Saturday, 5 April 2025

A Monument with a bust inscribed by John Cheere in Kingston, Jamaica.

 



Post in preparation.

To be added to as more information appears - I could do with some assistance from someone on the ground in Jamaica.

This is the only bust to my knowledge that has been ascribed to John Cheere with any degree certainty.

Most of the secular busts of Henry Cheere were probably not carved by him but made in his workshop or sub contracted  - the bust of Hawksmoor at All Souls College Oxford comes to mind.

This is a subject that I have returned to on several occasions and will no doubt come back to in the future. We do not know what Roubiliac did until 1736 with reports in the press of his busts of Farinelli and Senesino. 

There is so far no proof of later reports that Roubiliac was working for or subcontracting to Henry Cheere in his workshops at Westminster, but evidence presented here might suggest a working relationship with the Cheere brothers.

Roubiliac reused /repeated the dress on several of his busts and here we have evidence of this happening again, with the bust inscribed by John Cheere in Jamaica and the anonymous very fine lead and so far unidentified, bust in the Victoria and Albert Museum.


Much of John Cheere's early working life remains a mystery until in 1738 he acquire (along with his brother the properties of the van Nosts at Stone Bridge on the North side of what became Portugal Row and later Piccadilly, at Hyde Park Corner.

For a series of busts previously attributed to the hand of Henry Cheere but with only circumstantial evidence see my post.

https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2021/05/addison-or-someone-else.html


For a very useful article on Church Monuments in the West Indies see -

Carving Histories: British Sculpture in the West Indies by Joan Coutu in the Journal of the Church Monuments Society Vol XII 1997 p 77.

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The Marble Bust of the Hon. James Lawes ( 1698 - 1734).

Marble Bust.

 On the base of the socle the bust on the monument is inscribed .John Cheere (1709 - 87) Fecit 1737.

 St Andrew Parish Church.

Halfway Tree, Kingston, Jamaica.

The St Nicholas Chapel (western wall) boasts an elaborate memorial to the Hon. James Lawes, son of Sir Nicholas Lawes, (d. 1731 in Jamaica) who was Governor of Jamaica (1718 - 22) and benefactor who had also donated the intricate brass candelabrum to the church in 1706. 


This bust is very obviously closely related to the anonymous lead bust formerly thought to be of Hogarth in the V and A.

It is most likely that the bust had been carved whilst Lawes was in England and was later fitted on to the monument


The Hon. James Lawes was only thirty-six years old when he died in 1733, and his widow, Elizabeth née Gibbons contracted John Cheere to provide the monument to him.


James Lawes was born in Jamaica 26/02/1697. Member of Assembly 1721-1722, Member of Council 1725, Lieutenant Governor. Buried 29/12/1733. 

He had no legitimate children. Inherited Snow Hill and Mount James as well as a moity of Swallowfield, Temple Hall and Townswell estates from his father. He married Elizabeth, only daughter and heir of William Gibbons of Vere, Jamaica in 1720. 

She inherited her husband's estates on his death and remarried in 1742 to William, 8th Earl of Home.

 James Lawes of St Andrew, Esquire. Estate probated in Jamaica in 1734. Slave-ownership at probate: 317 of whom 158 were listed as male and 159 as female. 91 were listed as boys, girls or children. Total value of estate at probate: £21,515.31 Jamaican currency of which £10,228.75 currency was the value of enslaved people. Estate valuation included £0 currency cash, £6,702 currency debts and £2,490.53 currency plate.

 

The will of James Lawes was proved in Jamaica in 1733.

 

John Cheere also provided the monument to her mother Deborah Gibbons at St Peters, Vere Jamaica.(see image below)

 

Elizabeth Lawes nee Gibbons - later Countess of Home (née Gibbons; 1703/04 – 15 January 1784) was a Jamaican-English heiress. 

She was born in Jamaica in 1703 or 1704  She was the only child and heir of William Gibbons and his wife Deborah. William Gibbons was a West Indies merchant and one of the island's original English planters. Little otherwise is known of him.

 Her mother Deborah Favell was the daughter of John Favell, a member of Jamaica's Council and Assembly.

