Burdett-Coutts Memorial Sundial
The Burdett-Coutts Memorial Sundial is a structure built in the churchyard of Old St Pancras, London, in 1877–79, at the behest of Baroness Burdett-Coutts. The former churchyard included the burial ground for St Giles-in-the-Fields, where many Catholics and French émigrés were buried. The graveyard closed to burials in 1850, but some graves were disturbed by a cutting of the Midland Railway in 1865 as part of the works to construct its terminus at St Pancras railway station. The churchyard was acquired by the parish authorities in 1875 and reopened as a public park in June 1877. The high Victorian Gothic memorial was built from 1877 and unveiled in 1879. The obelisk acts as a memorial to people buried near the church whose graves were disturbed; the names of over 70 of them are listed on the memorial, including the Chevalier d'Éon, Sir John Soane, John Flaxman, Sir John Gurney, and James Leoni.
The monument was designed by George Highton of Brixton. It was manufactured by H Daniel and Co, a firm of masons from Highgate, and includes relief carvings by Signor Facigna. It comprises a tall square tower in a decorated Gothic style, topped by a tall Portland limestone pinnacle bearing a sundial, supported by columns of pink Shap granite and grey Cornish granite to either side of four inscribed marble plaques, each topped by a trefoil Gothic arch around a relief sculpture. The inscriptions on four marble panels include the Beatitudes from the Gospel of St Matthew, chapter 5, verses 3 to 9, and a religious poem.
The tower stands on a square plinth of Portland stone, which rests on an octagonal base of three steps made from red Mansfield sandstone. The steps are decorated with mosaic panels, mostly stylised flowers. The structure is surrounded by iron railings which create a square enclosure, with a Portland stone animal statue at each of the four corners, two lions and two dogs. The dogs may be modelled on Greyfriars Bobby, or possibly an animal owned by Burdett-Coutts herself. The railings also bear a plaque to Johann Christian Bach, buried in a pauper's grave nearby.
The monument became a Grade II listed building in February 1993, upgraded to Grade II* in September 2016. The garden is itself Grade II listed, and includes the tomb of Sir John Soane. St Pancras Old Church is also Grade II* listed.
Names on the memorial
- Charles Louis Victor De Broglie
- Chevalier d'Éon French Minister Plenipotentiary
- Joseph Franz Xaver von Haslang
- Louis Charles d'Hervilly, Marshal of France
- Paschalis De Paoli, President of the Corsican Republic
- Comte de Pontcarre
- Comte des Escotais
- Michael Joanned Baptista, Baron De Wenzel, Occulist to the Court of Hungary
- Charles Dillon, 10th Viscount Dillon and Frances, Lady Dillon
- Arthur Richard Dillon, Archbishop of Narbonne
- Lieutenant General Sir Rufane Shaw Donkin
- Miss Frances Doughty daughter of Sir Henry Tichborne
- Guy Henry Marie Du Val, Marquis de Bonneeval
- Reverend Joseph Duncan
- Sidly Effendi, Ambassador of the Ottoman Empire to the United Kingdom
- John Flaxman, sculptor
- Sir John Fleetwood, 5th Baronet
- Phillippo Nepumuceno Fontanae, Ambassador from the Court of Sardinia to Spain
- Francis Pietri Fozano
- Claude Joseph Gabriel, Viscount Le Vaulx, Marshal of France
- Bonaventure Giffard, Roman Catholic bishop and Andrea Giffard
- John Ernest Grabe, Anglican divine
- Antoine Francoise, Comte de Gramont
- Sir John Gurney, Baron of the Exchequer
- Samuel Harrison, singer
- The Hon Esme Howard of Norfolk, youngest son of Henry Howard, 15th Earl of Arundel, and his wife Margaret Zukn
- Jean Francois Lamarche, Count La Marche, Bishop and Count of Leon
- His Excellency Phillip St Martin Count De Front
- Morris Leivesley, 54 years Secretary of the Foundling Hospital
- James Leoni architect
- Count Ferdinand Luchesse, Envoy from Naples
- Andres Marshall, physician
- Maurice Margarot, radical political reformer, and his wife Elizabeth,
- Thomas Mazzinghi,, violinist father of Joseph Mazzinghi, the composer
- The Hon Isaac Ogden
- Father O'Leary,
- Don Joseph Alonzo Ortiz, Consul General of Spain
- Stephen Paxton, musician
- Peter Pasqualino, musician
- Madeline Antoinetter Pulcherie, Marquise de Tourville,
- Senora Dona Maria Manuela Rapaol, native of Cordova
- Simon François Ravenet, engraver
- Lady Slingsby, actress
- Sir John Soane, architect of the Bank of England
- Jeremiah Le Souef for 20 Years Vice Consul of the United States
- Sir Charles Henry Talbot, 1st Baronet, his wife and other members of the Talbot family
- Sir Henry Tempest, 3rd Baronet
- Manoel Viera, Portuguese merchant
- John Walker author of the Pronouncing Dictionary
- Edward Walpole
- Sir John Webbe and his wife Barbara
- Rt. Hon. Mary Dowager Lady Abergavenny
- Francis Claud Amos
- Hon Thomas Arundell and his wife Anne
- Claude Bigot de Sainte-Croix, Minister Plenipotentiary for the King of France in Sweden
- Lady Bowyer relict of Sir William Bowyer, Bt.
- William Brett, artist
- Henry Burdett, goldsmith
- Mary Burke, wife of John Burke, author of The Peerage
- The Hon Elizabeth Butler, daughter of Marmaduke Langdale, 5th Baron Langdale of Holme
- Rt. Hon. Elizabeth, Countess of Castlehaven, daughter of Henry Arundell, 5th Baron Arundell of Wardour
- Tiberius Cavallo, Scientist
- The Hon. Amy Constable, daughter of Hugh Clifford, 2nd Baron Clifford of Chudleigh
- Catherine Constable
- William Cummings, General of HM Forces
- John Danby, composer,
- Alexandre-César d'Anterroches, Bishop of Condom
- Joseph Cayetano De Bernales, Spanish merchant, and his wife Elizabeth,