List of monumental masons

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Richard Hakluyt's memorial
An example of a signed and dated maker's mark on a wall-mounted memorial to Mary Carpenter in Bristol Cathedral sculpted by monumental mason

This is a list of monumental masons, also known as memorial masons:

A[]

  • , English, active in early-to-mid-18th-century England
  • J. Annis, English, active in early-to-mid-18th-century England
    • Memorial to John Styleman (d.1734) monument, "a large hanging one with cartouches of arms pinned to a pyramid, was erected after 1750" in , Kent.[5]
  • John Wormald Appleyard, English, active 1851–1891.

B[]

  • , (also Bacon Junior and S. Manning), English, active in early 18th-century England
  • John Bacon Jr. (of London, 1777–1859) (see above), English sculptor and monumental mason, active in early 19th-century England, son of John Bacon (1740–1799)
    • Memorial to Thomas and Sophia Lambard, "a pair of large, exceedingly restrained tablets by John Bacon Jun., 1813." In , Kent.[10]
  • Carlo Bergamini (1870–1934), Italian-New Zealander
  • , English, active in early 18th-century Cambridgeshire.
  • Blore, English monumental mason, active in late-18th-century Cambridgeshire (designed a tablet in the north transept of Ely Cathedral).[12]
  • (alias O'Brien) (fl. 1782–1806) of ,"exemplifying the later eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Irish Churchyard Sculpture tradition in County Wexford."[13]
  • (fl. 1775–1819) and (fl. 1795–1837) of "exemplifying the later eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Irish Churchyard Sculpture tradition in County Wexford."[13]
  • Boehm, English monumental masons active in mid-19th-century Cambridgeshire.
    • Monument to Mrs. Montagu (d.1871) in St. Margaret's Church (Newton, Cambridgeshire).[14]
  • Solon H. Borglum, sculptor and monumental mason active in 19th-century New York
    • Charles Adolph Schieren (1842–1915) in Green-wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York.[15]
  • , English, active in mid-18th-century England. Designer of the (d.1739) Memorial, known as the Obelisk on Maggots Mount in Harston, Cambridgeshire.[16]
  • (active 1920s), monumental mason of Matlock, signed as "BOWDEN MATLOCK".[17]
  • Bushnell, English, active in mid-17th-century Cambridgeshire

C[]

