ⓘWhat do the D1–D5 confidence tiers mean?›
- D1A single attributed public source (museum, council, Historic England, CWGC, mapping data).
- D2Two or more independent public sources corroborate the same facts.
- D3A named coordinator or local reviewer has confirmed the public-source account.
- D4A named observer has personally visited and documented the site — photographs, inscriptions, condition.
- D5An archive or institution has provided written documentation supporting the entry.
A higher tier means more corroborating evidence, not automatic historical certainty. The Discovery layer does not replace archival verification.
A stained-glass window at St Mary the Virgin Church on Bute Street, Cardiff, depicts Christ walking on water above a warship and seamen rescuing a comrade, with the crest of the Russian Convoy Club and two ships sailing into Murmansk between icebergs below. It was dedicated by the South Wales branch of the Russian Convoy Club on 1 March 1998.
The Russian Convoy Club, South Wales Branch — dedicated to shipmates who gave their lives on the Arctic convoys to North Russia.
Documented in the IWM War Memorials Register (item 37147).
This page is maintained within the coordinator network. Confirming and upholding the accuracy of its content is the coordinator’s responsibility.
What this page does not claim
- Verbatim text of inscriptions beyond the dedication quoted here — full wording requires first-hand field observation (D4).
- Names of individuals commemorated — those belong on archival surfaces, not this discovery record.
- Endorsement by any named institution; sources are cited for documentary research only.
- Precise present-day condition or exact siting — confirm by a field visit before relying on it.
Sources
- AImperial War Museums — IWM War Memorials Register entry recording this memorial (item 37147).archived ↗
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