 In 1720 Elizabeth, then approximately sixteen years old, was married to the twenty-three-year-old James Lawes, son of Sir Nicholas Lawes, the island's governor. Nicholas Lawes was also a wealthy planter who had introduced the island's first printing press as well as the planting of coffee from about 1718.

 

James Lawes was perhaps the most eligible bachelor in Jamaica. He was often in dispute with the island's governor Henry Bentinck, 1st Duke of Portland (his father's successor to the post) and would not allow his wife to pay her respects.

 

The Lawes eventually moved to London, where he received the post of lieutenant governor for the island. However, Lawes died in 1734, several months before he could officially begin the position. They had no children.

 

 

Elizabeth inherited a great fortune upon James' death, possessing a jointure of £7,000 and 5,287 acres. She also owned many prosperous Jamaican estates inherited from her father.

She commissioned English sculptor John Cheere to construct the monument in her husband's honour. 

The resulting sculpture, the largest yet to be shipped to the West Indies, was placed in Lawes' home parish church of Saint Andrew.

 

Already rich from her merchant father, she married James Lawes, the eligible son of Jamaica's governor, in 1720. 

They moved to London, and his death in 1734 left her a wealthy widow. Elizabeth married the spendthrift William Home, 8th Earl of Home in late 1742. 

William Home abandoned her soon after and she spent her next years living an extravagant lifestyle; Elizabeth earned the nickname "Queen of Hell" for her "irascible" behaviour and lavish parties.

 

 see - The Burlington Magazine Vol. 109, No. 773 (Aug., 1967), pp. 443-451+453

For a useful biography of the Countess of Home see -

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Home,_Countess_of_Home#CITEREFPocockCook2011

see also for her Jamaica holdings and slave ownership  -

 https://www.ucl.ac.uk/lbs/person/view/2146649547

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For Monuments in the Colonies see - Persuasion and Propaganda: Monuments and the Eighteenth-Century British Empire by Joan Coutu, pub. Mc Gill, Queens University Press. 2006.

I do not have a copy.

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The Images below Courtesy the Conway Library, Courtauld Gallery Website.






























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The Monument to Mrs Deborah Gibbons (nee Favell) d . 1711.



Mother of  Elizabeth Lawes later Home, Countess of Home (née Gibbons; 1703/04 – 15 January 1784).

The monument is inscribed by John Cheere and was ordered by Elizabeth Lawes perhaps at the same time as that of her husband.



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An Anonymous Very Fine Lead bust in the Victoria and Albert Museum.

On a grey stone socle?

Including pedestal height: 75.5cm.

Width: 47.1cm

At one time thought to represent Hogarth.

It has long been my belief that Roubiliac was working with the Cheere brothers and that several lead busts (those of Mr Salmon and his wife also at the V and A) and lead bust with Sotheby's Lot 213 - 8 June 2021. (suggested as Addison but almost certainly not), a lead bust (perhaps of the Italian Castrato opera singer Farinelli with the London trade in 2014 (see link below), The lead bust of Matthew Prior in the Louvre (not Hyacinth Rigaud) and the lead bust suggested as Henry St John Viscount Bolingbroke.

A common feature of several of the male lead busts is the way the embroidered waistcoats are represented.


Without close inspection of better photographs of the Lawes Monument it is difficult to determine whether these busts represent the same man but from those available - currently I think not!




This very fine lead bust (images below) has been variously attributed.
The bronzing of the surface appears to be original and is a feature of many of the plaster figures manufactured by John Cheere.

The V and A say on their website -

"The artist, too, is unknown, although it was perhaps someone working in the circle of Henry Cheere (1703-1781) or that of his brother John. 

John Cheere (1709-1787) specialised in lead sculpture, and Henry Cheere seems to have produced a number of busts in this material".

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One factor that points to the "workshop" of John Cheere is the form of the socle - the slightly convex front with the recessed panel which was much used on the plaster busts manufactured by John Cheere.
Another is the bronze finish which was much used by John Cheere on his plaster statuary.















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Some links to posts on related busts.



The Bust possibly Farinelli definitely not Senesino.



