Statue

(lost) Henry Fawcett statue - lost

Erection date: 7/6/1893

Inscription

HENRY FAWCETT BORN 26 AUGUST 1833 DIED 6 NOVEMBER 1884. After losing his sight by an accident at the age of 24, he became PROFESSOR of POLITICAL ECONOMY in the UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE, MEMBER OF FOUR PARLIAMENTS and from 1880 to 1884 H.M.POSTMASTER GENERAL. His inexorable fidelity to his convictions commanded the respect of Statesmen. His chivalrous self devotion to the cause of the poor and helpless won the affections of his Countrymen and of his Indian fellow subjects. His heroic acceptance of the calamity of blindness has left a memorable example of the power of a brave man to transmute loss into gain and wrest victory from misfortune.

Donated by Henry Doulton and created in terracotta by Tinworth, who worked at Doulton’s nearby Lambeth factory where it was made. The base contained eight separate bas-relief sculptures, honouring Fawcett's attributes and his achievements. It was erected on the site of Fawcett’s house and unveiled by the Archbishop of Canterbury. The plaque that was attached to the front of the base carried the same inscription as that on his memorial in Westminster Abbey from where we copied it.

February 1959 the Council, in both their minutes and a local newspaper article, expressed their intention to remove or ‘knock down’ the statue to improve the Park. And the statue disappeared never to reappear again so the assumption has to be that the Council just demolished this, at the time, 66-year old work of art which commemorated an honourable man. There is a suggestion that the head from the statue survived and is kept by the Henry Fawcett Junior School.

This statue lives on in the 1959 film ‘Look Back in Anger’.  The invaluable ReelStreets has a screen shot showing the statue.

All our information comes from Vauxhall History which has two photos of the monument: showing it installed in the Park; and this one, showing Tinworth working on a preparatory model. The final monument was 16 foot high with life-size figures.

Site: Fawcett house and lost statue - Vauxhall (2 memorials)

SW8, Vauxhall Park

The Friends of Vauxhall Park say the plaque is on the site of both the Fawcett house, No. 8 The Lawn, and the lost statue, erected after the house had been demolished.

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:
Henry Fawcett statue - lost

Subjects commemorated i

Henry Fawcett

Economist, politician and educational reformer. Born Salisbury. Blinded in a ...

Read More

This section lists the subjects who helped to create/erect the memorial on this page:
Henry Fawcett statue - lost

Created by i

Sir Henry Doulton

Businessman, inventor and manufacturer of pottery. Born Vauxhall Walk where h...

Read More

George Tinworth

Ceramic artist. Born 6 Milk Street, SE5. The whole area has been rebuilt but ...

Read More

This section lists the other memorials at the same location as the memorial on this page:
Henry Fawcett statue - lost

Also at this site i

Fawcett house - Vauxhall

Fawcett house - Vauxhall

We're not experts so we'll accept that the tree is a mulberry. And the tree e...

Read More

Nearby Memorials

Imperial Hotel - statue 15

Imperial Hotel - statue 15

WC1, Russell Square

On this site there used to be a sister hotel to Hotel Russell, also designed by Charles Fitzroy Doll and erected in 1898. It was demolish...

1 creator
Frieze of Parnassus - Roubiliac

Frieze of Parnassus - Roubiliac

SW7, Kensington Road

The monument, officially titled the Prince Consort National Memorial, celebrates Victorian achievement and Prince Albert's passions and i...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Imperial Hotel - statue 03 - Elizabeth I

Imperial Hotel - statue 03 - Elizabeth I

WC1, Russell Square

Unmistakably Queen Elizabeth I.

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Robert Raikes statue

Robert Raikes statue

WC2, Victoria Embankment Gardens

There is a copy of this statue in Gloucester and another in Toronto.

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Kindertransport - Kent

Kindertransport - Kent

EC2, Liverpool Street Station, Lower level

This sculpture was first installed in 2003, just outside this station, in what is now named Hope Square, when it looked very different, c...

4 subjects commemorated, 2 creators