Statue

William IV statue

Inscription

{Front of the plinth:}
William IV, born 1765, died 1837.

{Right of statue base:}
Nixon

{On a plaque attached to the horizontal surface of one of the steps:
the City of London crest, followed by:}
This statue stood formerly in King William Street in the City of London where it was set up in 1845.  It was removed to this site and presented to H. M. Office of Works by the Corporation of the City of London in 1936.

Originally erected, December 1844, in the City, at the junction of King William Street and Cannon Street, facing down to London Bridge. He and his queen, Adelaide, had opened the Rennie London Bridge in 1831 so this was a good position. As traffic increased the statue had to be moved and the Greenwich Park site was chosen in 1935, it having just become available following the demolition of the church. Alamy have a photo of it being prepared for transportation.

Said to be the first statue in London in granite (a very hard stone), in the naturalistic style which was then new and fashionable. Seems the estimate for the job did not allow for the difficulties that granite presented; Nixon's finances were nearly ruined by this commission. Other London granite statues include: Baden-Powell, and the Crutched Friars.

Belongs to a select group of statues which become rude when viewed from a particular position. Another example is the Neptune in Bologna. No one can accuse us of being too highbrow.

Site: William IV statue (2 memorials)

SE10, King William Walk, St Mary's Gate into Greenwich Park

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:
William IV statue

Subjects commemorated i

King William IV, Duke of Clarence

The Duke of Clarence became King William IV (The Sailor King), reigning 1830 ...

Read More

This section lists the subjects who helped to create/erect the memorial on this page:
William IV statue

Created by i

Samuel Nixon

Sculptor.  Possibly born and brought up in London.  Died at his home, Kenning...

Read More

This section lists the other memorials at the same location as the memorial on this page:
William IV statue

Also at this site i

St Mary’s church, Greenwich

St Mary’s church, Greenwich

The excellent Greenwich Phantom tells us that the footprint of the old church...

Read More

Nearby Memorials

Ronnie Corbett - steel statue

Ronnie Corbett - steel statue

CRO, Charles Street

{On a nearby bench:} Plaque 1:The characters for this Portrait Bench chosen by your community celebrate Sustrans winning a nationwide vo...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Temple Bar memorial - Edward VII

Temple Bar memorial - Edward VII

EC4, Fleet Street

The niche on the north face holds a marble statue of the Prince of Wales, later Edward VII, in Field Marshal's uniform. Carved in the sto...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
FCO - G unknown

FCO - G unknown

SW1, Horse Guards Road, Foreign and Commonwealth Office

The Foreign Office was completed in 1873 to the 1861 designs of Sir George Gilbert Scott, with Sir Matthew Digby Wyatt for the St James’s...

Whittington statue - EC3

Whittington statue - EC3

EC3, Threadneedle Street

Statue on the right. Ornamental Passions has some information. Felbridge History gives a 'Joseph Carew' as the sculptor of another statu...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Queen Elizabeth I at Guildhall

Queen Elizabeth I at Guildhall

EC2, Basinghall Street, 71

Ornamental Passions has some more photos and information on these sculptures, and there we learn that this building is the 1870 Guildhall...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator