South Bank Lion, York Road, Lambeth, Greater London Authority, 1951. Creator: JR Uppington.

South Bank Lion, York Road, Lambeth, Greater London Authority, 1951. Creator: JR Uppington.

2-854-385 - Historic England Archive/Heritage Images

South Bank Lion, York Road, Lambeth, Greater London Authority, 1951. The South Bank Lion on a plinth outside the York Road entrance of Waterloo Station, viewed from the west. The South Bank Lion, or Red Lion, stood on the parapet of the Lion Brewery on the south bank of the River Thames near Hungerford Bridge. The sculpture was created in 1837 by William Frederick Woodington. The lion is formed from separate parts, visible in this photograph, using Coade stone. The Lion Brewery on Belvedere Road was demolished in 1949, having been damaged by fire in 1931; the site was used as the South Bank Exhibition for the Festival of Britain in 1951. The sculpture was removed before the demolition of the brewery and, having likely been painted red previously, was restored and repainted. It was positioned on a plinth outside the York Road entrance of Waterloo Station until 1966, when it was moved to the east end of Westminster Bridge in Lambeth and was stripped of its red paint. The sculpture is Grade II* listed.


Image Details


People Information

Creator
  1. JR Uppington, attributed to: British: photographer
People Related
  1. William Frederick Woodington: British: Artist, painter, sculptor

Medium
  1. Photograph

Geographic Hierarchy

World Europe United Kingdom England Greater London London Lambeth Lambeth

  1. 51 30 00 N , 000 09 00 W

Category Hierarchy

Locations & Buildings Other

Locations & Buildings Monuments & Statues


Digital Image Size

Pixel Dimensions (W x H) : 4271x5725
File Size : 71,636kb


Aliases

  1. JRU01_01_129
  1. JRU01/01/129
  1. 0250009860
  1. 2-854-385
  1. 2854385
  1. JRU01_01_129


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