The Two Mural Monuments at St James's Church, West Littleton.
The present church dates from 1855 when it was largely
rebuilt following damage by fire. Thomas Henry Wyatt, architect of the
Salisbury diocese, who designed and restored churches on the Wiltshire border,
e.g. Acton Turville 1853 and Shipton Moyne 1865, was responsible for the
rebuilding which included the addition of the South porch and Vestry.
It is not known how much of the earlier church building
survived the fire. The Chancel is slightly offset from the Nave. The barrel
vaulting of the Chancel roof suggests an earlier style of architecture
https://stjamesmonuments.org/index.php
........................
The Frankcom Monument.
I suspect put up after 1787.
Inscribed Tyley Colerne Fecit.
Tyley sometimes Tiley
see - for Tyley and Lancashire etc
.....................
The Hillier Monument
Inscribed Tyley, Bristol
.......................
The Tyley Family of Monumental Masons
James and Thomas & Sons, of Bristol
A Biographical Dictionary of Sculptors in Britain, 1660-1851 lists 138 monument by the Tyley family including the later West Littleton Monument but neglects to mention earlier monument inscribed Tyley of Colarne pictured above
https://gunnis.henry-moore.org/henrymoore/sculptor/browserecord.php?-action=browse&-recid=2765
Thomas Tyley I c1788 after 1881
James Tyley c1792 -
Jabez Tyley c1824 -
Thomas Tyley II c1826 -
Henry Tyley c1845 -
William Tyley active c1834
The Tyley family maintained their business as monumental masons in Bristol over more than a century. Thomas Tyley I was born in Bath and married Eliza (born c1809), perhaps as his second wife. In 1881 (aged 93) he was living (as he seems to have done through most of his life), at Under Bank tenement in the parish of St Augustine, Bristol.
Pigot’s Directory for Bristol,
1830, lists Tyley & Son (not Sons), stone and marble masons, at this
address. Thomas I had at least three sons, Jabez, Thomas II and Henry, all
marble masons living in the vicinity of St Augustine’s. Jabez is credited with
the tympanum sculpture on the principal front of the Victoria Rooms, Bristol
(now part of the university), c1841, which has a relief of Dawn in a chariot,
with floating genii in attendance (138). In 1881 he described himself as a
‘retired sculptor’.
The Bristol sculptor James Harvard Thomas (1854-1921) was trained in the workshop. J H Thomas’s obituary notes that he once said ‘To learn marble carving I went to Thomas Tyley’s in St Augustine’s, who was then a very old man and had been a pupil of Bacon Jnr [John Bacon II] and retained many of the traditions of the English eighteenth century sculpture’ (letter, Bristol City Archives, inf. Douglas Merritt). James Tyley was probably the brother of Thomas I.
There were other Tyley marble masons: James, born c1819
and Thomas, c1820, both spent their mature years in London.
A Thomas Tyley, whose kinship to the above listed family
members is unclear, ventured out of the monumental field. He won a Silver Isis
Medal in 1811 from the Society of Arts for a group entitled Christ healing the
sick, at which date he lived at 23 Upper Marylebone, London (133). In 1830 he
carved the dove on the pediment of Holy Trinity, Clifton (137) and in 1839
carved a statue of Sir Charles Wetherell (134). Another member of this
generation was James Tyley II, who was apprenticed to John Dunn on 14 March
1807.
The firm was still active in 1864, for in that year it
received a commission for a proposed sculpture gallery of British worthies
(135, 136). On 22 October 1864 the Builder carried a report of the venture (p
783): ‘In accordance with a proposition in the Builder that busts or portraits
of local worthies might usefully be placed in the respective public buildings
of the localities in which they lived, it has been proposed by Mr. R. A.
Kinglake to form a sculpture gallery of Somerset worthies in the Shire-hall. He
has commissioned Messrs. Tyley of Bristol to execute a memorial bust of “Good
Bishop Ken” well remembered in the diocese of Bath and Wells. The Marquis of
Bath permitted Messrs. Tyeley to make a photograph of the portrait of Ken in
the portrait-gallery at Longleat; and Scheffer’s painting of Ken in the Palace,
Wells, was also copied for the same purpose, by favour of Lord Auckland.
Another subject of sculpture is a memorial bust of the celebrated loyalist, the
Rev. Henry Byam, D. D., Rector of Luccombe, Somerset, and chaplain to Charles
II. in his exile’.
There are many monuments executed by the Tyleys in the West
Country and the list below is not comprehensive. They are by no means all stock
compositions. Gunnis considered the best to be the Gore, which has a medallion
portrait between two figures of officers in full regimentals (24). Potterton
notes of the Stock that it ‘has a figure of a mourning Religion kneeling at an
altar, but bored by mourning alone, she is now engrossed in the book which is
her attribute’ (22). The Worrall, a tablet to a four-year old child, has a
relief of the sleeping child above a touching poem, the whole encased in a
black frame (60). Penny illustrates the Rogers, which has a conventional, but
crisply carved, broken Ionic column from which sprouts a luxuriant willow tree
(75). The Lawless is a cartouche supported by a kangaroo and what may be an
ostrich (123).
Literary References: Census returns 1841, 1861, 1881;
Potterton 1975, 85; Penny 1977 (1), 29, 31, 119; Read 1982, 220
For Tyleys of Box and Colerne see






No comments:
Post a Comment