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Statue

St Dunstans - Elizabeth I statue

Erection date: 31/7/1928

Inscription

{Carved just below the feet, much weathered but it could be:}
1586

{On a plaque below the statue:}
This statue of Queen Elizabeth formerly stood on the west side of Ludgate. That gate being taken down in 1760 to open the street was given by the City to Sir Francis Gosling Knt. Alderman of this ward who caused it to be placed here.

On stone above QE's statue: "Parochial Schools. St Dunstan in the west. A.D.1839."
The history of this statue (and those of King Lud and his 2 sons in the vestry porch) is complex. Current thinking is that the Queen dates from 1670-99 and is by Cartwright or Bumpstead or Kerwin. There is a barely legible date on the base, 1586, which is explained by that being the date that the Lud-gate (where this statue, or its predecessor, was originally placed) was rebuilt, in the Queen's reign.

The Ludgate was restored again in 1670 after the Great Fire. When it was demolished in 1760 Sir Gosling arranged for the statue to be put on the St Dunstan's church that stood here but then that too was taken down and in 1829-33, the current St Dunstan's church was put up. Meanwhile it seems that the statue spent the time in the basement of a nearby pub. It was only when that too was demolished in 1839 that the statue was rediscovered and put in its current niche on St Dunstan's. A hazardous journey for what is said to be the only statue of Queen Elizabeth carved in her lifetime and the oldest outdoor statue in London. Millicent Fawcett left £700 in her will for the upkeep of this statue. The funds are managed by the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings.

In 1928 the statue was restored and we thank Jamie Davis for finding to the British Pathe news film of the unveiling, where we learn that the 80-year old Millicent Fawcett unveiled the restored statue, although she does not actually appear in the footage.

2018: Daniel Beaumont sent us copies of some drawings showing the statue on the old church. One of them shows the old church (or a large part of it) in front of the new church. This was possible because the new church was built on the old graveyard immediately to the north of the old church, which was demolished in order to allow Fleet Street to be widened. shows how the old church used to stick out into Fleet Street.

Site: St Dunstan in the West (4 memorials)

EC4, Fleet Street

You can see three of these memorials in our photo of the church. The fourth, the plaque to Garvin, is on the east-facing wall to the left of the Northcliffe bust. has visited the church.

The church has medieval origins but was rebuilt in the 1830s by John Shaw.

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This section lists the subjects commemorated on the memorial on this page:
St Dunstans - Elizabeth I statue

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:
St Dunstans - Elizabeth I statue

Created by i

John Bumpstead

City mason active post Great Fire of 1666.

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Thomas Cartwright the Elder

City mason active post Great Fire of 1666. His work was continued by his son,...

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Dame Millicent Garrett Fawcett

Intellectual, political leader, activist and writer. Born Suffolk and brought...

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Sir Francis Gosling

Alderman of the St Dunstan's ward in 1760.

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Wiliam Kerwin

Active post Great Fire of 1666.

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This section lists the other memorials at the same location as the memorial on this page:
St Dunstans - Elizabeth I statue

Also at this site i

St Dunstans - fountain

St Dunstans - fountain

Designed by John Shaw, Jnr., even in its current rather dilapidated state, th...

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St Dunstans - Garvin

St Dunstans - Garvin

J.L. Garvin, C.H., 1868 - 1947, for thirty-four years Editor of The Observer....

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St Dunstans -  Lord Northcliffe

St Dunstans - Lord Northcliffe

Unveiled in 1930 by Lord Riddell.

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