Statue

Elizabeth I statue - Harrow

Erection date: 1815

Inscription

No inscription that we could see.

Harrow School was founded in 1572 under a Royal Charter of Elizabeth I so this statue is entirely appropriate.

About this statue Wikipedia says "... originally at Ashridge Park; moved to Harrow School in 1925." And Bob Speel confirms that the statue was made for the then new Ashridge Park in 1815. But Ashridge Park still has a statue of Queen Elizabeth I and one that is near identical to this one.

ChilternsAONB explains that in 1925 the Ashridge house was sold and all its contents dispersed. We can find no confirmation but we have to assume that Harrow acquired this statue at the sale and that a copy was made, at some unknown date, and installed in the original niche at Ashridge. The harrow niche is clearly made for the statue so it seems Harrow knew they would have the statue when the building was designed, possibly as early as 1921. Or there were some significant late changes to the design to accommodate the statue.

Note also that the statue was erected in memory of Claud Hamilton who only died in early 1925. Which adds more questions about what happened when. Perhaps the Hamilton family chose to fund the statue as their memorial to Claud, possibly after it had been erected.

Site: Harrow School - 5 memorials (5 memorials)

HA1, Peterborough Road, Harrow War Memorial Building and Speech Room

In our photo, reading left to right: the WW1 memorial plaque is just to the right of the lamppost; the War Memorial Building plaque is one of those in the flint wall; the redbrick building at the right is the Speech Room - the road-side wall of which has the statue of Elizabeth and the Speech Room plaque is partially obscured by the top of the pig-pen railing end-post.

The Hamilton plaque is fixed inside the building, almost immediately behind the statue.

The Speech Room building was constructed 1872-7, designed by William Burges. The War Memorial building was constructed as a memorial to the 600 Old Boys of Harrow school lost in WW1. More information at the Listing entry.

This section lists the subjects commemorated on the memorial on this page:
Elizabeth I statue - Harrow

Subjects commemorated i

Queen Elizabeth I

Daughter of King Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn. Born Greenwich Palace.  Succeede...

Read More

This section lists the subjects who helped to create/erect the memorial on this page:
Elizabeth I statue - Harrow

Created by i

Claud Hamilton's brothers, son, grandson and nephews

Claud Hamilton's issue: Son: Gilbert Claud Hamilton (1879-1943), married twic...

Read More

Lord Claud John Hamilton

Second son of 1st Duke of Abercorn. Educated at Harrow. 1872 became a Directo...

Read More

Sir Richard Westmacott

Sculptor. Born Grosvenor Square. One of the Commissioners for the Great Exhib...

Read More

This section lists the other memorials at the same location as the memorial on this page:
Elizabeth I statue - Harrow

Also at this site i

Elizabeth I statue - Harrow - Hamilton plaque

Elizabeth I statue - Harrow - Hamilton plaque

This plaque refers to this statue.

Read More

Harrow School - Speech Room

Harrow School - Speech Room

The first stone of the new Speech Room was laid by His Grace the Duke of Aber...

Read More

Harrow School - War Memorial Building

Harrow School - War Memorial Building

The Harrow School War Memorial Building, Memorial Shrine, Ceremonial Staircas...

Read More

Harrow School - WW1 memorial

Harrow School - WW1 memorial

The plaque was laid in 1921 (British Pathe film) and the building was opened ...

Read More

Nearby Memorials

Hatton Garden - charity girl

Hatton Garden - charity girl

EC1, Hatton Garden

Ornamental Passions tells us "A pair of schoolchildren flanked each entrance, as was customary, but one pair was later transferred to St ...

2 subjects commemorated
Smuts statue

Smuts statue

SW1, Parliament Square

Winston Churchill wanted to unveil this statue but illness prevented.

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
V&A façade - Barry

V&A façade - Barry

SW7, Cromwell Road

Excluding the allegories (such as Knowledge) there are 36 statues on the two public façades of the V&A Museum, on Exhibition Road and...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Public Record Office - Queen Anne

Public Record Office - Queen Anne

WC2, Chancery Lane, Maughan Library of King's College, ex-PRO

The first buildings to occupy this site were built in 1232 by Henry III.  The building was known as the Domus Conversorum (the House of C...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Brunel statue - WC2

Brunel statue - WC2

WC2, Victoria Embankment

{On the plinth:} Isambard Kingdom Brunel, civil engineer, born 1806, died 1859.

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator