The statue of Thomas Hardy beside the Top o’ Town roundabout is one of the most recognisable landmarks in Dorchester. It depicts Hardy sitting on a tree stump, looking thoughtfully ahead with a book on his lap (it is said that the decision to sculpt Hardy sitting was made to compensate for the fact that he was known to be very short in stature!)
About The Sculptor
The Hardy Statue was created by renowned sculptor Eric Henri Kennington in 1931. Kennington was born in London in 1888, the son of a portrait artist Thomas Kennington. He served in the British Army during the First World War, and was sent home after being badly wounded in June 1915.
Unable to return to frontline action due to his injuries, Kennington was employed by the War Propaganda Bureau in 1917 to create pictures of the Western Front. With demand for memorials high at the end of the war, he became a stone carver and spent the next few years designing a great many war memorials around the country.
By the end of the 1920s he was one of the country’s most highly regarded sculptors. In 1931, after completing a set of relief panels for the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre in Stratford, Kennington was commisioned to work on creating Thomas Hardy’s Statue for Dorchester.
Unveiling The Statue
The finished statue was unveiled on 2nd September of 1931 by J.M. Barrie, the author of Peter Pan and a long-time close friend of Thomas Hardy.