- Source: George Blackall Simonds
George Blackall Simonds (6 October 1843 – 16 December 1929) was an English sculptor and a director of H & G Simonds Brewery in Reading, Berkshire.
Biography
George was the second son of George Simonds Senior, of Reading, director of H & G Simonds, and Mary Anne, the daughter of William Boulger of Bradfield. His grandfather was the Reading brewer and banker William Blackall Simonds. Simonds added Blackall to his name after the death of his brother, Blackall Simonds II, in 1905. He was a brother-in-law of the portrait painter John Collingham Moore and a cousin of the botanist George Simonds Boulger.
Simonds served as the inaugural Master of the Art Workers' Guild in 1884-85. His best known works are The Falconer (1873) in Central Park, New York City, and the Maiwand Lion (1886) in the Forbury Gardens, Reading, England.
In 1922, Simonds temporarily came out of retirement to build the war memorial in Bradfield, the village where he lived in Berkshire. This commemorates the deaths of local men in the First World War, including his son, a lieutenant in the 2nd Battalion the South Wales Borderers.
In 2005, users of Reading Borough Libraries voted Simonds winner of the 'Great People of Reading' poll.
Works
Notes
References
External links
New York City Department of Parks and Recreation: The Falconer
Reading Borough Libraries: George Blackall Simonds Archived 12 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine
Royal Berkshire History: George Blackall Simonds
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- George Blackall Simonds
- Blackall Simonds
- H & G Simonds Ltd
- Bazalgette Memorial
- George Simonds
- Statue of George Palmer
- William Blackall Simonds
- Simonds
- Maiwand Lion
- The Falconer (Simonds)