Frederick Brook Hitch
Frederick Brook Hitch, the son of architectural sculptor Nathaniel Hitch, was a British sculptor. He attended the Royal Academy and was a Fellow of the Royal Society of British Sculptors and lived in Hertford, Hertfordshire, England.
Works
Church and other architectural sculpture
Church and other architectural sculpture
War memorials
Images of the National Submarine War Memorial
Place | Location | Notes and References |
The RSPCA Animals Memorial Dispensary | Kilburn North West London | Brook Hitch executed a relief for the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Animals Memorial Dispensary in Kilburn, North West London. The clinic was opened on 10 November 1932 although it had been treating animals for 13 months prior to that date. Brook Hitch had won a competition for the best design, this competition run by the RSPCA and The Royal Society of British Sculptors. The bronze relief covers every type of animal who saw action and gave service; horses, mules, oxen, dogs, elephants, camels and pigeons. The plaques record that 484,143 animals were killed by enemy action, disease or accident and that 725,216 animals were treated by the RSPCA during the Great War. |
Images of the RSPCA Animals Memorial Dispensary
Harwich Royal Navy Reserve Auxiliary Patrol and Minesweepers Memorial
Other works: public statues
- A statue of Captain Matthew Flinders on North Terrace, Adelaide.
- Statue of Sir Ross Smith in the Creswell Gardens, near Adelaide Oval.
- The bronze statue of the hymn-writer Charles Wesley at the Methodist chapel in Bristol. Charles Wesley was the younger brother of John Wesley. He composed about 9,000 hymns during his lifetime, such as "Love Divine, All Loves Excelling" and "Hark, the Herald Angels Sing". The Brook Hitch bronze statue stands in the back courtyard of the Methodist chapel and has the motif "O let me commend my Saviour to you".
- Statue of Nelson in Pembroke Gardens, Portsmouth. This was erected in 1951.
- A statue of Sir Robert de Mantell in the grounds of Beeleigh Abbey in Essex. Sir Robert de Mantell was the founder of Beeleigh Abbey.
- A statue of Saint Giles for St Giles Church in Haughton, Staffordshire.
Other works: public statues