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Thursday, 26th November 2009

First new statue on George Street since 1873?

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Published Date:
01 May 2007
THE first statue in more than 100 years is set to be unveiled on Edinburgh's George Street in honour of an eminent city scientist.
James Clerk Maxwell - whose research inspired Albert Einstein - will join King George IV, Prime Minister William Pitt and mathematician Thomas Chalmers, at the prestigious address.

Sandy Stoddart, one of Scotland's best-known sculptors, has agreed to design the Maxwell statue, which is planned for the east end of the thoroughfare.

The Paisley-born artist was also behind the statues of philosopher David Hume on the Royal Mile and the "Kidnapped" memorial to Robert Louis Stevenson in Corstorphine. City screen legend Sir Sean Connery even attended the unveiling of the Stevenson statue in 2004.

The Royal Society of Edinburgh is behind the campaign to recognise Maxwell, whose work was said to pave the way for television, mobile phones and microwaves. The society is about to start a £50,000 fundraising drive to pay for the statue.

Society spokesman Stuart Brown said: "We're already speaking to the city council, the Cockburn Association and Edinburgh World Heritage Trust because of the obvious heritage issues involved in erecting a new statue somewhere like George Street, but we're hopeful our plans will be successful."

The three other statues on George Street were unveiled in 1831, 1833 and 1873 respectively. There is also the towering Melville Monument, in St Andrew Square, built between 1820 and 1823 in honour of Henry Dundas - the first Viscount Melville - who was Navy Secretary under Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger.

And in Charlotte Square Gardens stands the Albert Memorial, which was designed by Sir John Steell and unveiled in 1876, erected in honour of Prince Albert, Queen Victoria's consort.

Moira Tasker, director of the Cockburn Association, said: "We're very much in favour of what the society are proposing with this statue. It's pretty surprising that there isn't already a statue of Maxwell.

"I don't see any reason why the east end of George Street shouldn't be a suitable location and the nice thing is it will hopefully be finished around the time the refurbishment of St Andrew Square Gardens is finished and they are opened to the public for the first time."

Born in 1831 at 14 India Street, Edinburgh, Maxwell was brought up in the city, and then became a student at Edinburgh University at the age of 16. He was the youngest ever member of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, being accepted at the age of 14.

He went on to Trinity College, Cambridge, later becoming a fellow, and in 1856 was appointed professor of natural philosophy at Aberdeen's Marischal College.

Maxwell pioneered colour photography, and produced research on electricity and magnetic lines of force, known in the world of physics as "Maxwell's Equation". He also discovered that the speed of the movement of an electromagnetic field is approximately that of the speed of light.

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  • Last Updated: 03 May 2007 7:01 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: James Clerk Maxwell
 
1

dan,

01/05/2007 11:21:12

I was only thinking the other day that if a darn novelist gets a monolith of Eiffel Tower proportions on Princes Street, then Clerk Maxwell deserves better than a poxy brass plaque in India Street.

2

Douglas Eckhart,

Edinburgh 01/05/2007 11:52:19

good stuff from Stoddart.

Adam Smith is also going up, he is to parked near his old friend David Hume on the Royal Mile.

3

alex paterson,

embra 01/05/2007 12:16:28

Another statue for the City pigeons to crap on.

4

Jake La Feet,

South Morningside 01/05/2007 12:30:45

I must take issue with the premise: there have been countless Parliamentary enactments since 1873 which apply on George Street as equally as they do elsewhere.

5

Annoyingboi,

Stuck in Edinburgh 01/05/2007 13:12:00

Do we care?

6

GP,

01/05/2007 13:47:01

Should not require a new site just replace K G IV as this is an embarassment.
Can someone inform me what he did for Edinburgh?
or Scotland?

7

I'm no really here,

01/05/2007 18:33:35

It shows a disgraceful state of our education systems when one of the options on the poll is "No, it should be someone we have all heard of". If that was the case, George St would be packed end-to-end with statues of Elton John, Robbie Williams and Britney Spears.

Simply put, JCM was not one of Scotland greatest, he was THE greatest. A statue to him would be better than one to some King or Queen or some bastard politician.

8

Birnamo,

Edinburgh 01/05/2007 19:37:24

James Clerk Maxwell was one of the greatest physicists of all time bar none.

He proved that radio waves could existed before anyone had actually generated them and set the stage for radio communication, TV and much else.

If the voters have not heard of him there will be many international scientists who are astonished by our ignorance. The James Clerk Maxwell building in Edinburgh University goes some way to recording his career.

A City monument to his intellect and greativity is surely very appropriate.

9

Boy Wonder,

01/05/2007 21:43:55

I'm all for removing ALL the statchaes OUT of George Street and putting them in Princes Street Gardens where people might get a chance to read what's on the bases. Try doing that George Street from 7am to 1am!!!

10

sceptic,

livingston 01/05/2007 22:24:09

Why don't we have one of Donald Anderson over a public urinal so that the citizenry could show their gratitude and appreciation in an appropriate manner!

11

woodentop,

Physics lab, Friday afternoon 01/05/2007 23:48:46

A great man, and deserving of a statue in George Street. I wouldn't have necessarily agreed, back in the day when studying his work on electromagnetics as part of what was laughingly called 'modern physics' (and future students: look out for textbooks labelled 'Fundamentals of ...'. They're always the hardest).


 

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