harold Cawley [26 August 2009]
 * Eveleen M (5825978137): Kettle quote on stone at Irish Peace Park, Messines [22 April 2011]

Follow-up notes

 * Crichton-Stuart: (nothing on CWGC records, but inscription does exist).
 * Verify that no headstone inscription exists: Hicks-Beach, Lyell, Bennett-Goldney.
 * Find out inscription for Walrond (see here).
 * Some references to another cross for Agar-Robartes "St Hydroc Church (Lanhydrock, battlefield cross under glass on grassy bank in cemetery, may now be mounted inside church, small metal cross inset within the shaft)", see also: faygate (4096359034): Agar-Robartes returned cross (grassy bank) [uploaded 11 November 2009].
 * Irish war memorials: O'Neill: possible, but not certain.
 * Another possible memorial with O'Neill's name on is the Bachelors' Club memorial, but this is not certain as the spelling of the name is different.
 * Unknown (or no further education): Bennett-Goldney, O'Neill, Redmond and Walrond.
 * https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=yhA-AQAAMAAJ (Bennett-Goldney, as 'Francis Evans', educated in Bournemouth and Paris).
 * Harrow boarding houses have additional memorials, but not clear which one Crichton-Stuart was at (the Headmaster's House is the only one with no names listed at the IWM War Memorials Register, but there are more boarding houses than the ones listed there).
 * More on the Harrow War Memorial Building here (that definitely needs to be archived for posterity). A more serious source here mentions "Harrow School's Roll of Honour and within the six volumes of the Harrow Memorials of the Great War. In each volume, for each Old Harrovian, is a photograph and a short biography." (Links to the six volumes of Harrow Memorials of the Great War are below - Crichton-Stuart is here). Not many sources mention the memorial in the Crypt Chapel section of the Chapel at Harrow School. But the WWI "shrine" at Harrow is part of the War Memorial Building. The history can be confusing, as the foundation stone was laid in 1921, with the building not officially opened until 1926. The WW1 names are on stone screens in the portico (the entrance area where the shrine is), with the WW2 names on wooden panels upstairs in the building vestibule. The WW1 name panels can be seen here. The text above the cenotaph in the shrine area is the first stanza from the hymn O Valiant Hearts: "O valiant hearts who to your glory came/ Through dust of conflict and through battle flame; / Tranquil you lie, your knightly virtue proved, / Your memory hallowed in the land you loved."
 * More on Harrow School war memorials here. Researchers may be able to request a login there.
 * Eton (definitely, see example here) and Rugby (probably) have additional memorials in addition to the main ones, such as memorial for each of the school houses.
 * Esmonde appears not to be listed on the Stonyhurst war memorial (a list of names from this memorial is on the IWM War Memorials Register).
 * House of Lords WWI Book of Remembrance (British Library).
 * Large amounts of Hansard for the period 1803-2005 have been digitised, but some years are incomplete or missing altogether, and unfortunately the missing or incomplete volumes include some of the years covered here, see Volumes.
 * At some later point, add in first commission/regiment and fuller history of this for each MP.
 * Look for contemporary newspaper reports of the November 2013 parliamentary debate on First World War commemoration.
 * Memorial window to the two Flemings at Nettlebed includes a quote from a poem ('A Vignette', 1901) by Robert Bridges: "They walk in the city / which they have builded, / The city of God / from evil shielded" (this could be an alternative source of Valentine Fleming's inscription "the heights hold peace").
 * Children of Guy Baring:
 * Clive duplicate of 1900 picture: "World's News and Portraits." Illustrated London News [London, England] 08 Feb. 1908: 188.
 * Home Of The War Parliament. The Times (London, England), Thursday, Apr 29, 1948; pg. 3; Issue 51058.
 * Royal Insurance War Memorial.. The Times (London, England), Thursday, Nov 23, 1922; pg. 6; Issue 43196.
 * British Legion. The Times (London, England), Monday, Sep 19, 1932; pg. 7; Issue 46242. (Sandhurst war memorials)
 * Redmond:
 * Campbell: writ issued during a recess of the House of Commons; recorded in Hansard on 10 October 1916; related reports in The Times: News in Brief. The Times (London, England), Saturday, Sep 16, 1916; pg. 5; Issue 41274. News in Brief. The Times (London, England), Friday, Oct 13, 1916; pg. 5; Issue 41297.
