Camel-ended Bench
Berry & Son, Regent Street
SLB Foundry, Sittingbourne
1877
Cast iron
Victoria Embankment, London
Photograph and text by Jacqueline Banerjee
[[You may use this image without prior permission for any scholarly or educational purpose as long as you (1) credit the person who scanned the image and (2) link your document to this URL.]
"With their battered walls, thick parapets, occasional landing stages, all faced with granite blocks, with their rhythmical rows of plane trees lining broad avenues, their dolphin-based lamps of cast iron, their lion-headed mooring rings, and general character of solid indestructibility, the Embankments are the most enduring monuments of Victorian enterprise London can offer" (Weinreb and Hibbert 267). Most of the benches, much used by office-workers at lunchtime, tourists during the day, and down-and-outs at night, feature sphinxes, presumably to go with Cleopatra's Needle, installed on the Embankment in 1878. The fine "laden camel" bench-ends, one of which is shown here, seem to have been a part of this scheme.
An observant reader, William Arthurs, has kindly pointed out that one such bench is the subject of the frontispiece (image) to Jack London's The People of the Abyss (1903).
These benches nicely complement the Imperial Camel Corps Memorial in the Embankment Gardens, which was unveiled later, in 1916.
References
Weinreb, Ben and Christopher Hibbert. The London Encyclopaedia. London: Macmillan, rev. ed. 1992.
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Last modified 29 August 2007