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EPSTEIN’S LATEST SCULPTURE UNVElLED.—Trumpeters of the Royal Horse Guards sound a fanfare as the war memorial at the new headquarters of the British Trades Union Congress in Bloomsbury, London, is unveiled. The work of Sir Jacob Epstein, the massive statue of a woman holding her dead son in her arms, is a memorial to trade unionists, in the armed forces and as civilians, who lost their lives in the two world wars.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19580403.2.195

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume XCVII, Issue 28552, 3 April 1958, Page 19

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72

EPSTEIN’S LATEST SCULPTURE UNVElLED.—Trumpeters of the Royal Horse Guards sound a fanfare as the war memorial at the new headquarters of the British Trades Union Congress in Bloomsbury, London, is unveiled. The work of Sir Jacob Epstein, the massive statue of a woman holding her dead son in her arms, is a memorial to trade unionists, in the armed forces and as civilians, who lost their lives in the two world wars. Press, Volume XCVII, Issue 28552, 3 April 1958, Page 19

EPSTEIN’S LATEST SCULPTURE UNVElLED.—Trumpeters of the Royal Horse Guards sound a fanfare as the war memorial at the new headquarters of the British Trades Union Congress in Bloomsbury, London, is unveiled. The work of Sir Jacob Epstein, the massive statue of a woman holding her dead son in her arms, is a memorial to trade unionists, in the armed forces and as civilians, who lost their lives in the two world wars. Press, Volume XCVII, Issue 28552, 3 April 1958, Page 19