Memorial bench
A memorial bench or memorial seat is a piece of furniture which commemorates a person who has died. Memorial benches are typically made of wood, but can also be made of metal, stone, or synthetic materials. Typically memorial benches are placed in public places but are often also placed in domestic gardens.
- Bench in the village of Rhos in Neath Port Talbot, Wales, a memorial to the Primrose Colliery disaster of 1858, which claimed the lives of 14 miners (men and boys) and 7 horses
- Class of 1980 Memorial bench near the north trailhead of the Flirtation Walk, West Point, New York
- Memorial benches at the Royal Military College of Canada
- Memorial seat commemorating the Ulster Defence Regiment at the National Memorial Arboretum in Staffordshire
- The Canterbury Pioneer Women's Memorial at the top of Bridle Path in New Zealand, with the Jane Deans memorial seat in the foreground
- Ian Dury memorial bench in Richmond Park, southwest London
- Andrew Haswell Green's memorial bench in Central Park, New York City
- Walter Lord memorial bench at Green Mount Cemetery in Baltimore, Maryland, engraved with his books' titles
- Memorial bench and plaque dedicated to C. F. Powell at the site of his death in the foothills of the Alps, Italy
See also
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