The Bathford monument relief to Martha Maria Phillips which is inscribed Ford Bath has the same relief but without the "hatching" on the background.
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Inscribed - Parsons & Ford. Bath.
An excellent and comprehensive look at the church.
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This list does not include the Bath Abbey Coward Monument - and there are probably more which remain to be identified.
They were also probably responsible for numerous chimneypieces installed in local houses many of which were removed particularly in the late 19th/early 20th century. There are probably numerous Bathstone monuments / gravestones in churchyards in Gloucestershire Somerset and Wiltshire which came from the Ford workshops.
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Unfortunately the inscription is impossible to read.
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Sir John Fust and Dame Phillippa Fust.- Funerary Monument - c1779 -
St Michael the Archangel, Hill, near Thornbury, Glos.
The Monument is not inscribed but is obviously from the Ford workshop.
repeating the relief of the grieving woman seen on other Ford monuments.

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John Russ - d. 1758 - Funerary
Monument -
Castle Cary, Somerset.
Inscribed on the supporting bracket Jno. Ford Bath Fecit.
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John St Albyn - Funerary
Monument - 1766 -
Stringston, nr Bridgwater. Somerset.
Inscribed Ford Bath Ft on the supporting bracket.
Images above from -
https://www.facebook.com/groups/584528982020638/posts/2074783926328462/
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Morgan Graves - Funerary Monument -1770 - St Lawrence, Mickleton, Glos.
For a Mezzotint portrait of Morgan Graves see
https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/P_1902-1011-2301
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Day (or Dawe) family member - Funerary Monument, nd.
St Mary Magdalene - Ditcheat,
Somerset.
The form of the skull on the apron should be noted - it is repeated on other Ford monuments - including on the reliefs with the grieving child on both the Coward Monument at Bath Abbey, the Phillips Monument at Bathford, and the Smith monument at Combe Hay.
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Robert Smith d.1755 of Combe Hay Manor - Funerary Monument. Erected 1760 -
Parish Church, Combe Hay, Somerset.
Inscribed on the supporting bracket.
Note the use of the Ford type skull on the apron.
Information below from - https://somerset-cat.swheritage.org.uk/records/DD/HY/4/11/1
Deeds relating to the manor of Stoney Littleton, with
Weavers or Deans Farm (296a 1 r. 36 p.) and Stoney Littleton Farm (462a 1 r. 22
p.), all in Wellow. [1591]-1883
In 1591 Queen Elizabeth I granted the Rectory of Wellow
(formerly belonging to the Monastery of Cirencester), with tithes of corn,
blade, grain, etc., to Sir Walter Hungerford of Farleigh Hungerford [Latin]. In
1700 John Lodington of London, merchant, and others conveyed the tithes of
corn, grain and hay in the manor of Stoney Littleton to Robert Smith of Stoney
Littleton, gent. (This deed includes a recitation of the purchase of the castle
park and manor of Farleigh Hungerford by Henry Bayntun of Spye Park, Chittoe,
Wiltshire, 11 Mar 1687).
The property remained in the hands of the Smith family until
1820. It formed the pre-nuptial marriage settlement of John Smith, second son
of Robert and Dorothy Smith of Stoney Littleton, and Anne Bennett, daughter of
Thomas Bennett of Steeple Ashton, Wiltshire, Esq., 1713. By the will of John
Smith of Stoney Littleton, Esq. (13 May 1747, cod. 1 Jan. 1747, proved 26 Aug.
1748) it passed to his daughter Ann, wife of his nephew John Smith of Combe
Hay, and in 1767 a grant of annuity was made by John Smith of Stoney Littleton,
Esq., prior to his marriage to Catherine Houstoun, daughter of Alexander
Houstoun, clerk, Dr of Physics. The pre-nuptial marriage settlement between
John Smith of Combe Hay, Esq., and Mary Shirley, daughter of the Hon. George
Shirley of Eatington, Warwickshire, settled the manor of Stoney Littleton and
the manor of Combe Hay, in the parishes of Combe Hay, Wellow, Dunkerton, South
Stoke and Englishcombe. Stoney Littleton Farm was leased for 14 years to Joseph
Pointing of Stoney Littleton, yeoman, and Weavers Farm was leased to James
Rossiter of the same, yeoman, 1801. In 1820 Capel Hanbury Leigh (formerly
Smith) of Pontypool, Monmouth, and Charles Hanbury Tracy of Toddington,
Gloucestershire, Esq., conveyed the property to Daniel Clutterbuck of Bradford,
Wiltshire, Esq. [includes detailed map and schedule of lands]. In 1823
Clutterbuck conveyed it to Thomas Samuel Jolliffe, Esq.



