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Monument details

HER Number:TR 04 SW 159
Type of record:Listed Building
Name:HUBERT FOUNTAIN, Victoria Park, Ashford

Summary

Grade II* listed fountain. Main construction periods 1833 to 1862. Installed in Victoria Park in July 1912.


Grid Reference:TR 0053 4225
Map Sheet:TR04SW
Parish:ASHFORD, ASHFORD, KENT

Monument Types

  • SITE (Post Medieval - 1833 AD to 1862 AD)
Protected Status:Listed Building (II*) 1071019: HUBERT FOUNTAIN

Full description

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The following text is from the original listed building designation:
1. 5344 VICTORIA PARK Hubert Fountain TR 04 SW 3/276
II
2. Inscription "On July 23 1912 this fountain was presented to the town of Ashford by Mr Geo Harper 26 years a member of the UDC, Chairman 1907-10. It was shown at the Exhibition of 1862 as the Hubert Fountain". Gigantic Mid C19 French painted cast iron fountain of exuberant style. The topmost jet and bowl are supported by 4 cherubs standing on a plinth decorated by the masks of ancients. Below this are 4 bowls supported by 2 gods and 2 goddesses which appear to represent 4 continents, having attendant cupids with conches and cornucopia. Below this again, grotesque mask waterspouts eject the water into the basin. The fountain is approached by means of cemented balustrading.
Listing NGR: TR0129243149

LB entry replaced 07/02/2007:

Building Details:

Building Name: HUBERT FOUNTAIN
Parish: ASHFORD
District: ASHFORD
County: KENT
Postcode:

Details:

LBS Number: 180065
Grade: II
Date Listed: 04/06/1976
Date Delisted:
NGR: TR0053442259


Listing Text:

5344 VICTORIA PARK
Hubert Fountain
TR 04 SW 3/276

4.6.1976 II

Fountain with cast iron sculpture, 1862.

MATERIALS: cast iron sculpture set in a pool with concrete walls.

DESCRIPTION: The fountain is of cast iron, with white-painted figures (well weathered in 2006). Its topmost jet and bowl are supported by four cherubs standing on a plinth decorated by the masks of ancients. Below are four bowls supported by two gods and two goddesses which appear to represent four continents, these having attendant cupids with conches and cornucopia. Below this grotesque mask waterspouts eject the water into the basin. This is circular, and of concrete. The fountain is approached from the south-east by a short flight of shallow steps with short concrete vase balusters which lead to a concentrically paved forecourt-like space (steps and paving not of special interest). A bronze plaque on the wall of the basin records ON JULY 23 1912./THIS FOUNTAIN WAS PRESENTED TO/THE TOWN OF ASHFORD BY MR. GEO. HARPER/25 YEARS A MEMBER OF THE URBAN DISTRICT COUNCIL. CHAIRMAN 1907-10./IT WAS SHOWN AT THE EXHIBITION OF 1862 AS THE HUBERT FOUNTAIN.

HISTORY: Victoria Park, Ashford, is a small municipal park of typical Victorian design with tree-lined curvilinear walks, bandstand and shelters. It has one outstanding feature, the large and exuberant Hubert Fountain of 1862, installed in the east part of the park in 1912 having been given to the town, as an inscription records, by George Harper, a long-time member of the UDC. The fountain is of French manufacture; the inscription records that it was shown at the International Exhibition (or Great London Exposition) of 1862 as the Hubert Fountain. A local history book which reproduces photographs of the fountain records that it was moved to Ashford from Olantigh, a house near Wye (Kent) that burnt down in the late C19 or early C20.

SUMMARY OF IMPORTANCE: Victoria Park's Hubert Fountain was exhibited at the 1862 Exhibition, and having originally been erected elsewhere, was given to the town and installed in 1912. It is a typical mid C19 exhibition piece, with a pyramidal arrangement of cast iron cherubs, ancients, gods and goddesses rising out of a surrounding basin. The fountain is approached by a shallow flight of steps with balusters to either side. Life-size cast iron stags (no longer present) reclined on the plinths at the bottom of the steps when the fountain was first re-erected. (1)

From Historic England's National Heritage List for England: (17/05/2016)
"Summary of Building

Fountain of c 1862 in the Ecole des Beaux Arts style, cast in France by the foundry of M. Barbezat and Co. at the Val d'Osne and exhibited at the International Exhibition (or Great London Exposition) of 1862 as the Hubert Fountain. It was installed in Victoria Park in July 1912.

