A local trust recently launched an ambitious appeal to recognise the achievements of Admiral Arthur Phillip RN, founder of modern Australia, who lived in Bath.
In June the Britain-Australia Society Education Trust launched the ambitious appeal to raise in excess of £200,000 to provide memorials in Westminster Abbey and in the grounds of the Assembly Rooms in Bath to recognise the achievements of Admiral Arthur Phillip RN, Commander of the First Fleet to Australia in 1787-8 and founder of the colony of New South Wales and of modern Australia.
Arthur Phillip, although a national hero in Australia, is largely unknown in Britain.
To mark the 200th anniversary of his death in Bath in 1814, the Trust has the approval of the Dean and Chapter of Westminster Abbey to install a ledger stone in the nave near to the tomb of the Unknown Warrior.
In Bath, where Phillip lived from 1806 to 1814 at 19 Bennett Street, plans for a beautiful commemorative bronze armillary sphere mounted on a carved Bath Stone base were given planning permission by Bath and North East Somerset Council in April.
There are also plans to provide funds for St Nicholas’ Church, Bathampton, where the Admiral and his wife are buried and where there is already an informative display about the voyage of the First Fleet. The Trust is planning to support the memorial proposals for the church if it is able to raise sufficient funds from donors for that purpose, and would hope to be able to provide up to £15,000.
An enduring bursary fund is to be established to make educational grants and to award scholarships in Phillip’s name to young Britons and Australians qualified and keen to deepen their knowledge of the other country.
Locally the Memorials Appeal has now reached well over £40,000 and on 25th September the Education Trust will be commissioning the commemorative sculpture for Bath from the internationally famous sundial maker David Harber, who will be collaborating with Somerset based stone carver Nigel Fenwick.
The sculpture will be unveiled on 12th July next year. It will provide an attractive new art work next to the Assembly Rooms and opposite Admiral Phillip’s house. It is hoped it will encourage residents, visitors and school children to learn more about the First Fleet’s voyage and Admiral Phillip’s life, through the facts engraved on the sculpture. It is also expected to encourage more Australian visitors to visit both Bath and Bathampton.
The commissioning of the Bath Memorial co-insides with the launch, on 25th September at the Guildhall in Bath, of a new and well reviewed book written by Justice Michael Pembroke, Judge of the Supreme Court of New South Wales – entitled, “Arthur Phillip, Sailor, Mercenary, Governor, Spy”.
Bath resident Andrew Fletcher said: “I have read the Pembroke book and found it most informative and easy to read – I am strongly recommending it!”
The Education Trust are grateful for the support of the National Trust, the Heritage Services Department of Bath and North East Somerset Council, Bath Tourism Plus, the City of Bath World Heritage Manager, the Bath Preservation Trust and all those who have donated to the Appeal.
If you would like to learn more about the project or donate, visit http://www.britozwest.org.uk or phone Richard Pavitt 01935 824045.