  • , famed sculptor and monumental mason active in 19th-century New York
    • Monument to Elias Howe Jr. (1819–1867), located at the intersection of Battle Avenue and Hemlock Avenue in Green-wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York.[20]
  • R. Chambers, English monumental mason active in mid-to-late-18th-century Kent.
    • Memorial to Richard Savage (d.1772), tablet with branches at the sides by Chambers who signed it in English and Hebrew, located in , Kent.[21]
  • , Scottish, (Brechin, Scotland), presently active, designer of the Wallace Monument
  • Sir Francis Chantrey, English sculptor and monumental mason active in early-to-mid-19th-century England.
    • Memorial to (d.1810), a "large hanging monument, this time with a profile medallion on a draped altar," attributed to Chantrey by style. It was removed from the old "humble medieval village church" upon its replacement with the new St. George, Beckenham, Kent (1885–87) in the south transept, built by architect W. Gibbs Bartleet of Beckenham.[22]
    • Monument to Samuel Knight (d.1829) in All Saints Church (Milton, Cambridgeshire).[23][24]
  • Sir Henry Cheere (1703 – 15 January 1781) was a renowned 18th-century English sculptor and monumental mason. He was "the first English-born sculptor to match the virtuosity of the continentals" and "formed his style on the small, crisp, cirvaceous shapes of the French sculptor [Roubiliac], though his monuments never approached Roubiliac’s in ease and inventiveness. Much of his work is unsigned, as is his commonly considered c.1760 masterpiece at Shadoxhurst, Kent.[25]
  • F. W. Commons was a monumental mason, trained in Europe (there is some speculation this was from 1858 to 1860), who was commissioned to carve four allegorical figures, each 12 ft high, for £2,100 to crown the front of Parliament House, Melbourne, though it never eventuated due to the depression. He set up as a monumental mason at Ballarat in 1880. He was then advertising from Creswick Road, 'blue stone, granite and marble masonry, engraving, carving and sculpture’ as well as 'City and Garden sculpture’. Much of his work can be seen in the historic buildings and gardens of Ballarat. A catalog of his work can be seen in F.W. Commons monuments, Libraries Australia ID 8859827.
The American Volunteer, 1876. (Note man standing on base.)
  • Carl Conrads (1839–1920), German-born American sculptor at New England Granite Works, Hartford, Connecticut.
    • The American Volunteer (1876) at Antietam National Cemetery, Sharpsburg, Maryland. The granite statue – 21 ft 6 in (6.55 m) tall; 44 ft 7 in (13.59 m) with base – was likely the largest sculpture in the United States prior to the Statue of Liberty.
    • Alexander Hamilton (1880), Central Park, New York City.
    • Many Civil War monuments.
  • , English monumental mason active in the mid-19th century in Kent.
    • Memorial to Monument, a stone obelisk located quarter-mile west of , Kent. Cosway was a "who fell off a stage coach here in 1835, and was killed. G. Cooper of Canterbury fecit. Struck by lightning" in the 1960s and thereafter threatened with demolition.[26]
  • , English monumental masons active in the 1880s in Camden, London.[27]
  • , English monumental mason active in early 19th-century England.
    • Tablet to d.1808 in Holy Trinity Church (Guilden Morden, Cambridgeshire).[28]

D[]

E[]

F[]

  • (active 1890s), around South Shields, Tyne and Wear.[31]
  • John Flaxman, English monumental mason active in late-18th-century and early 19th-century England
    • Coffin-shaped tablet of (d.1794) in St Andrew's Church, Cherry Hinton, Cambridgeshire.[32]
    • Memorial to Frances Hoare (d.1800), a “Grecian tablet, notably severe by comparison with the earlier monuments. Mourning members of her family, contemporarily dressed, in relief on either side of inscription.” It was removed from the old “humble medieval village church” upon its replacement with the new St. George's Church, Beckenham, Kent (1885–87) in the north transept, built by architect W. Gibbs Bartleet of Beckenham.[33]
    • Monument to Sir Charles Cotton, Admiral of the White (d.1812).[34]
    • Monument to Mrs. E. Knight in All Saints Church (Milton, Cambridgeshire).[23]
  • John Franklin (d.1831), English, "monumental mason of local note whose tablets frequently appear in east Wiltshire and neighbourhood".[35]
  • John Frazee, carver active in mid-19th-century New York.

G[]

  • , English monumental mason of Regent Street, London active in the early 19th century
  • (see above), English monumental masons of Regent Street, London active in the mid-19th century
    • Memorial to Jemima Wilson (d.1865). "Still in the pre-Chatnrey tradition, with its female wreathing an urn with flowers. Signed by Gaffin, and poorly carved." It was removed from the old "humble medieval village church" upon its replacement with the new St. George's Church, Beckenham, Kent (1885–87), built by architect W. Gibbs Bartleet of Beckenham.[22]
  • , 208 Girod Street, New Orleans, Louisiana
  • Eric Gill (1882–1940), English monumental mason
  • , English monumental mason active in the mid-17th-century England
    • "Black and white marble tablet to Herbert Randolph, with Corinthian side pilasters, ostentatiously signed by Francis Grigs, Fecit Anno 1645." Located in , Kent.[39]
  • (d.1720), English, a mason with his own memorial in .[40]

H[]

