The memorial was put up shortly after Captain Tom passed away
A memorial of Captain Sir Tom Moore has been defaced with graffiti after the letters ‘IRA’ were sprayed across the statue in Hatton, Derbyshire.
The white paint graffiti was noticed on Wednesday morning earlier this week.
Anthony Ball, chairman of the Dove Valley Community Project which manages the park containing the statue, told Derbyshire Live: “What I don’t understand is that you’ve got a small memorial remembering those who lost their lives.
“Why did they spray Captain Tom? What has he got to do with the IRA?
https://twitter.com/NewsForAIl/status/1476552263695052803
“I was nearly physically sick when I saw it. Every day I do my walk, I walked around the corner, and I looked at it and was nearly physically sick. I touched it with my hand thinking it was something that would just wipe off, and it was spray paint.”
“I could almost understand if someone sprayed a war memorial or a soldier, but not Captain Tom walking down the street.
“I had to get a bin bag and put it over Captain Tom, I couldn’t leave him like that.”
Here’s what the statue looked like earlier this year when it was erected.
This fantastic tribute to Captain Sir Tom Moore has been installed by AGC Fabrications at Thistly Meadow, just across the River Dove from Tutbury ❤️ pic.twitter.com/8S8YLtSc7G
— BBC Radio Derby (@BBCDerby) February 4, 2021
The statue was cleaned hours after it was found to be defaced. Derbyshire Live reported the firm which installed the statue removed the white paint for free.
The memorial captures Captain Tom completing one of the famous laps of his garden which saw him raise millions of pounds for the NHS last year.
Underneath it reads: “Captain Sir Tom Moore 1920 – 2021. Tomorrow will be a good day.”
Captain Tom, who served in the British Army in the Second World War, became famous in the early days of the pandemic when he began walking laps of his garden to raise money for the NHS.
He incredibly ended up raising over £30 million by walking 100 laps of his Bedfordshire garden.
His actions inspired thousands of others to raise money for charity and support communities during the pandemic, while attracting criticism from many – not for his charitable work – but for the fact that the NHS was not being properly funded either during or prior to the pandemic.
“Captain Tom is a hero, but the NHS shouldn’t have to rely on charity,” one reader wrote into The Guardian.
Captain Tom was 100 when he passed away after contracting Covid and developing pneumonia.
Related links:
Captain Sir Tom Moore statue vandalised days after it was unveiled
Captain Tom Moore’s daughter says online trolls ‘would have broken his heart’
A movie biopic of Captain Sir Tom Moore is in the works