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Thomas Ridgeway Gould

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Thomas Ridgeway Gould Famous memorial

Birth
Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, USA
Death
26 Nov 1881 (aged 63)
Florence, Città Metropolitana di Firenze, Toscana, Italy
Burial
Jamaica Plain, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, USA Add to Map
Plot
Forest Avenue
Memorial ID
View Source
Sculptor. For many years he worked in the dry goods business but when it failed he began as a professional sculptor, though he had very little formal training in that area. His specialties included portrait busts of prominent figures such as Governor John Andrew of Massachusetts and writer Ralph Waldo Emerson. Two of his best known works are "The West Wind" and a sculpture of Cleopatra. He is most famous however for a sculpture of King Kamehameha I of Hawaii. The original was lost in a shipwreck in route from Europe but was later salvaged and now stands in Kapaau, Hawaii. Two copies were also made. One stands in front of the Aliiolani Hale building in Honolulu and the other represents Hawaii in Statuary Hall at the United State Capitol Building in Washington DC. After his death at his home in Florence, Italy, his body was returned to Forest Hills for burial in the family plot, and his final resting place marked with one of his own creations, "Ascending Spirit". Today some of the places his work is on display are the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Boston Athenaeum Library, University of Rochester Memorial Art Gallery and the Mercantile Library at the University of Missouri-St. Louis.
Sculptor. For many years he worked in the dry goods business but when it failed he began as a professional sculptor, though he had very little formal training in that area. His specialties included portrait busts of prominent figures such as Governor John Andrew of Massachusetts and writer Ralph Waldo Emerson. Two of his best known works are "The West Wind" and a sculpture of Cleopatra. He is most famous however for a sculpture of King Kamehameha I of Hawaii. The original was lost in a shipwreck in route from Europe but was later salvaged and now stands in Kapaau, Hawaii. Two copies were also made. One stands in front of the Aliiolani Hale building in Honolulu and the other represents Hawaii in Statuary Hall at the United State Capitol Building in Washington DC. After his death at his home in Florence, Italy, his body was returned to Forest Hills for burial in the family plot, and his final resting place marked with one of his own creations, "Ascending Spirit". Today some of the places his work is on display are the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Boston Athenaeum Library, University of Rochester Memorial Art Gallery and the Mercantile Library at the University of Missouri-St. Louis.

Bio by: Jen Snoots


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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Originally Created by: Jen Snoots
  • Added: Apr 11, 2007
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/18866670/thomas_ridgeway-gould: accessed ), memorial page for Thomas Ridgeway Gould (6 Nov 1818–26 Nov 1881), Find a Grave Memorial ID 18866670, citing Forest Hills Cemetery and Crematory, Jamaica Plain, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, USA; Maintained by Find a Grave.