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Items
was classified by is exactly
Grade II
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Physical Energy equestrian statue, London
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Quintin and Alice Hogg Memorial
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Statue of Abraham Lincoln, Manchester
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Statue of Abraham Lincoln, Parliament Square
- Statue of Alderman John Lucas
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Statue of Alexandra, Whitechapel
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Statue of Alfred Fagon
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Statue of Annie Jerningham
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Statue of Arthur Bower Forwood
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Statue of Augustus John
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Statue of Benjamin Alfred Dobson
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Statue of Benjamin Disraeli, Aylesbury
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Statue of Benjamin Disraeli, Bolton
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Statue of Benjamin Disraeli, Liverpool
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Statue of Benjamin Disraeli, Parliament Square
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Statue of Britannia, Esher
- Statue of Britannia, South Shields
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Statue of Catherine Booth, London
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Statue of Charles Cavendish
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Statue of Charles Darwin, Shrewsbury
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Statue of Charles Gordon, Gordon's School
The statue of Gordon was repatriated from Khartoum, Sudan after independence and was reinstalled in its present position at Gordon's School in 1959. -
Statue of Charles Gordon, Gravesend
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Statue of Charles Gordon, Westminster
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Statue of Charles Henry Wilson, Hull
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Statue of Charles Henry Wilson, Warter
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Statue of Charles II, Gloucester
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Statue of Charles II, Soho
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Statue of Charles Kingsley
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Statue of Charles Napier, Trafalgar Square
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Statue of Charles Palmer
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Statue of Charles Vane-Tempest-Stewart
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Statue of Charles Wesley, Bristol
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Statue of Colin Campbell, Westminster
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Statue of Douglas Haig, Clifton College
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Statue of Edmund Burke
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Statue of Edward Colston
The almost hunched, contemplative figure represents Colston in his maturity. For a likeness, the sculptor may have turned to Jonathan Richardson’s portrait of 1702, a version of which hangs in the Council House. The reclining figure by Rysbrack on Colston’s tomb in All Saints, Corn Street, may also have been useful. The monument shows a younger, more vigorous man, although Rysbrack may well have used the same source. Cassidy’s statue depicts Colston in early eighteenth century clothes […] Three of the side reliefs show apocryphal or symbolic scenes from Colston’s life. One shows Colston distributing alms in the street; another depicts mythical seahorses and tritons pulling an anchor; the third depicts the legend […] of a dolphin plugging a leak in one of Colston’s ships. […] It was this ‘incident’ that is said to have caused Colston to adopt the dolphin as his emblem. Stylised dolphins, with writhing tails and looking more like animated catfish, are at each corner of the pedestal. The fourth panel bears an inscription and the sculptor’s name. (Merritt & Greenacre 2011: 41) -
Statue of Edward Stanley, Parliament Square
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Statue of Father Thames
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Statue of Florence Nightingale
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Statue of Francis Drake, Tavistock
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Statue of Francis Russell 5th Duke of Bedford
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Statue of Francis Russell, 7th Duke of Bedford
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Statue of Frederick Cavendish
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Statue of Frederick James Tollemache
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Statue of George Bentinck, Cavendish Square
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Statue of George Canning
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Statue of George Cornewall Lewis
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Statue of George Curzon
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Statue of George Elliott Benson, Hexham
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Statue of George Herbert