..........................
Barbara Montagu - d. 1765 - Funerary
Monument. -
St Mary's Church, Charlecombe, Bath.
Inscribed Ford Fecit Bath on the supporting bracket.
Photographs here taken by the author 28 October 2025.
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The Ward Family - Funerary
Monument - 1770 - St Martin's, North Stoke, Somerset.
Inscribed on the supporting bracket - Ford Bath Ft.
The top section - the obelisk has been removed (fallen off?), only a small section of the top of the obelisk - about 30 cms remains (currently sitting against the wall) without any of the inscription.
Photographs by the author in very low light.
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John Browne and Robert Browne - Funerary Monument - 1771 - St Mary's Church, Frampton, Dorset.
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:St_Mary%27s_church,_Frampton,_Dorset_(interior)
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Robert and George Cox (1777) - Funerary Monument, 1790 -, Piddletrenthide,
Dorset.
see above - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:All_Saints_Church,_Piddletrenthide_(interior)
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Thomas Coward (d.1773) - and his wife Mary (d.Funerary Monument - c.1773 - Batcombe,
Somerset.
Inscribed on the supporting bracket Ford Bath Ft.
Thomas Coward of Spargrove, Batcombe.



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Jane Talbot d. 1761 - Funerary Monument - St Leonard's, Keevil, Wilts.
Inscribed on the supporting bracket Ford Bath Fecit.
To my mind the poor quality of the lumpy sculpture of the woman lets this monument down.
The form of the urn with the label should be noted.
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Twenty vases - Presumably of Bath Stone – 1763 for Sir William Lee, of Hartwell House – untraced.
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George Husey, d. 1741, erected c.1759 - Funerary Monument -
North Wall of the Chancel, Holy Cross, Seend, Wilts.
This monument could be much improved with a gentle wash!
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Interiors_of_churches_in_Wiltshire
Another monument at Seend can perhaps be tentatively attributed to the Ford workshop.
Robert Usher d. 1774.
Whilst much simplified it resembles the design of the Smith Monument of c. 1760 at Combe Hay, near Bath.
There is no workshop inscription.
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Charles Holder - d. 1763 the Funerary Monument -
St Nicholas Church, Bathampton, Somerset.
Photographs here taken by the author 3 November 2025.
This handsome monument has dtails which are very much influenced by those of Henry Cheere of Westminster - in particular the paw feet supporting the sarcophagus and the use of exotic marble veneers.
The form of the pediment is very similar to that of the Coward monument in Bath Abbey.
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The Ford Workshop Monuments at Steeple Ashton.
Anne Wainhouse - Funerary Monument - 1771 - St Mary's Church, Steeple Ashton,
Wilts.

The Monument to Richard Long - d. 6 May 1760.
Steeple Ashton Church, Wiltshire.