The lead bust suggested as Bolingbroke.



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 The following have been suggested as by Roubiliac!

Monument to Lieutenant Stapleton, Port Royal Church, Jamaica.

Killed in 1754 by a backfiring cannon at Port Royal as graphically illustrated in the carved relief on the monument by Roubiliac.


The monument was commissioned by his brother Sir Thomas Stapleton (1727 - 81). Baronet of the Leeward Islands - see - https://www.ucl.ac.uk/lbs/person/view/2146644085

See Roubiliac and the 18th Century Monument. Bindman and Baker, pub. Yale 1995.









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The Monument to Edward Manning (1710 - 56) in the Parish Church, Kingston, Jamaica.
with a relief bust, formerly believed to have been by Roubiliac but now attributed to Sir Robert Taylor.

Information here from - 




The Memorial inscription -

NEAR THIS MONUMENT LIES INTERRED THE BODY OF EDWARD MANNING, ESQ. ONE OF THE HONOURABLE PRIVY COUNCIL SPEAKER OF THE ASSEMBLY AND CUSTOS ROTULORUM OF THIS PARISH IN WHICH STATIONS HE DISTINGUISHED HIMSELF. (HIS VIRTUES ARE THEN RECORDED, AND THE INSCRIPTION THUS TERMINATES): HE DIED GREATLY LAMENTED DECEMBER 6th, 1756 AGED 46 YEARS.


Resident slave-owner and agent of the South Sea Co. in Jamaica, party to public divorce proceedings in Jamaica in 1741.

 

Owner of 413 acres and 104 enslaved people in St Andrew, Jamaica, in 1753.

 

Edward Manning was listed in the Jamaican Quit Rent books for 1754 as the owner of 750 acres of land in St Andrew, 480 acres in St Thomas-in-the-East, 1500 acres in Portland, 3200 acres in Clarendon and 80 acres in Vere, total 6010 acres.

 

"M.A. Kingston 1744, '45, '49, '52. Portland 1754, '55, '56. Speaker 1756. Called to the Council 1756. Died K.P.C. 1756, December 6; aged 46 years. He was married to the sister of Sir Henry Moore, but they were divorced; Ballard Beckford was the Co-Respondent."

 

Anna Catalina, daughter of Elizabeth Pinnock, a free mulatto woman, by the Honble Edward Manning esq, was born 13/5/1755 and bapt. at Kingston 24/11/1755. Perhaps the mother was Elizabeth Pinnock [no racial description given] whose daughter Sarah was baptised in St Andrew 22/12/1749 [no paternity mentioned].

 


 

Will of Edward Manning of Kingston, Jamaica proved 05/05/1758. After monetary legacies to his family in England and providing for 'a free mulatto' woman Elizabeth Pinnock and Elizabeth's children, he left his estates 1/4 to his nephew Sabine Turner and 3/4 to Sarah and Mary Lawrence, the daughters of his sister Sarah Baxter.

 

Edward Manning of Kingston, Esquire. Estate probated in Jamaica in 1758. Slave-ownership at probate: 609 of whom 327 were listed as male and 282 as female. 132 were listed as boys, girls or children. Total value of estate at probate: £67,297.54 Jamaican currency of which £25,322.18 currency was the value of enslaved people. Estate valuation included £15.39 currency cash, £33,218.13 currency debts and £1,243.56 currency plate.

For the indiscretions of both Manning and his wife in Jamaica see -

https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/id/eprint/27514/2/799860_vol_2.pdf

for more on Manning and the iniquitous Slave Trade in Jamaica see - 

http://www.barrow-lousada.org/PDFdocs/Kingston%20loan%20books.pdf

see also

A 1748 “Petition of Negro Slaves” and the Local Politics of Slavery in Jamaica by James Roberstonin the The William and Mary Quarterly, Vol. 67, No. 2 (April 2010), pp. 319-346 (28 pages).

available on line through jstor


The Monument to Edward Manning (1710 -56).

Previously suggested as by Roubiliac.

Currently attributed to Sir Robert Taylor (1714 - 88) which would seem most likely.

Taylor seems to have specialised in relief portraits on his monuments.

