South Woodford Sorting Office Roll of Honour

South Woodford Sorting Office Roll of Honour. Photo by Woodford Times Newspaper 06/06/1919.
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Employees of the South Woodford Royal Mail Sorting Office who served in the First World War were commemorated on a Roll of Honour unveiled in June 1919. The Roll of Honour was possibly produced on paper or wood. The memorial appears to have been lost when the sorting office was closed and a new one built in 1948. Fortunately, an article published in the Woodford Times newspaper in 1919 marked the occasion and published the names of the sixteen men featured on the memorial, three of whom had died in the conflict.

‘There was an impressive little ceremony on Wednesday morning at the Woodford and South Woodford Postmen’s Sorting Office Marlborough Road… [which] unveiled a beautiful roll of honour of the names of the men of that district who have borne a great part in the war. Of the 26 men comprising the full staff, 16 went out and three of them lost their lives – W. Lynch and J.H Russell (killed in action) and W.H. J Godfrey (died of wounds).

Sources

Woodford Times, 6th June 1919

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Find out more about some of the individuals featured on this memorial by selecting from one of the names below.

To view a complete list of every individual commemorated on this memorial, please click on the memorial inscription link above.

Biography available.

Name Regiment Year of death
Joseph Henry Russell London Regiment (Post Office Rifles) 1917
William Henry James Godfrey Royal Field Artillery 1917
William Lynch London Regiment 1915