Tuesday, 26 November 2024

The Nightingale Monument, Westminster Abbey.


post in preparation.

 The Nightingale Monument, Westminster Abbey.

c. 1760/1

Louis Francois Roubiliac (d 1762).

Some images and notes -


In St Michael's chapel, off the north transept of Westminster Abbey, is the monument commemorating Lady Elizabeth Nightingale and her husband. 

She was born in 1704, the eldest of three daughters of Washington Shirley, Earl Ferrers and Viscount Tamworth (d.1729) and his wife Mary. 

Her sisters were Selina, Countess of Huntingdon (d.1791 aged 83) and Mary, Viscountess Kilmorey (died 1784).

 

On 24th June 1725 Elizabeth married Joseph Gascoigne (1695-1752), son of the Reverend Joseph Gascoigne, Vicar of Enfield in Middlesex. He assumed the surname of Nightingale on becoming heir to his kinsman Sir Robert Nightingale. 

Of their three sons, Washington, Joseph and Robert, only Washington survived his father but then only by two years. Elizabeth died on 17th August 1731 following a premature birth caused by the shock of a violent flash of lightning. This child, also called Elizabeth, survived and later married Wilmot Vaughan, 1st Earl of Lisburne and died (also in childbirth) in 1755.

The monument was not erected until 1761, and gives an incorrect date of death for Lady Nightingale. The inscription reads:

 

Here rest the ashes of JOSEPH GASCOIGNE NIGHTINGALE of Mamhead in the county of Devon Esqr., who died July the 20th 1752 aged 56. And of Lady ELIZABETH his wife, daughter and coheir of WASHINGTON Earl Ferrers; who died August the 17th 1734 aged 27. Their only son WASHINGTON GASCOIGNE NIGHTINGALE Esqr. deceas'd, in memory of their virtues, did by his last will order this monument to be erected.











































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