A BRADFORD man has uncovered the design for a church war memorial drawn up in 1920 to honour those who died for their country in the First World War.

The document, which is drawn on fabric, is dated July 1920 with the name of Empsall and Clarkson architects and surveyors printed on the bottom.

At the top, it says: "St John's, Horton Lane, Bradford. Design for war memorial in oak."

John Young, of Burnside Avenue, Shelf, found the design while looking through his late mother's belongings and is keen to know more about its history.

He said: "I would like to find out whether it was ever built."

The memorial design is inscribed as follows: "The men of this parish whose names are inscribed here died for their country in the war 1914-1918.

"This is the memorial of their honour and of our gratitude."

The names shown on the design start with Captain Reginald Lupton and Lieutenant Robert Cecil Cordingley, and run down to Fireman Eli Buckley.

How Mr Young's mother, Elizabeth McLean, came to be in possession of the drawing, is a mystery though, as she lived in Glasgow, but her father lived in Bradford for a time.