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Plaque

Cheyne Walk heads - More and Erasmus

No inscription remains legible but we believe we've found used as the model for the head on the right and it's Erasmus.  So we are plumping for: More on the left and Erasmus on the right.

Site: Cheyne Walk - friendship (2 memorials)

SW3, Cheyne Walk, 15

has a page about this house which name-drops many celebrities but none of the 4 depicted in these sculptures. The sundial between these two double portrait plaques is headed "Lead kindly light", words from a Cardinal Newman hymn. Built c.1718 this house is Listed but the entry does not mention any of the items on the front elevation.

Then we found a detailed of the house which tells us that the portrait heads do not appear in a photograph of the house in the so they were erected after 1909, and also suggests that Lord Courtney erected them. That's the Liberal politician Lord Leonard Courtney of Penwith (1832-1918). He was in the house from about 1883 until his death and then his widow stayed until her death in 1929.

We then found the book which says, in Courtney's widow's words, talking about the changes her husband made to this house: "Then came the sundial — an old one fixed on the front of the house. The motto on it was his choice — ' Lead, kindly light.' But his biggest venture was the two pairs of sculptured heads — Sir Thomas More and Erasmus on one panel, Carlyle and Mazzini on the other."

So that's the heads identified. Only two questions remain: who sculpted them? and why these 4 men rather than anyone else?  We cannot discover the name of the sculptor but the other question turns up an interesting result.

From we learn that Mazzini lived in a number of different Chelsea addresses at different times (although Cheyne Walk itself does not figure). He was good friends with Thomas Carlyle and would sometimes stay overnight at 24 Cheyne Row. Thomas More lived in Chelsea as is well-documented on about 6 other memorials to him in the area, and Erasmus was a good friend who stayed with him when in London.

So each panel shows the patriarch of a Chelsea household alongside a very good, foreign, friend who was often"put up" in that household.  This pair of paired portraits commemorates, not just 4 illustrious men of history, but also long-lasting male friendship across national borders.

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This section lists the subjects commemorated on the memorial on this page:
Cheyne Walk heads - More and Erasmus

Subjects commemorated i

Desiderius Erasmus

Catholic priest, social critic, teacher, and theologian. Born Rotterdam, date...

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Sir Thomas More

Born Milk Street. In conflict with Henry VIII over religion he was imprisoned...

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This section lists the other memorials at the same location as the memorial on this page:
Cheyne Walk heads - More and Erasmus

Also at this site i

Cheyne Walk heads - Carlyle and Mazzini

Cheyne Walk heads - Carlyle and Mazzini

Both Mazzini and Carlyle are almost always depicted with a beard but finally ...

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Nearby Memorials

Sewers - College Place

Sewers - College Place

NW1, College Place

See Herbal Hill for a similar plaque.

1 subject commemorated
Teddington Studios - Morecambe and Wise

Teddington Studios - Morecambe and Wise

TW11, Broom Road, Teddington Studios

This plaque replaced the one for Eric Morecambe on his own.

2 subjects commemorated, 1 creator
Southwark Cathedral - Sam Wanamaker

Southwark Cathedral - Sam Wanamaker

SE1, Cathedral Street, Southwark Cathedral

The Wanamaker plaque is to the right of the Shakespeare memorial.

2 subjects commemorated
Johan Zoffany

Johan Zoffany

W4, Strand on the Green, 65

The plaque adds an extra 'n' to his first name, although several biographies refer to him as John.

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Alexander Pope - W4

Alexander Pope - W4

W4, Chiswick Lane South, 110

Alexander Pope, 1688 - 1744, poet, lived in this row, Mawson's Buildings, 1716 - 1719. English Heritage

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator