Kester:
Point taken!

I was thinking, though, of a memorial erected nearer the time of the Napoleonic wars. The plaques in Victory and at the Old Admiralty Building are of fairly recent date. However, on reflection, it seems not to have been the custom to have public memorials commemorating war dead, as opposed to specific famous heroes, until after the First World War. This was the first war in which men were conscripted and almost every family in the land experienced a loss. Until then, it seems that soldiers and sailors were a separate caste almost - who were expected to save the nation in times of trouble, but could be forgotten afterwards and abandoned to destitution. Roy Adkins ends his 'Trafalgar: a Biography of a Battle' with a poignant poem about a poor sailor after Trafalgar. I'll post it on the poetry thread so that the poetry-averse can avoid it if they choose.