Francis William Doyle Jones

British sculptor From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Francis William Doyle Jones, sometimes Francis William Doyle-Jones, (11 November 1873–10 June 1938) was a British sculptor.[1] Although principally a portrait sculptor, Jones is notable for the number of war memorials he created for British towns and cities following both the Boer War and World War I.

Quick Facts Born, Died ...
Francis William Doyle Jones
Born11 November 1873
Hartlepool, England
Died10 June 1938(1938-06-10) (aged 64)
St Luke's Hospital, Chelsea, London
NationalityBritish
Alma mater
  • National Art Training School
Known forSculpture
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Biography

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Perspective

Jones was born, to Irish parents, in Hartlepool. He was the eldest son of a stonemason and monumental sculptor, Francis Jones (c. 1846–1918), from County Monaghan and for a time worked for his father before studying in Paris.[1] Jones returned to England to study at the National Art Training School in London, where he was taught by Édouard Lantéri.[2][3] After graduating, Jones established a studio at Chelsea in west London and had his first sculpture shown at the Royal Academy in 1903.[4] Between then and 1936, Jones had about thirty works, including portraits and statuettes, exhibited at the Academy.[1] Throughout the 1910s, he also regularly exhibited with the International Society of Sculptors, Painters and Gravers and at the annual exhibition of Works by Artists from the Northern Counties held at the Laing Art Gallery in Newcastle upon Tyne.[1]

From 1904 to 1906 Jones created a series of Boer War memorials for British towns.[1] For the memorials at Penrith and Gateshead he created identical memorials featuring a female figure representing Peace crowning the Heroes.[5][6] Following the end of World War I Jones won several commissions for further public war memorials. He created several designs, including cenotaphs, for these works but in some instances, such as for the memorials at Woking, Gravesend and Brighouse he used a common design with a figure of Victory standing on a globe and holding a wreath of laurel leaves.[4]

Jones had a keen appreciation of Irish culture and, from early in his career, received several public commissions from Irish organisations, most notably for a monumental statue of Saint Patrick at Saul, County Down.[2][7] From 1923 onwards, he was a regular exhibitor with the Royal Hibernian Academy, RHA, in Dublin.[2][3] Shown at the RHA in 1923, Jones' bust of Michael Collins was acquired by the National Gallery of Ireland in 1924 while the Hugh Lane Gallery in Dublin holds a bronze bust of Joseph Devlin by Jones.[2]

Jones was elected an associate member of the Royal Society of British Sculptors in 1923.[1]

Public works

1900–1909

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Boer War memorial Albert Park, Middlesbrough 1905 Obelisk on pedestal with panelsPeterhead granite6.7m tall Grade IIQ26614806 [8][9]
Thumb Boer War memorial Saltwell Park, Gateshead 1905 Statue on columnBronze & granite Grade IIQ26540952 [10][11]
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Boer War memorial Town Hall Gardens, Llanelli, Carmarthenshire 1905 Statue on a pedestal and plinthBronze & granite Grade IIQ29490306 [12][13][14]
Boer War memorial Ward Jackson Park, Hartlepool 1905 Statue on pedestalBronze & granite Grade II The statue was stolen in 1965 and only the pedestal remains in place.[15][16]
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Boer War memorial Castle Park, Penrith, Cumbria 1906 Statue on columnBronze & granite Grade IIQ66478786 [5][6]
John Mandeville Newmarket Square, Michelstown, County Down 1906 Statue on pedestalBronze & granite [2][7][17]
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1910–1919

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Matthew Webb Marine Parade, Dover, Kent 1910 Bust on pedestal with plaqueBronze & granite Q117405781 [18]
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Robert Burns Galashiels, Scottish Borders 1912 Bust on pedestalBronze & granite Category CQ56633763 [19]
Thumb Chimera with Personifications of Fire and the Sea 24–28 Lombard Street, London 1914 Architectural sculptureStone Grade II Architects, Gordon & Gunton[20][21]
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1920–1929

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Bevans Cement Works war memorial Cement Works, Northfleet, Kent c. 1920 Seated sculpture on cube pedestal with plaqueConcrete & bronze Grade IIQ26671015 [22][23][24][25]
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War memorial The Esplanade, Weymouth, Dorset 1921 CenotaphPortland stone5.3m tall Grade IIQ26672299 [26][27]
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War memorial Teddington, London 1921 CenotaphPortland stone5.4m tall Grade IIQ66478655 [28][29]
Thumb Partick & Whiteinch war memorial Victoria Park, Glasgow 1922 Statue on obeliskBronze & stone8m tall Category CQ77782061 [30][31]
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War memorial Windmill Hill Gardens, Gravesend, Kent 1922 Statue on columnBronze & stone9.2m tall Grade IIQ66477666 [32][33]
Thumb War memorial The Park, Hullen Edge Road, Elland, West Yorkshire 1922 Statue on pedestalBronze & granite Grade IIQ26427083 [34][35]
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War memorial Jubilee Square, Woking, Surrey 1922 Statue on columnBronze & stone5.2m tall Grade IIQ66478558 [4][36]
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War memorial King Edward Square, Sutton Coldfield, Birmingham 1922 Statue on pedestalBronze & stone6.4m tall Grade IIQ26677176 [37][38]
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War memorial Abbey Fields, Kenilworth, Warwickshire 1922 Obelisk with relief & plaqueStone Grade IIQ26678076 [39][40]
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War memorial Rydings Park, Brighouse, West Yorkshire 1922 Statue on columnBronze & granite Grade IIQ26426829 [41][42]
War memorial Station Road, Cockermouth, Cumbria 1922 Statue on columnBronze & granite [43]
Archbishop Thomas Croke Liberty Square, Thurles, County Tipperary 1922 Statue on pedestal with statuettesBronze & limestone [2][7]
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Gillingham War Memorial Gillingham, Kent 1924 Inscribed columnStone Grade IIQ26677893 [44][45]
War memorial St Michael And All Angels Church, Houghton-le-Spring, Sunderland 1925 Cenotaph with relief figuresPortland stonec. 6m tall Grade IIQ66477939 [46][47]
Canon P.A Sheehan Doneraile, County Cork 1925 Statue on pedestalBronze & stone [2][7]
Thumb Cardinal Patrick O'Donnell Cathedral of St Eunan and St Columba, Letterkenny 1929 Statue on pedestal [7]
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War memorial Waterloo, Merseyside c. 1920s Statue on pedestalBronze & sandstone Grade IIQ26548994 [48][49]
War memorial Jarrow, South Tyneside c. 1920s Statue on columnBronze & stone [50]
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1930 and later

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Edgar Wallace 107 Fleet Street, Ludgate Circus, London 1934 PlaqueBronze
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T. P. O'Connor Chronicle House, Fleet Street, London 1935–1936 Bust and plaqueBronze [51]
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Saint Patrick Saul, County Down 1938 Statue on pedestalGranite11m tall [2][7]
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George V Howard Davis Park, Jersey 1939 Statue on pedestalBronze & granite Q99528341 Completed by William Reid Dick following death of Jones in 1938.[1]
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Other works

  • At the Royal Academy in 1909, Jones exhibited the silver relief sculpture White Horses, which was inspired by a Rudyard Kipling poem and was designed for Harley Hall near Northallerton.[1]
  • The offering of youth on the altar of patriotism, a relief shown at the Royal Hibernian Academy in 1925.[2]

References

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