 * McLaren: writ appears to have been issued during another recess. Nothing found except the following: The Spalding Vacancy.. The Times (London, England), Wednesday, Sep 26, 1917; pg. 3; Issue 41593. The By-Elections.. The Times (London, England), Friday, Oct 26, 1917; pg. 3; Issue 41619.
 * Thynne: writ issued during a recess of the House of Commons; recorded in Hansard on 15 October 1918; related reports in The Times: Parliament.. The Times (London, England), Tuesday, Oct 22, 1918; pg. 10; Issue 41927.
 * Other: Mr. Primrose's Wedding.. The Times (London, England), Wednesday, Apr 07, 1915; pg. 11; Issue 40822. Primrose-Stanley Wedding.. The Times (London, England), Thursday, Apr 08, 1915; pg. 11; Issue 40823. The Meeting Of Parliament.. The Times (London, England), Monday, Oct 11, 1915; pg. 8; Issue 40982.
 * Remembrance In The Commons. The Times (London, England), Thursday, Dec 15, 1949; pg. 2; Issue 51565.
 * The New House. The Times (London, England), Thursday, Oct 26, 1950; pg. 5; Issue 51832.
 * Opening Of The New House Of Commons: The Ceremony In Westminster Hall. The Times (London, England), Friday, Oct 27, 1950; pg. 10; Issue 51833.
 * Commons In New House. The Times (London, England), Friday, Oct 27, 1950; pg. 4; Issue 51833.
 * In Westminster Hall. From Our Special Correspondent. The Times (London, England), Friday, Oct 27, 1950; pg. 4; Issue 51833.
 * Primrose: grave: The Hon. Neil Primrose's Grave.. The Times (London, England), Wednesday, Dec 19, 1917; pg. 6; Issue 41665.
 * Primrose: grave 2: News in Brief. The Times (London, England), Thursday, Dec 20, 1917; pg. 6; Issue 41666.
 * Major Redmond's Grave In Flanders.. (From Our Special Correspondent.). The Times (London, England), Tuesday, Oct 23, 1917; pg. 9; Issue 41616.
 * The Memory Of Major W.Redmond.. (FROM OUR OWN CORRESPONDENT.). The Times (London, England), Friday, Aug 31, 1917; pg. 7; Issue 41571.
 * Mills service (Lord Hillingdon illness):
 * Two links on Alexander George Agar-Robartes (author of the poem about his older brother): https://www.1418now.org.uk/somme100/gallery/national-trust-for-victor-and-alexander-agar-robartes-2 ; http://www.nationaltrustcollections.org.uk/object/889453
 * A work of Bennett-Goldney was published posthumously in 1920 by his brother Sebastian Evans - see History of the Westgate (1920); also other titles published posthumously http://www.abebooks.com/History-Westgate-Bennett-Goldney-F.S.A-M.P-Francis/862830566/bd;
 * Article on Willie Redmond and Willie Redmond illustrated with other Irish military and naval leaders, both from Great Irishmen in War and Politics (1920).
 * Files only on Wikipedia: File:Oswald Cawley 1.jpg; File:Francis McLaren 1.jpg; File:HTCawley.jpg; File:1910 Harold Thomas Cawley MP.jpg; File:Francis Bennett-Goldney 1.png; File:1906 Thomas Agar-Robartes MP.jpg; File:1906 Charles Lyell.jpg.
 * Trinity College, Toronto (sources for this are broken): "In the chapel a memorial tablet in Indiana limestone designed by the late Allan George, F.R.A.I.C. 15 feet high and about 8 feet wide is dedicated to the members of Trinity College who gave their lives in the First and Second World Wars. A number of bronze memorial plaques honour alumni who died during the First World War [...] On the wall outside the entrance to the chapel, a memorial Triptych illuminated manuscript in three frames is an Honour Roll erected by Trinity College in 1942 which is dedicated to approximately 1000 men and women of Trinity College who served and those who died while serving their country; An artist, Jack McNie, completed the lettering by hand." Was able to find photo and source for the limestone memorial tablet inside the chapel, but failed to find anything for the 1942 roll of honour at the entrance to the memorial chapel (the 'memorial Triptych illuminated manuscript in three frames').
