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South Bank Lion

The South Bank Lion is an 1837 sculpture in Central London. Since 1966 it has stood next to County Hall, on the South Bank of the River Thames. It is a significant depiction of a lion, along with the four that surround Nelson's Column in Trafalgar Square just across the river.

South Bank Lion

1837 (1837)

Coade stone

Lion

3.7 m × 4.0 m (12 ft × 13 ft)

13 tonnes

Grade II* listed

London

The statue is about 13 feet (4.0 m) long and 12 feet (3.7 m) high, and weighs about 13 tonnes (14 tons). It was cast in 1837, the year of Queen Victoria's accession, of Coade stone, one of the earliest types of artificial stone. The material is very resistant to weathering, and the fine details of the lion's modelling still remain clear after decades of exposure to the corrosive effects of London's severe air pollution, the infamous pea soup fog, prior to the passage of the Clean Air Act 1956. The statue was made in separate parts and cramped together on an iron frame. It was formerly known as the Red Lion, as it was painted that colour between 1951 and 1966.

Gold lion and other statues at Twickenham Stadium

Gold lion and other statues at Twickenham Stadium

The Lion Gate at Kew Gardens

The Lion Gate at Kew Gardens

The prototype for the Lion Brewery statue was made in wood, and was rediscovered in Woburn, Bedfordshire in the 1970s. It was moved to Cambridge, where it was displayed at the new Lion Yard shopping centre, which had been named after a pub at that location. From 1999 the statue was kept in storage until late 2014, when it was moved to Cambridge University Rugby Club's ground on Grange Road, Cambridge.


A second, similar Coade stone lion was removed from the Lion Brewery when it was demolished. It stood on an arched gateway leading to a second brewery site on the south side of Belvedere Road, on the corner of Sutton Walk. It was presented to the Rugby Football Union in 1971, its centenary season, by the Greater London Council and unveiled in 1972. It is now located above the central pillar of the Rowland Hill Memorial Gate (Gate 3) to the west of Twickenham Stadium. It was covered in gold leaf when England hosted the 1991 Rugby World Cup.


The Lion Brewery also had a third Coade stone lion, over the arched entrance to the south of the main brewery site, on the north side of the Belvedere Road. It was present in 1930, but was missing for some years before the brewery was demolished, and is believed to have been destroyed.


A recumbent Coade stone lion, made in 1821 to a different design by Thomas Hardwick for King George IV, is mounted above the Lion Gate at Kew Gardens. It is partnered by a unicorn of the same material, which surmounts the corresponding gate. The Lion and the Unicorn were traditional symbols of England and Scotland respectively.

List of public art in Lambeth

hidden-london.com

From brewery mascot to king of the bridge: South Bank Lion, Westminster Bridge, SE1

lambeth.gov.uk

Coade Stone Lion, Waterloo Railway Station, Waterloo

walklondon.com

The South Bank Lion

victorianweb.org

The Coade Lion, Westminster Bridge

The Vauxhall Society

Lion Brewery

in Survey of London: Volume 23, Lambeth: South Bank and Vauxhall, ed. Howard Roberts and Walter H Godfrey (London, 1951), pp. 58–61. British History Online

Coade's Artificial Stone Works

in Survey of London: Volume 23, Lambeth: South Bank and Vauxhall, ed. Howard Roberts and Walter H Godfrey (London, 1951), pp. 51–54. British History Online

Lambeth Waterworks and Lion Brewery

in Survey of London: Volume 23, Lambeth: South Bank and Vauxhall, ed. Howard Roberts and Walter H Godfrey (London, 1951), p. 32. British History Online

Plate 32: Lion Brewery, north-west side of Belvedere Road, 1930

A London Inheritance

The Brewery At The End Of Sutton Walk

London Remembers

South Bank Lion

Public Monuments and Sculpture Association

The South Bank Lion, Westminster Bridge

Public Monuments and Sculpture Association

Rugby Union Lion

ESPN, 6 March 2014

The famous golden lion at Twickenham

World Rugby Museum

The Story of the Lion

Kew Gardens

Lion Gate

BBC News, 27 November 2014

Cambridge Lion Yard lion roars again at university rugby club