Monument

Virginia Settlers Memorial

Erection date: 1928

Inscription

{Inscription, repeated on both sides of the marble base of the monument:}

Virginia Quay
The Virginia Settlers Memorial tablet was unveiled in 1928 on the wall of Brunswick House which formerly stood about 100 yards to the west of this point. In 1999 Barratt Homes Limited reinstated this monument and commissioned the mariner’s astrolabe by Wendy Taylor C.B.E.

{On the plaque facing the river, beneath a depiction of three ships and a banner with the inscription 'Dei Gratia Virginia Condita' (By the grace of God, Virginia was founded) :}

From near this spot, December 19 1606, sailed with 105 “adventurers”:
The “Susan Constant” 100 tons. Capt. Christopher Newport in supreme command;
The “Godspeed” 40 tons. Capt. Bartholomew Gosnold;
The “Discovery” 20 tons. Capt. John Ratcliffe.
Landed at Cape Henry, Virginia April 26 1607.
Arrived at Jamestown Virginia May 13 1607 where these “adventurers” founded the first permanent English colony in America under the leadership of the intrepid Capt. John Smith, Edward Maria Wingfield President of the Council, the Reverend Robert Hunt and others.
At Jamestown July 30 1619, was convened the first representative assembly in America.
Erected by the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities in 1928 in commemoration.

This voyage took place 16 years before the Mayflower.

The memorial has a history of its own. British History Online (text and plan) and this 1893-6 map confirm that in 1928, when the wharf was known as Brunswick Wharf, a plaque was erected on the westernmost pier of Brunswick Buildings (formerly the Railway Tavern). The Guardian says this building was, at this time, the Dockmaster's House. Stand at the memorial and look east; the building you see is standing about where the Railway Tavern stood. In 1947, following Blitz damage, that was demolished and the quay modified.

The plaque was kept to form part of a large monument, erected by the Port of London Authority, in the form of a pile of stones from the old quay, with a bronze mermaid on top. Harold Brown designed the whole monument and the mermaid. We thank Jamie Davis for finding this link to the British Pathe news film of the unveiling in 1951.

But this monument was left neglected and vandalised and the mermaid stolen. Images at Tower-Bridge.org show that the plaque was also removed but that must either have been retrieved; or removed before the vandals came back for it; or perhaps the current plaque is a reproduction.

Then, as part of their redevelopment of this area for housing, Barratt Homes Limited reinstated this monument, in a slightly different place, and commissioned the mariner’s astrolabe by Wendy Taylor. Unveiled 23 September 1999.

The mermaid was discovered being auctioned in 2007, having been bought from a man in Hatfield Heath in about 1992. But its reappearance was too late for the monument and Barratts showed no interest in acquiring it. The auction description was "Lot 413: Harold Brown: a bronze figure of a mermaid, modelled in high relief with long flowing hair and curling tail on wave-cast base signed Harold Brown, 1950, Weathered green patination, 180 cm.; 71 ins. high."

Listed in 2017.

2018: Matt Hogendobler kindly corrected our inept Latin translation. And Paul Dyer provided this link to a photo of Brunswick Wharf in 1920.

Site: Virginia Settlers Memorial (1 memorial)

E14, Jamestown Way, Thames Path

Credit for this entry to: Alan Patient of www.plaquesoflondon.co.uk

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:
Virginia Settlers Memorial

Subjects commemorated i

Bartholomew Gosnold

Explorer. Born in Grundisburgh, Suffolk. He led the first recorded European e...

Read More

Robert Hunt

Vicar. Born circa 1568. He was chaplain to the Jamestown Settlement.

Read More

Christopher Newport

Seaman. Baptised at Harwich, Essex, on 29 December 1561. He was the captain o...

Read More

John Ratcliffe

Mariner and colonist. His family name appears to have originally been Sicklem...

Read More

Captain John Smith

Citizen and cordwainer (cobbler), first among the leaders of the settlement a...

Read More

Show all 10

This section lists the subjects who helped to create/erect the memorial on this page:
Virginia Settlers Memorial

Created by i

Barratt Developments PLC

One of the largest residential property development companies in the United K...

Read More

Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities

The United States' first statewide historic preservation group. In 2009, it s...

Read More

Harold Brown

Sculptor active in 1938 - 50. In 1938 he was living in Belfast. With no image...

Read More

Wendy Taylor

Sculptor resident in Bow. Studied at St. Martin's School of Art. Her philosop...

Read More

Nearby Memorials

Shacklewell WW1 memorial

Shacklewell WW1 memorial

E8, Shacklewell Lane

The carving on the south face has a peculiarity which we think must be an error. It's normal for all the lettering to be in caps with som...

War dead | WW1
108 subjects commemorated
Helena Fedorowicz

Helena Fedorowicz

N4, Finsbury Park

This was originally a well-designed and substantial monument. Both sides of the base are convex and Wikipedia have a photo, November 2007...

2 subjects commemorated
All Hallows, Gospel Oak, War Memorial

All Hallows, Gospel Oak, War Memorial

NW3, Savernake Road, Parish Church of All Hallows

This text is on the north-west face of the stone base to the cross. There was text on at least one other side of the stone but the weath...

1 subject commemorated
Sheen war memorial

Sheen war memorial

TW9, Sheen Lane

This monument appears in a scene shot on location in the 1973 movie 'Vault of Horror' (segment 5 'Drawn and Quartered'). There you see th...

3 subjects commemorated
Women in WW2

Women in WW2

SW1, Whitehall

The typeface used on the sides of the monument replicates that used in war-time ration books. The unveiling was one of the ceremonies to ...

1 subject commemorated, 4 creators

Previously viewed

Frederick Pethick-Lawrence

Frederick Pethick-Lawrence

Husband of Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence. Born London. Campaigned with his wife Emmeline for votes for women. Died at the Manor House Hospital, London.

Person, Gender Issues, Politics & Administration

3 memorials
Matthew Bell

Matthew Bell

Psychoanalyst who works near West Smithfield and is interested in local history.  He felt passionately that there should be a memorial where the denouement of the 1381 revolt took place and where T...

Person, History, Medicine

2 memorials
Christina Rossetti

Christina Rossetti

Poet in the Pre-Raphaelite style.  Sister to Dante; family details are given there. Born at 38 Charlotte Street.  Engaged three times but never married; at least two of them were rejected due to 'r...

Person, Poetry, Seriously Famous

1 memorial
Walter Hodges

Walter Hodges

Secretary of the People's Gospel Mission.

Person, Politics & Administration

1 memorial