TODAY'S Object of the Week is a memorial to a dashing captain whose "splendid bravery" saved many lives during the First World War.

The handsome tribute to George Burdon McKean stands in Willington, County Durham, where he was born in 1888.

The Northern Echo: The George Burdon McKean memorial in WillingtonThe George Burdon McKean memorial in Willington

It commemorates the remarkable action which won him a Victoria Cross.

With intense machine gunfire raining down on his men in a trench, he realised that the only way their operation could succeed was by someone physically taking out the enemy stronghold.

So he dashed at the “block” which was guarding the gun that was causing so much mayhem.

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He dashed out into the open, flung himself over the barbed wire and then, “with utter disregard of danger, leapt over the block head first” and landed on top of the enemy - quite literally.

He ended up lying on top of a German soldier, and as he struggled violently beneath him, another rushed at him with a fixed bayonet. Capt McKean shot the on-rusher with his revolver, and then turned the gun on the man beneath him.

The block was now in his possession, but he was out of bombs – and the machine gun was still firing. Somehow he held on until more Mills bombs arrived and then, singlehandedly, he dashed at the machine gun post, killing two men, capturing four others and destroying the weapon.

“This officer’s splendid bravery and dash undoubtedly saved many lives,” said his Victoria Cross citation, “for had not this position been captured, the whole of the raiding party would have been exposed to dangerous enfilading fire.”

The Northern Echo: Lieutenant George Burdon McKeanLieutenant George Burdon McKean

McKean was born at 102, High Street, Willington, in 1888, an “extremely delicate” baby. His father was a furniture dealer who died when he was young and he moved with his mother and sister into Bishop Auckland. He attended Bishop Barrington School until he was 13 when he became an apprentice cabinet maker, to T Thompson, in Newgate Street.

There is a lot of uncertainty about the next phase of his life, but his mother died and in September 1902, when he was just 14, he sailed from Liverpool to Montreal on the SS Tunisia, probably with a view to joining his elder brother on a cattle ranch.

When war broke out he applied to join the Canadian Expeditionary Force but was turned him down three times on the grounds of poor physique – he was 5ft 6ins and weighed nine stone.

Fourth time lucky, he enlisted with the Royal Montreal Regiment, and in June 1916 he made it to the Western Front. In April 1917, near the northern French town of Lens, he won the Military Medal, and was promoted to Second Lieutenant.

The Northern Echo: George McKean VC in his university days in CanadaGeorge McKean VC in his university days in Canada

A year later, at Gavrelle, near Arras, he won the Victoria Cross “for most conspicuous bravery and devotion to duty during a raid on the enemy’s trenches”.

And still he wasn’t done. In September 1918, he was in the German-held French village of Cagnicourt, with two other Canadian scouts – the rest of their advance party was lost, McKean himself was suffering shrapnel wounds, and the rest of the troop was several minutes behind.

And 150 Germans were watching him. With great bravado, he began waving his arms and his guns, and bellowing out orders to what anyone watching would have thought was a large number of troops.

They took about 100 prisoners, and McKean was awarded with a Military Cross to complete his set.

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He left the Army in July 1919 with the rank of captain, married Constance Hilton in Brighton, and got a job running a sawmill in Hertfordshire. It was there, in November 1926, when he was aged 38, that tragedy struck.

Capt McKean was sawing some logs at his mills at Cuffley when the blade broke and his head came into contact with the revolving saw. Terrible injuries were inflicted and he died a few hours later.

Two days later, his wife gave birth to their daughter, Patricia.

The Canadians felt they had lost one of their great war heroes. They named a 9,000ft mountain in the Rockies – Mount McKean – after him and his name is still revered in Canadian military circles.

He is also remembered in Cagnicourt, a farming village of about 400 residents that was almost wholly rebuilt after the ravages of the First World War. In 2003, the mayor unveiled a memorial to McKean in the newly renamed La Place du George Burdon McKean which had previously been the church square.

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