St. Andrew's Church, Waterloo Street, Hove, BN3 1AQ
Monuments  

Over the years the church gained many marble wall tablets to commemorate those who have worshipped here.

As part of his campaign to focus attention on his newly-created east end, Fr Kirkley removed all but four of the tablets and placed them in the lobbies and stairwell. It is thought that the four that remained in situ did so because relatives of those commemorated still worshipped here.

The same must certainly be true of the four brass plaques that commemorate young soldiers who lost their lives in the First World War.

 

 

On the north side of the nave is a large memorial to Lord Charles Henry Somerset (d.1831), Paymaster General to the Forces and Governor of the Cape of Good Hope, who was most famous for having had as his medical attendant Sir James Barry (no relation to the architects), one of the first women surgeons who was only able to practice as an army surgeon by succcessfully pretending to be a man. The memorial depicts Somerset's grieving widow placing a laurel wreathe on his funerary urn.

On the opposite side of the church is a memorial, obviously by the same sculptor, to Sir George Dallas, 1st Bt, who died in 1833. Here the grieving widow holds a lily in front of a classical tablet. Sir George was a noted poet and political writer, best known for Letters on the Political and Commercial State of Ireland (1797). Many of his unpublished works are now in the Bodleian Library in Oxford.

The most interesting tablet in the church may be found in the staircase lobby and commemorates Sir Ralph Gore, 7th Bt, who died in 1842. He was one of a group of notable Anglo-Irish aristocrats residing in Hove at the time, many of whom came to England following the 1801 Act of Union. The memorial was designed by Amon Henry Wilds, architect son of Henry Wilds who had built the Kemp Town development in association with Charles Busby. The buildings of Amon Henry Wilds, which often incorporate Ammonite motifs as a pun on his name, can be seen in nearby Oriental Place. Carved by the monumental masons W. Lambert of Brighton, his fine architectural tablet is topped by the Gore shield of arms.

 

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What's On?

  • Church open to the public
    Sunday, 5th September 2010 14:00h
    The Friends of St. Andrew's invite you come and lo>...more info