Английская Википедия:Bazalgette Mausoleum

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Шаблон:Short description

Файл:Bazalgette's Mausoleum, Wimbledon - geograph.org.uk - 2168902.jpg
Sir Joseph Bazalgette's Mausoleum, St Mary's Church, Wimbledon

The Sir Joseph Bazalgette Mausoleum is a Grade II listed structure currently on Historic England’s Heritage-at-Risk Register.[1] It stands in the grounds of St Mary's Church, Wimbledon, in the London Borough of Merton.[2] The mausoleum is the final resting place of the noted Victorian engineer Sir Joseph Bazalgette and many members of his family.

It was built circa 1804 for John Anthony Rucker, a local merchant trader, businessman and slave-owner based at West Hill House, East Putney.[3] Bazalgette acquired the mausoleum for his family towards the end of the 19th century as the churchyard was full.[4]

Architecture

The mausoleum in neo-classical style made of Portland stone.[5] It consists of a rusticated base with decorated archway to the vault which has space for nine coffins. An obelisk sits atop the base, stating the names of the Bazalgette family interred there.[6] It is believed the obelisk was an addition by Sir Joseph Bazalgette.[7]

The mausoleum was built by Jesse Gibson, a architect based in Hackney, for John Anthony Rucker who died in 1804.[8] Gibson was based in the City of London and is known for having rebuilt the now demolished St Peter le Poer in Broad Street,[9] Vintner’s Company almshouses on Mile End Road and Saddlers Hall in Cheapside.[10][11] Gibson also built West Hill House, in East Putney, for John Anthony Rucker (now the Royal Hospital for Neuro-Disability).[12][13]

Файл:Joseph Bazalgette by Lock & Whitfield.jpg
Sir Joseph Bazalgette

Sir Joseph Bazalgette

Sir Joseph Bazalgette (1819-1891) was an eminent engineer, known for large infrastructural improvement that improved the sanitation of Victorian London.[14] As the Chief Engineer for the Metropolitan Board of Works from 1856, Bazalgette was responsible for resolving the ‘Great Stink’ of 1858.[15] His sewerage system helped to rid London of pollution and waterborne diseases such as cholera and typhoid.[16] Crossness and Abbey Mills Pumping Stations were created as part of these designs.

Bazalgette created several bridges across the Thames, and designed the Victoria, Albert and Chelsea embankments. A memorial to Bazalgette by George Blackall Simonds is located on the Victoria Embankment, by the Hungerford Bridge.[17]

Sir Joseph Bazalgette died on 15 March 1891.[18] He is interred in the mausoleum alongside his wife Maria and five of their children.

John Anthony Rucker

Joseph Anthony Rucker was a merchant originally from Hamburg.[19] He bought property in South London including the West Hill estate and the Wandle Villa in the late eighteenth century.[20] He owned slave estates in Grenada, Curacao and St Vincent, and was a witness for the 1789-90 Committee on the Slave Trade.[21] Rucker’s estates and property were inherited by his nephew, Daniel Henry Rucker.[22]

When Sir Joseph Bazalgette bought the mausoleum for his family towards the end of the 19th century, the tomb had been unattended for 84 years.[23]

Heritage

The mausoleum has been placed on Historic England’s Heritage-at-Risk Register due to internal collapse due to water ingress.[24] The iron gates in front of the steps leading down to the vault are also missing.

Habitats & Heritage, a south-west London based charity, are currently working with the church to restore the mausoleum.[25]

References

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