 * http://www.wisbech-society.co.uk/publications.html (includes book on CAPTAIN NEIL PRIMROSE MP)
 * https://livesofthefirstworldwar.org/lifestory/4443856 (Thynne centenary tribute, worth using as an external link or to follow up for photo sources and other details)
 * http://www.antique-swords.eu/Boer-War-British-heavy-cavalry-officers.html (O'Neill sword)
 * Thynne CWGC inscription best seen in the findagrave.com photo.
 * Chettleburgh Book Memorial (not sure about this - should include Guy Baring, but no online list available). Has an IWM record here. See also:
 * Geograph for more images: http://www.geograph.org.uk/ and https://tools.wmflabs.org/geograph2commons/
 * Flickr image links no longer needed: jmc4 - Church Explorer (8049883531): Cawley brothers tablet (St Peter and St Paul Church) [17 October 2007]; Andrew Arnold (17471543026): McLaren headstone (Busbridge) [10 May 2015]; Moominpappa06 (12411557325): Overstrand War Memorial (Mills) [24 November 2013]; Rex Harris (4898368293): Fleming wall tablet (St Bartholomew's Church, Nettlebed) [16 August 2010]; Rex Harris (4898894928): Memorial window at St Bartholomew's Church, Nettlebed (Fleming) [16 August 2010]; Rex Harris (4898366253): Inscription on memorial window at St Bartholomew's Church, Nettlebed (Fleming) [16 August 2010]; Moominpappa06 (12248738955): Panel at St Martin's Church, Overstrand (Mills) [24 November 2013]; Moominpappa06 (12249312586): Mills among the names on the panel at St Martin's Church, Overstrand [24 November 2013]
 * Rothesay and Bute Roll of Honour introduction is by "J.K.H.", Church of Scotland Minister James King Hewison, and ends with this quotation: "O not in vain has been your great endeavour, / for by your dyings, Life is born again; / and greater love hath no man tokened ever, / Than with his life to purchase Life's high gain." ('The Vision Splendid', John Oxenham)
 * Three new war memorials for Henley
 * This image may include the Primrose Postwick church wall tablet (brass on black marble), possibly on the wall at left.
 * Memorial plaque for the dead of WWI - may be useful at some point.
 * Extra IWM memorial records to review: The Duke's Bell Tower (Clan Campbell WW1), Northern Ireland National War Memorial, Heywood Borough - WW1 Roll of Honour.
 * Duplicate IWM record here for 'Henley Memorial Hospital'. The duplicate is Henley And District Hospital. Records don't completely match.
 * No IWM record for the Diocese of Salisbury Memorial Book, but there is a reference to Salisbury Diocese WW1, describing a memorial window in Salisbury Cathedral.
 * The IWM name list for Busbridge is full of transcription errors. The entry for Francis McLaren appears to be this one, with the wrong surname used and the name completely mangled.
 * Guest blog post on the Digby Stuart College/Roehampton/Sacred Heart memorial:.
 * Three MPs and freemasons listed here were members of the Apollo Lodge (Oxford) and are mentioned in the article on that topic here.
 * As well as the Royal Gallery, there was an additional House of Lords memorial, a statue later moved to an outside garden. Details on the UK Parliament website and also here.
 * Stained glass memorial in Grangetown: . Might be connected, probably not. Very nice example of stained glass.
 * Royal Bucks Hussars (Primrose) have a memorial and what looks like a book of remembrance here. Also described here.
 * McLaren may be on this memorial, but names are not visible or listed.
 * Photograph of Hawarden book of remembrance is here.
 * A number of memorials are not strictly speaking war memorials. Sometimes the deceased is just mentioned on another person's memorial, with no mention of the war or how they were killed. An example is the mention of W.G.C. Gladstone on his mother's memorial tablet here. A similar instance is the bench mentioned here, that commemorates tree planting done by W.G.C. Gladstone in 1912. It is not even clear if the bench was placed before or after Gladstone died in the war.
 * Additional image of Fittleton Hicks-Beach family plaque:.
 * Lanhydrock Memorial Hall has a Roll of Honour listing those who returned safely from the World Wars, with Agar-Robartes's brothers listed.
 * Picture of the St Austell church brass plaque is among the photos here (confirmed by comparing with IWM memorial transcript).