  • Christopher Horsnaile, English, monumental masons active in early eighteenth-century England (see also Edward Stanton
    • Monument to Bishop Fleetwood of Ely (d..1723) in north chancel aisle of Ely Cathedral.[41]
  • John Hickey, English monumental mason active in late-eighteenth-century England
    • Memorial to Amy Burrell (d.1790), a “hanging monument, large but detailed with delightful delicacy,” removed from the old “humble medieval village church” upon its replacement with the new St. George's Church, Beckenham, Kent (1885–87) in the south transept, built by architect W. Gibbs Bartleet of Beckenham.[4]
  • "Hooper, sculptor," English, active in late-19th-century Devon.
    • Wall-mounted memorial in Hatherleigh, Devon.[42]
  • Humphrey Hopper (active 1830s), English, active in Cambridge, Cambridgeshire
    • Memorial to the Rev. Charles Simeon d.1836 in Holy Trinity Church (Cambridge), "epitaph in Gothic forms."[43]

J[]

  • Tim Johnson of Carving and Restoration Team in Manassas, Virginia, American stone carver presently responsible for the CIA Memorial Wall.[44]
  • N Johnson, English monumental mason active in the early 17th-century Cambridgeshire, the monument of Sir Giles Allington (d.1613) and Lady Allington in is attributed to him.[45]

K[]

  • Michael Kenney (fl. 1794–5) of Ballylough, "exemplifying the later eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Irish Churchyard Sculpture tradition in County Wexford."[13]
  • D. Kindersley, English, active mid-20th century
    • Monument (completed 1947) to Mrs. Mary Robinson (d.1939) in .[46]

L[]

  • Robert Launitz, sculptor and monumental mason active in mid-19th-century New York
  • , English monumental mason firm, active in mid-19th-century England

M[]

  • , English monumental masons active in mid-19th-century London.
    • "A. W. Law, Esq." (d. 1824), wall-mounted memorial tablet (signed by Mallcott on the memorial underside) first erected in , City of London, and removed 1883 to St. Vedast-alias-Foster, London, when St. Matthew's was demolished in 1885.
  • S. Manning of London, see
  • Midcounties Co-operative, English
  • , (active 1910s), monumental mason of Hampstead, London.[48]
  • , monumental mason, designer and sculptor active in mid-19th-century New York
    • Brown Family: (1854) located on Hillock Avenue within Serpentine Path Knoll, in Green-wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York.[49]
  • Monumental Bronze Company, American, Bridgeport, Connecticut, active between 1875 and 1912 with their subsidiaries in the United States and Canada manufactured rust-resistant white bronze (zinc) monuments.[50]
    • (1849–1861) "Our Drummer Boy" Monument, located in Soldiers’ Lot – Atlantic Avenue, between Meadow Avenue and Linden Avenue in Green-wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York.[51]
    • Kurten Obelisk in , Louisiana.[52]
  • , famed sculptor and monumental mason active in 19th-century New York

N[]

  • , active in early 18th-century Cambridgeshire
  • Samuel Nixon (sculptor), English monumental masons active in mid-19th-century London.
    • "Martha Hatch, daughter of Henry Emlyn of Windsor" (d.1838) first erected in , City of London, and removed 1883 to St. Vedast-alias-Foster, London, when St. Matthew's was demolished in 1885.
  • Noble, English monumental masons active in mid-19th-century Cambridgeshire.
    • Monument to (d.1870) in .[14]
  • (fl. 1824–35) of Ferns, "exemplifying the later eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Irish Churchyard Sculpture tradition in County Wexford."[13]
  • , English monumental mason active in late-17th-century and early-18th-century England.
    • Memorial to Sir John Banks (d.1699) in , Kent, "a stupendous pile of marble, rising to the roof. Sir John, in a wig, cravat, and semi-Roman dress, stands in an elegant pose by an urn on a tall pedestal. On the other side his wife, robed as a Roman matron, leans pensively on the pedestal. Below, their son, Caleb, reclines on his elbow, in Roman armour and wig. Backcloth held by flying putti, side pilasters, wide arching cornice and, at the very top, a garlanded cartouche of arms. Flowery Latin inscription. Everything indeed that could set a suitable seal on the career of a scucessful [sic] nouveau riche." attributed to the sculptor John Nost on grounds of style.[55]

