Edward Hodges Baily

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Edward Hodges Baily RA FRS (March 10, 1788 - May 22, 1867) - (sometimes misspelled Bailey) was an English sculptor who was born in Bristol.

His father, who was a celebrated carver of figureheads for ships, destined him for a commercial life, but even at school the boy showed his natural taste and talents by producing numerous wax models and busts of his schoolfellows, and afterwards, when placed in a mercantile house, still carried on his favourite employment. Two Homeric studies, executed for a friend, were shown to John Flaxman, who bestowed on them such high commendation that in 1807 Baily came to London and placed himself as a pupil under the great sculptor. In 1809 he entered the Royal Academy Schools.

"Eve at the Fountain"
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"Eve at the Fountain"

In 1811 he gained the Royal Academy gold medal for a model of Hercules restoring Alcestis to Admetus, and soon after exhibited Apollo discharging his Arrows against the Greeks and Hercules casting Lichas into the Sea. He was elected ARA in 1817 and RA in 1821 when he exhibited one of his best pieces, Eve at the Fountain. He was entrusted with the carving of the bas-reliefs on the south side of the Marble Arch in Hyde Park, and executed numerous busts and statues of public figures, including the prominent, well-known statue of Nelson, at the top of Nelson's Column, in Trafalgar Square. In 1857, the year of his retirement from the Royal Academy, he also designed a Turner Gold Medal for Landscape Painting.

Baily's election as a fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) came in 1842. Amongst his pupils was William Theed (1804-1891), a leading Victorian sculptor who produced a number of portrait busts and the large group sculpture ‘’Africa’’ for the Albert Memorial in Kensington Gardens. Among Baily's assistants were Musgrave Watson (1804-1847) and Joseph Durham ARA (1814-1877).

Financial insecurity was a recurring theme in his life. He was first declared bankrupt in 1831, and again in 1838. On the first occasion questions were asked in Parliament on his behalf because his financial distress had resulted from delays in receiving payment for sculptures at Buckingham Palace. Fortunately his appeals to the Royal Academy for financial assistance, were successful in the 1830s, as again in the 1860s, when they provided him with a pension of £200 a year as an honorary retired RA.

Amongst Baily's many busts and statues of scientific, religious and literary figures (mostly from the Victorian period but some from earlier periods) are following :

Edward Baily's public statue to Isaac Watts at Abney Park, Stoke Newington
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Edward Baily's public statue to Isaac Watts at Abney Park, Stoke Newington
  • Charles James Fox & Lord Mansfield - St.Stephen's Hall, Westminster, London
  • Lord Byron - Harrow School; and Newstead Abbey, Nottinghamshire
  • Michael Faraday - University Museum, Oxford
  • Dr Isaac Watts - Dr Watts' Walk, Abney Park Cemetery, Stoke Newington, London
  • Sir Robert Peel - Market Place, Bury
  • Horatio, Viscount Nelson - on Railton's column, Trafalgar Square
  • Richard Owen - Royal College of Surgeons
  • Sir John Herschel - St. John's College, Cambridge
  • Thomas Bewick - Literary & Philosophical Society, Newcastle upon Tyne
  • Sir James Knott - as above
  • George O'Brien Wyndham, 3rd Earl of Egremont - St.Mary's, Petworth, Sussex
  • Charles, 2nd Earl Grey - Grey Street, Newcastle upon Tyne
  • Eve at the Fountain - Art Gallery, Cambridge
  • Governor Richard Bourke - State Library of New South Wales, Sydney
  • Athena - The Athenaeum Club, Waterloo Place, Pall Mall, London
  • Sir Thomas Picton - Carmarthen, Wales
  • Chief Justice Tindal - Tindal Square, Chelmsford, Essex
  • Sir Charles Metcalfe - Kingston, Jamaica
  • Thomas Fleming - Manchester Cathedral

Baily died at 99 Devonshire Road, Holloway on 22 May 1867 and is buried in London's Highgate Cemetery.

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This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

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