Reasons for Designation

The Hubert Fountain, an ornamental cast iron fountain cast by the French foundry of the Val d'Osne, the largest art cast iron maker in France, first displayed at the 1862 International Exhibition in Kensington, then situated in the grounds of Olantigh Towers, Wye but moved to Victoria Park Ashford in 1912, is listed at Grade II* for the following principal reasons: * Design Quality: a monumental art cast iron fountain of three tiers with figures of cupids, atlantes and caryatids based on antique and classic models in the Ecole des Beaux Arts style, cast by a foundry which acquired a worldwide reputation for such fountains and described in the 1862 International Exhibition catalogue as 'a fine monumental work' and 'of exquisite design and perfect form'; * Rarity: the finest of only three examples of listed cast iron ornamental fountains in England, one of only three surviving listed ornamental fountains in the country displayed at C19 International exhibitions, and the only listed ornamental fountain in England cast by a French foundry; * Comparators: comparable with the Ross Fountain in Edinburgh (listed Grade A), also exhibited at the 1862 Exhibition, the Hubert Fountain was considered in 1862 as the finer of the two fountains although the Ross Fountain now has stronger group value; * Degree of survival: little altered.



History

This monumental cast iron fountain was cast c 1862 by the French foundry of M. Barbezat and Co. at the Val d'Osne, Foundry, Haut Marne. The foundry, started in 1835, by Jean Pierre Andre Victor, inventor of the cast iron ornamental technique, became the largest art cast iron maker in France near Paris and acquired a worldwide reputation for monumental art cast iron fountains with large figures after antique and classic models after exhibiting at the 1851 Crystal Palace Exhibition. The designer has not been identified but many celebrated artists of the Ecole des Beaux Arts had their works cast here.

The fountain was first erected in the Royal Horticultural Society's gardens in London for the Second International Exhibition of 1862 as the Hubert Fountain. It was one of two large fountains exhibited, the other fountain, cast by the foundry of Antoine Durenne and called the Ross fountain after its purchaser, is now situated in West Princes Street Gardens in Edinburgh and is listed at Grade A by Historic Scotland.

The Hubert Fountain is illustrated in an engraving on page 65 of 'Cassell's Illustrated Exhibitor' of 1862 and on page 66 is a reference to 'two French fountains of exquisite design and perfect form. One by Durenne is a good specimen of casting; and the other, shown in our engraving is a fine monumental work produced at the foundry of M. Barbezat and Co., the successors of Andre at the Val d'Osne, in Paris.' The catalogue lists the medals awarded to M. Barbezat and continues 'His works are no less artistic than beautiful and among the bronzes and iron works in the Exhibition we find objects designed by artists of high class, Lienard, Mathurin Moreau, Alfred Jacquemard and Charouse.'

After the 1862 Exhibition the Hubert Fountain was erected in the grounds of Olantigh Towers at Wye, about five miles from Ashford, but this mansion was destroyed by fire in 1903. During the rebuilding of that property in 1910 the fountain was purchased by Mr. George Harper, an antique shop owner and art collector who was also at that time Chairman of the Ashford Urban District Council. He made an anonymous offer to present the fountain together with two huge cast iron stags to Ashford on condition that the Council would dismantle the fountain and re-erect it at Victoria Park at their own expense. The Council decided to reject the offer on the grounds of expense but then Harper agreed to pay for the dismantling and re-erection if the Council provided the foundations, water supply and would provide a water display every year on his birthday. The fountain was dismantled and brought to Ashford in sections by traction engine and on 24 July 1912 the fountain was formally presented to Ashford. Three weeks later Harper was run over and killed by a train.

The life-size cast iron stags which stood on the plinths at the bottom of the steps when the fountain was first re-erected were removed at a later date.

The fountain was listed at Grade II on 4 June 1976 and underwent some restoration in 1977.

Details

Fountain of c 1862 in the Ecole des Beaux Arts style, cast in France by the foundry of M. Barbezat and Co. at the Val d'Osne and exhibited at the International Exhibition (or Great London Exposition) of 1862 as the Hubert Fountain. It was installed in Victoria Park in July 1912 and the outer pool walls are of that date.

MATERIALS: painted cast iron sculpture set in a pool with concrete walls.

PLAN: a three tier fountain with a circular base.

DESCRIPTION: a monumental fountain of cast iron, with painted figures. Its topmost finial emerges from a vase and the wide circular basin below is supported by four putti representing different continents standing on a moulded plinth decorated by the masks of ancients and bearing decorative panels with the names of continents. The plinth supports four flat circular bowls supported by two seated atlantes and two seated caryatids with attendant cupids with conches and cornucopia. At their sides quadrant-shaped pierced bowls shoot jets and, from the circular base below, grotesque mask waterspouts under acroteria eject water into the basin. The basin is of 1912, circular, and of concrete. A bronze plaque on the wall of the basin records 'ON JULY 23 1912./THIS FOUNTAIN WAS PRESENTED TO/THE TOWN OF ASHFORD BY MR. GEO. HARPER/25 YEARS A MEMBER OF THE URBAN DISTRICT COUNCIL. CHAIRMAN 1907-10./IT WAS SHOWN AT THE EXHIBITION OF 1862 AS THE HUBERT FOUNTAIN' " (2)


Historic England, National Heritage List for England (Index). SKE29372.

<1> English Heritage, List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest (Map). SKE16160.

Sources and further reading

Cross-ref. Source description
---Index: Historic England. National Heritage List for England.
<1>Map: English Heritage. List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest.