The Monument to Sophia Cotton (b. c 1704 - died 1767).
Sisters of Thomas Salusbury Cotton; Henry Cotton; Anne Cotton; Sir Robert Salusbury Cotton, MP, 3rd Baronet; Philadelphia Cotton and 10 other siblings.
John Ford I (1711 - 1767) and John Ford II (173 - 1803) who described himself as a Statuary.
https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2025_10_24_archive.html
The Monument was probably put up shortly after the death of Sophia in
1767.
https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2025/10/monuments-by-ford-of-bath-bath-abbey.html
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It is strange that as time progressed the quality of the
workmanship of the Ford monument reliefs gradually deteriorated. I suspect Ford Jnr had little to do with the carving.
Memorial on the Floor of Bath Abbey.
In a Walled Grave / are deposited the Remains of / John Cox
/ Esquire / fourth Son of the late / William Cox Esquire / of Piddletrenthide /
in the / County of Dorset / Died / 20th. January 1814 / Aged 41.
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John St Albyn - Funerary Monument - 1766 -
Day (or Dawe) family member - Funerary Monument,
The inscription is illegible.
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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The Monument to Richard Long - d. 6 May 1760.
Church of St Mary's Steeple Ashton, Wiltshire.
