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Monument to Anne Carey d. 1772. daughter of Robert Smith of Combe Hay, nr Bath, Somerset.
Tentatively suggested here as by the Ford Workshop.
Steeple Ashton.
The very fine Funerary Monument to Robert Smith (d.1755) - is inscribed Ford and erected 1760 - in theParish Church, Combe Hay, Somerset. (see the photographs above).
Although lacking an inscription by Ford comparison with the Marlborough monument to Elizabeth and Robert Clavering (illustrated below) suggests the attribution. In particular the details of the urn, the form of the pair of brackets and the use of the coloured marble all suggest Ford's work.
The Monument to John Smith MP (1727 - 75) of Combe Hay Manor, nr Bath.
Steeple Ashton Church.
Erected 1770s ??
It is not inscribed but its manufacture by the Ford workshop should be considered. The Ford workshop made the very fine monument to his father Robert Smith (d. 17 ) in the Church at Combe Hay,
Smith was a Member of the Parliament for
Bath 19 November 1766 -12 November 1775.
He married in 1757 the Hon. Anne Tracy, daughter of Thomas
Charles Tracy, 5th Viscount Tracy and left one son, John Smith (1759–1813), who
changed his name to John Smith Leigh and was High Sheriff of Somerset for 1811
The Monument to Edward Blagden (d. 1750) of Hinton, Steeple Ashton.
No inscription.
For good measure another fine monument at Steeple Ashton which might be attributable to the Ford Workshop.
The flaming urns are repeated on the Elizabeth Tyrell monument of c. 1760's at Didmarton
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The Monument to Elizabeth Tyrell, d. 1745.
St Lawrence Church, Didmarton, Gloucestershire.
This monument was erected in her memory by her daughter Elizabeth Forrester (d. 1763).
Tentatively ascribed to the Ford workshop - it should be compared with the Anne Cary monument at Steeple Ashton (illustrated above) and the Marlborough monument (illustrated below).
The detailing of the Urn here is particularly instructive as is also the use of the coloured marble.
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Charles Inman and Ralph Preston - Funerary Monument. 1772 Spanish Town Cathedral, Jamaica.
Currently no images available.
The Monument is inscribed -
TO THE MEMORY OF MESSRS. CHARLES INMAN, & RALPH PRESTON
FROM LANCASTER, IN GREAT BRITAIN, BUT LATE OF THIS PARISH, MERCHANTS. THE
FORMER DIED 14 AUG 1767, AET 42 THE LATTER THE 29th OF JANY. 1772, ONLY TWENTY
SIX.
Ford, Bath, Sculp.
Six eulogistic lines follow. C. Inman, born 1725, Son of
Christopher Inman, by his wife, Mary Patefield, married " Lady M.
Bowlby," and by her had a son, ancestor of the Inmans of Upton Manor, co.
Chester.
In 1745 Inman is mentioned as a consignee on board the ships
Sunderland and Happy Return, but in the following year he is mentioned as a
merchant at Barbados. There is a memorial tablet in Kingston Parish Church,
Jamaica, jointly erected to Charles Inman and Ralph Preston 'from Lancaster in
Great Britain but late of this parish, merchants'. It seems probable that the
Charles Inman of Barbados later removed to Jamaica. Charles Inman died 14 August
1767, aged 42 and Ralph Preston died 29 january 1772 aged only 26. The tablet
was erected by their friend M. Benson, in all probability a Lancaster man too
and very likely Moses Benson
See Philip Wright, Monumental Inscriptions of
Jamaica
see - also
FURNITURE AND THE PLANTATION: FURTHER LIGHT ON THE WEST
INDIAN TRADE OF AN ENGLISH FURNITURE FIRM IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.
K. E. Ingram
Furniture History, Vol. 28 (1992), pp. 42-97
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u7wjRuf4HnY
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Elizabeth and Robert Clavering (1720 -74) - Funerary Monument - 1773.
St
Peter and St Paul Church, Marlborough, Wilts.
Inscribed Ford on the supporting bracket.
The central urn should be compared with the urns on the Elizabeth Tyrell monument at Didmarton illustrated above and the urn on the Monument to Anne Carey at Steeple Ashton (illustrated above).
The pair of smaller urns follow the same pattern as the pair of urns (here lacking flame finials) on the Elizabeth Tyrell Monumennt at Didmarton.
Robert Clavering was rector of Marlborough from 1723 - son Algernon.
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Rev. Samuel Woodforde - Funerary Monument - 1772 - Ansford, Castle Cary, Somerset.
image from - https://www.parsonwoodforde.org.uk/features-object-ansford-tablet.html
see Diary of a Country Parson, page 113. -
On March 7 (1772) he sends Mr. Ford, the Bath Statuary the inscription for his father’s monument : the latter will cost -£14 14s. The Diarist does not tell us the inscription on this monument, but Phelps, who succeeded Collinson as the historian of Somerset, gives it in full.
Phelps says ;
‘ Against the north wall of the chancel [Ansford Church] is a neat monument of white marble, having inscribed on it
H.S.E. Samuel Woodforde, A.M. ecclesiae de Castle
Cary Vicarius j hujus item parochise annos magis
quinquaginta rector indefessus, et honoratissimo comiti de
Tankerville k sacris domesticus. Vir erat antiquis moribus,
virtute, fide ; pauperibus erogator largus : pater
prudens ac providus : amicus certus, cordatus, ndus.
Eodem tumulo quiescunt cineres uxoris amatae sequd
ac amantissimae Janae Woodforde, quae per quadraginta
fere annos in domesticis vitae muneribus obeundis
plurimis antecdlere, nuUi forsan secunda videbatur.
Amabil« in vita, nec in morte divisi sunt.
Ilia prius Feb. 8, 1766.
|Etatis ] 60
Ille secutus Mali 16, 1771. ( anno J 76
Valete suaves animae, sed n
The Diary is available on line at -
https://ia601500.us.archive.org/16/items/in.ernet.dli.2015.227134/2015.227134.The-Diary_text.pdf
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Unidentified subject - Funerary
Monument. nd. St Nicholas, Cork. No further information.
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Young Mr Worlidge - Marble Bust - 1764 - Exhibited at the Free Society, London, untraced.
Thomas Worlidge II (b. 1745).
Thomas Worlidge I the artist and engraver is said to have had thirty-two children by his
three marriages, but only Thomas, the son by his third wife, survived him. Thomas married, in 1787, his cousin Phoebe, daughter of Alexander Grimaldi (1714−1800); her brother was assistant to Thomas Worlidge I, she
was buried in Bunhill Fields on 14 January 1829. Her husband migrated to the
West Indies in 1792. In March 1826 he was again in London, and while employed
as compositor in the office of the Morning Advertiser was sent to prison for an
assault. His father drew a portrait of him, which bore the title ‘A Boy's Head. (this info needs fact checking).
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John Andrews - Funerary
Monument. c. 1763 / 4 - St Nicholas, Bromham, Wilts.
Inscribed on the supporting bracket - Ford Bath.
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Francis Turner Blyth - Funerary Monument. 1770. Jackfield,
Salop. Untraced.
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The Ford Family Monument.
Colerne, Wiltshire.
The monument has been moved and rather clumsily re erected on the North wall of the Chancel.
Several pieces are missing.
I have written at some length about sculpture and sculptors in Bath in the 18th Century including the Parsons family, the Greenways, Prince Hoare, the Fords and Joseph Pluras and family -