Thomas Earp (1828–1893) was a British sculptor and architectural carver who was active in the late 19th century. His best known work is his 1863 reproduction of the Eleanor Cross which stands at Charing Cross in London.[1] He specialised in sculpture for Gothic Revival churches and worked closely with the architect George Edmund Street in the 1860s and 1870s.
Earp was born in Nottingham, England. He studied at the Nottingham School of Art and Design and after completing his studies in the early 1850s went to work for the building contractor George Myers (who himself worked extensively for Pugin) in London.[2]
Around 1851 Earp founded his own architectural sculpture practice. By 1864 he was established at 1 Kennington Road, Lambeth, and employed 24 people. One of his projects, a marble and alabaster reredos, pulpit and baptismal font for the Church of St John the Baptist, Huntley, was particularly acclaimed and was exhibited at the Great Exhibition of 1862.[2]
Earp and Hobbs Ltd
Earp's practice expanded in 1864 when he went into partnership with another sculptor, Edwin Hobbs Senior (c.1841-1904). Together they opened premises in Chorlton-upon-Medlock, Manchester on Lower Mosley Street, later moving to premises in Moss Side. While Hobbs was based in Manchester, Earp worked from the London office at 32 Canterbury Place, Lambeth Walk. In the late 1880s the business was renamed Earp, Son and Hobbs, and by 1900 it was trading as Earp and Hobbs Ltd. Thomas Earp's son, Edgar Earp worked in the practice along with Edwin Hobbs Junior.[3]
Works
Earp's reredos at Leeds Parish ChurchHorton family mausoleum at Middleton Cheney, NorthamptonshireEarp's pulpit at St Michael and All Angels, Hughenden. The pulpit is carved with the figures of the archangels Michael, Gabriel, and Uriel.
Works include:
Carving at Shadwell Court, Brettenham, Norfolk for Samuel Sanders Teulon (1865-60) Although Historic England records Teulon's carver as "unknown",[4] Mark Girouard suggests Earp,[5] and is followed in this by Pevsner.[6]
carved pulpit, Church of St James the Less, Pimlico, London (1862)[7]
Girouard, Mark (1979). The Victorian Country House. New Haven, US and London: Yale University Press. p.202. ISBN0-300-02390-1.
Pevsner, Nikolaus; Wilson, Bill (2002). Norfolk: Northwest and South. The Buildings of England (3rded.). New Haven, US and London: Yale University Press. pp.638–640. ISBN0-300-09657-7.
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