O[]

P[]

  • , English monumental mason from St. Ives practicing throughout England.
    • Urn memorial tablet of Robert Underwood d.1792 in .[56]
  • Andrew Lang Petrie (1854–1928), Australian.
  • Philip, English, active in 19th-century Cambridgeshire, England.
  • , English monumental masons active in mid-19th-century Cambridgeshire.
    • Monument to (d.1850) in .[14]
  • (1565, Antwerp – 1640, Amsterdam), Dutch, father of Nicolaes Eliaszoon Pickenoy
  • , a four-generation family of Scottish masons, started by who established their monumental workshop in 1842 outside the gates of Green-wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York. succeeded his father in the 1860s and '70s, his son opened the shop outside Green-wood's eastern gate. were the fourth generation; all are buried in Green-wood.[57]
    • Pfizer Family Memorials: Emile Pfizer in Green-wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York (1866–1941).[58]
  • Richard Potter, (c.1800), "Builder and Monumental Mason".[59]
  • , blacksmith of New Orleans, Louisiana
    • The Sociedad Ibera de Beneficence Muerta tomb in .[60]
    • Grailhe Gates in .[61]
  • Ambrose Poynter, English monumental masons active in early 20th-century England.
    • Mausoleum (1922) in .[14]
  • (of London), English monumental mason firm active in early-to-mid-19th-century London, England.

R[]

Wall-mounted memorial by Reeves of Bath of Thomas Preston Esq. (d.1820) and wife Jane (d.1823), their daughters, and many subsequent entries. The tablet was created c.1820 but entries were inscribed until 1848. It features the willow tree motif, and is in the City of London Church of St Magnus-the-Martyr, near London Bridge.

S[]

Scheemakers's Shakespeare memorial in Westminster Abbey
View of Albert Park looking north to the monument to Prince Albert in the distance.
  • , English, active in early 19th-century England.
    • Monument to Mrs. Mary Crop (d.1808) in .[46]
  • of Manchester, ‘Feeit(?)’, English, active in mid-18th-century England.
  • R. Sheppard Marble and Stone Works, 171 Queen Street, Toronto, Ontario. Active in 19th-century Ontario. "This number now lies approximately at the junction of Queen Street and University Avenue, an area of eight-lane divided macadam and massive granite buildings. The number 171 no longer exists."[71]
  • William Stanford (1837–1880), Australian,
  • Charles Stanley, English, active in mid-18th-century England.
    • Executed a monument (d.1743), designed by John Sanderson in the cloister of Ely Cathedral.[46]
  • Edward Stanton (sculptor) of London (1681–1734), an Englishsculptor and monumental mason, and monumental mason active in early 18th-century England, and son of William Stanton (mason)
    • Monument to Bishop Fleetwood of Ely (d..1723) in north chancel aisle of Ely Cathedral.[41]
    • Monument to Sir Marmaduke Dayrell and his mother
  • Thomas Stanton, English monumental mason active in mid-17th-century England.[72]
    • Memorial to Robert Heath (d.1649), a set of alabaster reclining figures, Robert is robed as a judge. "Thomas Stanton agreed to make a monument in 1664, and only charged 60 pounds,"according to the late Rupert Gunnis. The memorial is in the north aisle of , Kent.[73]
  • William Stanton (mason) of London ((1639–1705), father of Edward Stanton (sculptor), was an English monumental mason active in late-seventeenth-century England.[74]
  • William Stead, (early 1800s), carver and monumental mason of York, England
  • Nicholas Stone, English sculptor, builder, mason, monumental mason to the Royal Court
    • Memorial to (d.1634), only two calcined busts survive high in the north aisle of , Kent.[75]

