Other

Liberty's - weather vane - Mayflower

Site: Liberty's - weather vane - Mayflower (1 memorial)

W1, Great Marlborough Street

Brought to our attention by Londonist, the weather vane atop Liberty's represents the Mayflower.

Arthur Lasenby Liberty (1843 - 1917) opened his shop in Regent Street in 1875 and it rapidly expanded into neighbouring properties. As the Regency 99-year leases ended the whole of Regent Street was redeveloped with tight control exerted over the design of the buildings to ensure an impressive but harmonious whole. Liberty employed architects Edwin T. Hall and his son Edwn S.. They designed the Regent Street building in the required Imperial Edwardian style (Ornamental Passions have a page about that building) but rather let rip with the building in Great Marlborough Street which was not subject to the design rules, so they used a style very popular at the time - Tudor Revival. The timbers of two ships were used in the construction of the shop: HMS Impregnable (formerly HMS Howe) and HMS Hindustan. As far as we can see Liberty's no longer has a presence on Regent Street.

Why the Mayflower? The Tudor period is defined as Henry VII - Elizabeth I, that's 1485 -1603. The Mayflower sailed in 1620, during the reign of James I of England, so choosing that for the weathervane involved some date flexibility. Liberty's has always specialised in decorative imported goods, perhaps referenced by a ship of colonisation. We're struggling here.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the subjects commemorated on the memorial on this page:
Liberty's - weather vane - Mayflower

Subjects commemorated i

The Sailing of the Mayflower

The ship that carried pilgrims from Britain to the New World. There were 102 ...

Read More

Nearby Memorials

Crucifixion

Crucifixion

EC1, St John's Square, St John's Cloister Garden

The crucifixion sculpture was created by Cecil Thomas and installed as part of the post war reconstruction (1955-8).  A square carved pa...

2 subjects commemorated, 3 creators
Mary Dunning's maze

Mary Dunning's maze

NW4, Greyhound Hill, Church Farm House Museum

The maze was funded by a bequest from the late Colette Fontaine and a generous gift from the Friends of the Museum. The stone bird-bath a...

1 subject commemorated
Virtues - Delectation

Virtues - Delectation

WC2, Trafalgar Square, National Gallery - Staircase Hall - North Vestibule

In a formal garden Margot Fonteyn sits demurely listening to Edward Sackville-West playing a harpsichord. A female statue behind holds a ...

2 subjects commemorated
Henry Cole at V&A

Henry Cole at V&A

SW7, Exhibition Road, Victoria & Albert Museum

April 2018: Freshly regilded and looking splendid – but with a new metal walkway cutting across it. The designers’ website even includes ...

1 subject commemorated
Marta Krawiec

Marta Krawiec

WC1, Theobald’s Road

This is our third memorial at the junction (Francis Golding, Federica Baldassa) - all to cyclists killed by HGVs at this junction.  Road....

2 subjects commemorated