Home Page About the Society Gallery Meetings Museum Publications Newsletters-Events Resources
West End Local History Society
Local History - Memorial to Richard St.Barbe Baker
Museum & Heritage Centre
The Old Fire Station
High Street
West End. Hampshire
Return to
Local History Index

MEMORIAL TO RICHARD St.BARBE BAKER
corner of Chapel Road and High Street, West End

unveiled by Cllr. Martin Kyrle on Friday 28th March 2003

Image 0

Dr. Richard St.Barbe Baker, OBE
1889 - 1982

     
           The memorial to Richard St.Barbe Baker marks the completion of a programme of environmental improvements that has been undertaken in West End's High Street. Totalling £180,000 the project has been funded by the Borough Council with the support of the Hedge End, West End and Botley Local Area Committee. The improvements have been undertaken in partnership with Vail Williams and include upgraded pavements, safety railings, better lighting plus the removal of graffiti and damaged planters. The scheme has also seen the introduction of a local CCTV system managed by S & P Southampton Ltd.

           The bronze bas-relief of Richard St.Barbe Baker was made by sculptor Jill Tweed. The bronze was cast by Burleighfield Arts Ltd, High Wycombe and the Portland Stone column and granite top were supplied by Vokes and Becks of Winchester. This is Jill Tweed's third work in the Borough. Her first, completed in 1995, was "
The Railwayman" statue - a prominent sculpture in Eastleigh's Leigh Road shopping precinct. Her second, completed in 2001, was the bronze "Angel of Mons" on the town's War Memorial.


            Richard St.Barbe Baker,OBE was born on the 9th October 1889 in West End. He was a forestry adviser and silviculturist and Founder of the
Men of the Trees in 1922. This organisation is now known as the International Tree Foundation.

            He became Assistant Conservator of Forests in Kenya and Nigeria in the 1920's and was concerned for the rapidly decreasing fertility of the land. He believed it was necessary to plant more trees to combat the shifting methods of agriculture and he initiated the idea of voluntary tree planting by native tribesmen. He founded the society, The Men of the Trees, in Kenya in 1922.

            For the remainder of his life Barbe Baker travelled extensively around the world, lecturing and writing to convey his message about the importance of trees. Through his determination and energy he influenced the protection of the giant redwoods in California, the replanting of large areas in northern Africa and stimulated a new world-wide direction for forest conservation.

            In 1978 Richard St.Barbe Baker received an OBE for his work. He planted his last tree in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada on 5th June 1982 in a ceremony celebrating World Environment Day, and died four days later in his ninety-third year.

A SERIES OF PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN AT THE UNVEILING OF THE MEMORIAL IN WEST END

Image 1 Image 2
Image 3 Image 4
Image 5 Image 6
Image 7 Image 8
Image 9

Return to top of page.      Return to Previous Page      Go to Home Page      Go to Local History Page Page

Web Space provided by Hampshire County Council

This page is designed for Microsoft Internet Explorer.
Uses Frames, Java Applets and Scripts.
It should be viewed with your screen set at
800 x 600 pixels and medium sized fonts.