Peel Memorial, Bury

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Peel_Memorial,_Bury an entity of type: Thing

The Peel Memorial is a public statue by Edward Hodges Baily, a nineteenth-century British artist best known for his sculpture of Nelson on Nelson's Column. It is located in the centre of Bury, Greater Manchester. The statue commemorates the life of Sir Robert Peel, twice UK Prime Minister and founder of the British Conservative Party, who was born in Bury. The statue is of bronze, and stands 3.5m high. Peel is depicted in contemporary dress, "addressing the House of Commons on the memorable subject of Free Trade" rdf:langString
rdf:langString Peel Memorial, Bury
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Peel Memorial
xsd:float 53.59369277954102
xsd:float -2.297777891159058
xsd:integer 33953331
xsd:integer 1083683310
rdf:langString no
rdf:langString Peel Memorial
xsd:integer 1851
xsd:string 53.593694444444445 -2.2977777777777777
rdf:langString The Peel Memorial is a public statue by Edward Hodges Baily, a nineteenth-century British artist best known for his sculpture of Nelson on Nelson's Column. It is located in the centre of Bury, Greater Manchester. The statue commemorates the life of Sir Robert Peel, twice UK Prime Minister and founder of the British Conservative Party, who was born in Bury. The statue is of bronze, and stands 3.5m high. Peel is depicted in contemporary dress, "addressing the House of Commons on the memorable subject of Free Trade" The statue is mounted on a granite pedestal 3.66m high. The front of the pedestal bears the Peel family coat of arms and the word "Peel" in bronze capital letters. On the left and right sides are bronze bas-reliefs representing Commerce and Navigation. On the back of the pedestal is a circular bronze panel containing a quotation from one of Peel's speeches. The statue was originally surrounded by an iron railing with gas lights at each corner, although this was later removed.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 6684
<Geometry> POINT(-2.2977778911591 53.593692779541)

data from the linked data cloud