Charles McBride

Charles McBride (1853- 17 December 1903) (sometimes known as Charles McBryde) was a Scottish sculptor active in the second half of the 19th century.

Charles McBride by Henry Snell Gamley
Andrew Carnegie by Charles McBride, Edinburgh Central Library
The Marquis of Argyll by Charles McBride, St Giles Cathedral, Edinburgh

Life

McBride was born in Edinburgh in June 1853.

He lived at 8 Hope Street just off Charlotte Square, facing his stoneyard at 7 Hope Street Lane (now built over).[1]

He died in December 1903.

He is buried in the northern extension of Dean Cemetery in western Edinburgh. His grave is on the south side of the north path, towards the centre of the path, in the second row back. It holds a fine bronze head depicting McBride, carved by Henry Snell Gamley.

Notable Works

See[2]

gollark: There are also, if NLP were not so bee, *many* useful approaches I could take to categorize things efficiently.
gollark: I'm likely to implement (eventually) fuzzy page name matching where it tells you stuff *like* what you spelt. Right now the search just looks for pages containing the same word (give or take endings, SQLite uses some "porter stemming" algorithm).
gollark: > "nice editor" sounds good. for instanceI mostly just mean that it will, for instance, keep your current indentation/list level if you add a newline. I can't think of much other useful stuff, markdown is simple enough.> it'd be cool to have a way to embed links to other notes a way that's as easy as adding a tenor gif to a discord messageYou can, it's just `[[link text:note name]]` or `[[note name]]` if they're both the same. "Nice editor" may include something which shows fuzzy matches > sematic taggingI thought about tagging but realized that "bidirectional links" were *basically* the same thing; if you put `[[bees]]` into a document, then the `Bees` page has a link back to it.
gollark: Δy/Δx, if you prefer.
gollark: The slope of the line.

References

  1. Edinburgh and Leith Post Office Directory 1900-1901
  2. "The Character Statues".
  3. Buildings of Scotland: Edinburgh by Gifford, McWilliam and Walker p.284
  4. http://orapweb.rcahms.gov.uk/wp/00/WP000421.pdf
  5. ""Alexander Dickson"".
  6. ""John Inglis, Lord Glencorse"".
  7. Buildings of Scotland: Edinburgh by Gifford, McWilliam and Walker
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