 * A number of books of remembrance were set up at the diocesan level. At least one of those listed here is on one of those (the one for the Diocese of Salisbury). Gloucester may be another one.
 * Unused references for Falkland memorials: http://www.centreforstewardship.org.uk/remembering-the-old-parish-of-falkland/, http://www.centreforstewardship.org.uk/wp/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/falklandnewmemorial.pdf, https://jackdeighton.co.uk/2016/03/22/falkland-war-memorial/
 * Unused references for Falkland memorials: http://www.centreforstewardship.org.uk/remembering-the-old-parish-of-falkland/, http://www.centreforstewardship.org.uk/wp/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/falklandnewmemorial.pdf, https://jackdeighton.co.uk/2016/03/22/falkland-war-memorial/

Missing entries
Some databases or image repositories lack entries, and are listed here for future reference.
 * The War Graves Photographic Project (TWGPP): Hicks-Beach, Redmond.
 * Hansard records of writs: Harold Cawley, Agar-Robartes, Crichton-Stuart, Mills, Walrond, Baring, Fleming, Redmond, McLaren, Primrose, Glazebrook, Clive, Lyell. Kettle is n/a.
 * Imperial War Museum War Memorials Register: Bennett-Goldney, Campbell, McLaren, Walrond, Lyell, Kettle, Esmonde.
 * War Memorials Online: Baring, Bennett-Goldney, Campbell, Harold Cawley, Oswald Cawley, Clive, Crichton-Stuart, Fleming, Gladstone, Glazebrook, Hicks-Beach, McLaren, O'Neill, Redmond, Walrond, Lyell, Kettle, Esmonde.
 * Heraldic shields with no WP image: Bennett-Goldney, Harold Cawley, Oswald Cawley, Fleming, Glazebrook, O'Neill, Mills, Redmond
 * No pictures found in The Illustrated London News for the following: Oswald Cawley, O'Neill, Lyell, Kettle, Esmonde.

Other deaths sources
For use in later lists and tables (mainly peers, and sons of peers and MPs, or WWII deaths).
 * Useful link to all VII volumes of Rugbeians who fell in WWI: http://lib.militaryarchive.co.uk/library/Biographical/Memorials-of-Rugbeians-Who-Fell-in-The-Great-War.asp
 * J. S. Cawley:
 * J. S. Cawley on the 20th Hussars Regimental Panel in Royal Memorial Chapel (Sandhurst)
 * J. S. Cawley in Rugby Memorial Chapel.
 * http://www.nationaltrustcollections.org.uk/object/617528 (John S. Cawley)
 * http://www.nationaltrustcollections.org.uk/object/617584 (John S. Cawley)
 * http://www.nationaltrustcollections.org.uk/object/617530 (John S. Cawley)
 * http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205291963 (John S. Cawley)
 * http://www.greatwarbritishofficers.com/index_htm_files/STANHOPE_RP_Research.pdf (son of Arthur Stanhope, 6th Earl Stanhope)
 * https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/powis-castle-and-garden/features/powis-castle-remembers-its-wwi-hero (son of George Herbert, 4th Earl of Powis, several results for this Percy Clive in the NT Collections as well)
 * https://www.flickr.com/photos/13706945@N00/24031451862/ - memorial that includes the name of John Alexander, Viscount Weymouth, the eldest son of Thomas Thynne, 5th Marquess of Bath.
 * British Army Bond of Sacrifice: Officers Died in the Great War 1914-1916, contains over 2,600 officer biographies from both volumes of the Bond of Sacrifice. The Bond of Sacrifice was designed to act as a biographical record of all British officers who fell in the Great War. Volume 1 covered the first four months of the war and closed in December 1914, while Volume 2 covered the first six months of 1915. Not completed. Both volumes are at the Military Archive: Vol I; Vol II.
 * http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/421537
 * Hugh Trenchard memorial.
 * Guards Chapel books of remembrance: http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2021580, http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2023965, http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2023974, http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2023941, http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2021325, http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2021332, http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2023954.
 * All six volumes of Harrow Memorials of the Great War:, , , , ,.
 * Guards Chapel books of remembrance: http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2021580, http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2023965, http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2023974, http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2023941, http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2021325, http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2021332, http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2023954.
 * All six volumes of Harrow Memorials of the Great War:, , , , ,.