T[]

  • , English monumental mason active in late-nineteenth-century England
  • Tucker, Mason, English, active in or around nineteenth-century Bath, Somerset.[63]
  • Treasure, Mason, English, active in or around nineteenth-century Bath, Somerset.[63]
  • Samuel Thatcher (1825–1899), monumental mason, Taunton, Somerset. Active – mid to late 19th century.[76]

V[]

Harold Vogel, American stone carver who created the first 31 stars.[77] of the CIA Memorial Wall and its inscription when the Wall was created in July 1974.[44]

W[]

1862 advertisement for Woodcock & Meacham, Architects
  • Henry Weekes (14 January 1807–1877) was an English sculptor and monumental mason, best known for his portraiture. He was among the most successful British sculptors of the mid-Victorian period.
    • Memorial to William, Lord Auckland (d.1814), "Grecian tablet with a profiule medallion in very low relief. Carved in 1849 by Henry Weekes" It was removed from the old "humble medieval village church" upon its replacement with the new St. George's Church, Beckenham, Kent (1885–87) in the south transept, built by architect W. Gibbs Bartleet of Beckenham.[22]
  • White, English, active in or around 19th-century Bath, Somerset)
  • Mr. of London, English, active in mid-19th-century England)
  • Paton Wilson, English,
    • brass tablet of d. 1893 in the Arts and Crafts style, set in St. Mary the Great (Cambridge).[79]
  • Wilton, English monumental mason, active in late-18th-century Cambridgeshire, who designed the monument to Elizabeth Bacon and her brother Peter Standly in
  • of Chicago, Illinois, foundry active in the 1890s.[80]
  • (1747–1808), sculptor and monumental mason active in late-18th-century England.
    • Memorial to Mrs. (d.1778) in .[46]
    • Standing wall monument to (d.1789) in .[46]
  • Sir Richard Westmacott the Younger (1775–1856) RA, renowned sculptor and monumental mason.[24]
    • Memorials to William Pitt the Younger and Charles James Fox in Westminster Abbey
    • Memorial to Sir George Warren (d.1801) in St. Mary's Church, Stockport, Greater Manchester, depicting a standing female figure by an urn on a pillar.[9]
    • Memorial to (d.1803), a "sarcaphogus with scrolls at the ends and putto heads, with half-spread wings" in the churchyard north of the chancel of , Kent.[81]
    • Memorial to John Turton (d.1806) was the doctor of King George III of Great Britain. His heavily Grecian memorial tablet in , Kent, features Doric columns beside the inscription and a sarcophagus. On the latter books and serpent-entwined staff. It was designed and carved by the renowned Sir Richard Westmacott.[73]
    • Memorial to (d.1810), a "relief of a classically robed man leaning pensively on an altar ‘To Gratitude.’".[73]
    • Memorial to (d.1824) (by Sir Richard Westmacott) in .[46]
    • Memorial to (d.1820), showing a seated effigy.[9] in St. Mary's Church, Stockport, Greater Manchester.[9]
    • Memorial to (d.1828) at .[82]
    • Memorial to William Pemberton (d.1828) at .[14]
  • Richard Westmacott III RA (1799–1872)
  • Joseph Wilton, English monumental mason active in late-18th-century England,
    • Memorial to Stephen Hooker (d.1755), memorial executed after 1788 and features a "tall, slender ahnging monument of white marble, detailed with exceeding refinement."[83]
  • of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
  • , characterized by vermiculated rustication on corners and sides and additional classical ornament on cast-iron mausoleum
  • Woodcock and Meacham, architects and monumental masons in Massachusetts formed by Woodcock and George F. Meacham (1831–1917).[86]
  • W. Wright, English, active in mid-17th-century Cambridgeshire.
    • Monument to Dorothe and (d.1638).[87]

Y[]

  • (born c.1963), Chinese, monumental mason in Zhenwu Shan cemetery.[88]

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