There several Taylor monuments - Thomas Withers in Bridgetown, Barbados (damaged) d August 1750 which resembles also the monument to John Andrews in Trinity Hall Chapel, Cambridge.

Image below courtesy the Conway Library, Courtauld Gallery.

https://photocollections.courtauld.ac.uk/sec-menu/search/detail/e58cdf03-88e9-4081-8a43-ab244eb38849/media/ca3110c7-07db-ee57-cd1d-9becf28e5c5f?mode=detail&view=horizontal&q=Taylor&rows=1&page=31&fq%5B%5D=search_s_collection:%22The%20Conway%20Library%22














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The Withers Monument.

Sir Robert Taylor (17.

Formerly in the Church at Bridgetown, Barbados where it had been damaged.

Currently displayed in the Barbados Museum.

To the Memory of THOMAS WITHERS Mercht. who Died Aug. 30th 1750,

 Aged 68 Years. A Man of fair Character in his Profession And unaffected Piety in his Life. 

In the Dispatch of Business punctual and exact. In his Friendships hearty and sincere, In his Conversation affable and free. Charity which actually extended itself to man[y,] [A]nd readiness with a

Benevolence that reached Al[l.] 

This monument was erected by his Son . . .Daniel Moore



Images below provided to the Paul Mellon Archive by Joan Coutu whose thesis on Colonial Monuments.

Persuasion and Propaganda: Monuments and the Eighteenth-Century British Empire was published in 2006.



https://photoarchive.paul-mellon-centre.ac.uk/objects/408117/barbados-museum-and-historical-society-monument-to-thomas-w?ctx=5ec3d345d520f6ce3357963a606bb7f358d4e049&idx=6

see also - https://edinburghuniversitypress.com/media/resources/9781474473804_-_Evans_-_English_Grave_Markers_Barbados.pdf




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Of Tangential Interest.

John Bacon and his Jamaican Monuments.

John Bacon’s commission to produce a statue of Admiral Lord Rodney to be located in the main square of Spanish Town Jamaica led to a further 11 requests from senior government officials and wealthy planters over the next decade. Included are 5 examples here; three from Spanish Town Cathedral and one each from Kingston Parish Church and St James's Church Montego Bay. 


https://victorianweb.org/sculpture/baconsenior/jamaica.htm

List of John Bacon’s Jamaican works (from Roscoe)

Roscoe Number.    

47.   John Wolmer (†1729), Funerary Monument . 1789. St. Thomas, Kingston, Jamaica.

49.    George McFarquhar (†1786).   Funerary Monument. 1791, St. James, Montego Bay, Jamaica.

56.   Dr Fortunatus Dwarris (†1790) and his niece, Anne Neufville (†1782). Funerary Monument      1792                Kingston, Jamaica

72.  Malcolm (†1781) and Eleanor Laing (†1747). Funerary Monument . 1794. St. Thomas, Kingston, Jamaica.

74.   Rosa Palmer (†1790). Funerary Monument. 1794. St. James, Montego Bay, Jamaica

82.  E Prince. Funerary Monument. 1795. Port Antonio. Jamaica, WI

96.  Thomas, 4th Earl and Catherine, Countess of Effingham (both †1791).  Funerary Monument, 1796. Spanish Town Cathedral, Jamaica.

105. Anne Williamson (†1794). Funerary Monument. 1798. Spanish Town Cathedral, Jamaica.

108. Richard Batty (†1796).    Funerary Monument. 1798. Spanish Town Cathedral, Jamaica.

110. Francis Rigby Brodbelt (†1795).  Funerary Monument. 1799. Spanish Town Cathedral, Jamaica.

112.  Mary Carr (†1798).  Funerary Monument ?  1799. Kingston Cathedral, Jamaica.

150.  Admiral Lord Rodney.  Statue. 1786-1790.  Spanish Town, Jamaica.


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for a very good high resolution 18th century map of Jamaica see -

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vere_Parish,_Jamaica#/media/File:A_new_&_accurate_map_of_the_island_of_Jamaica._Divided_into_its_principal_parishes._LOC_74693274.jpg