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Statue

Public Record Office - Queen Elizabeth I

Erection date: 1867

Site: Old Public Record Office - 4 queens (5 memorials)

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 Converts) and was intended to provide a refuge for Jews who had converted to Christianity. It provided them with somewhere to live and a Chapel in which to worship, and was run by the Master of the Converts.  In 1377 the office of Master of the Converts was amalgamated with that of Master of the Rolls, and the site was named the Rolls Estate.  The Rolls Chapel was used both for worship and for storing records – the Rolls were the parchment records of the Court of Chancery.  Following the fire in the Palace of Westminster, the Public Record Office was built here, in 1851-8, as a repository for parliamentary records. 

The Medieval Chapel was demolished in 1895, with only one arch preserved and mounted on the garden elevation of the Chancery Lane wing, and a new Chapel was built within the configuration of the Public Record Office. The rescued arch can be seen near the bike shelter but there is nothing there to identify it. Stained-glass windows from the 17th and 18th centuries which incorporated the Coats of Arms of previous Masters of the Rolls were preserved and installed in the Chapel, together with new windows added in 1899.  Three monuments were also retained: the terracotta figure of Dr Yonge, Master of the Rolls and Dean of York (died 1516) by Pietro Torrigiano; a monument to Richard Allington (1561); and one to Lord Bruce of Kinloss (Master of the Rolls, died 1616).

The information above is mainly from a modern plaque in the Weston Room, the same room in which the PRO WW1 memorial is to be found. 1977-97 the PRO moved its papers out to Kew where the collection became known as the National Archive. The Old PRO building was then taken over by King's College London for their Maughan Library. In 1891 an archway was added with statues of 2 kings.

But before that, in 1867, the tower above the main entrance was added, to house a water tank. Its summit is adorned with statues of 4 queens. Victoria was the reigning monarch and the other 3 are a selection from the 6 previous queens (or almost queens) of England. Often what's excluded is as interesting as what's included so here are the rejected queens with possible reasons for exclusion: Lady Jane Grey (short-lived), Tudor Mary I (seldom commemorated), Queen Mary (joint monarch with William).

All the statues are in Portland stone, 2.4m high and placed so high as to make photography a challenge. Locations: Queen Victoria - south above main entrance, Empress Matilda - east, Queen Anne - west, Elizabeth - north.

 

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This section lists the subjects commemorated on the memorial on this page:
Public Record Office - Queen Elizabeth I

Subjects commemorated i

Queen Elizabeth I

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

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This section lists the subjects who helped to create/erect the memorial on this page:
Public Record Office - Queen Elizabeth I

Created by i

Joseph Durham (sculptor)

Sculptor.  Born London.  Died London.

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This section lists the other memorials at the same location as the memorial on this page:
Public Record Office - Queen Elizabeth I

Also at this site i

PRO WW1 memorial

PRO WW1 memorial

We don't normally collect memorials inside buildings but this one is rather t...

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Public Record Office - Empress Matilda

Public Record Office - Empress Matilda

Ward-Jackson refers to this statue twice as 'Empress Mathilda' and once as 'E...

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Nearby Memorials

Public Record Office - Empress Matilda

Public Record Office - Empress Matilda

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

Ward-Jackson refers to this statue twice as 'Empress Mathilda' and once as 'Empress Maud' which confused us at first but we discovered th...

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

V&A façade - Gibbons

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
Charlie Chaplin - statue

Charlie Chaplin - statue

WC2, Leicester Square

Unveiled by Sir Ralph.

1 subject commemorated, 2 creators
Colonial Office - S01 - G. Grey

Colonial Office - S01 - G. Grey

SW1, Whitehall, Foreign Office

Statues Hither and Thither has been invaluable in identifying some of the busts and most of the statues. The statues are not labelled and...

1 subject commemorated, 2 creators
Bomber Harris

Bomber Harris

WC2, Strand

Unveiled by the Queen Mother on 31 May 1992, the 50th anniversary of the first Allied 1,000 bomber raid on 30 May/31 May 1942. Actually ...

2 subjects commemorated, 2 creators