Introduction

According to Truro Cathedral's biography of the sculptor, which contains a photograph of the Hitch and his large family, when he was fourteen years old he left his home in Ware, Hertfordshire, to become an apprentice with Farmer & Brindley and may have worked on the Albert Memorial, Westminster Cathedral, the Natural History Museum, “carving out rough-hewn forms ready for the master carver to add the fine details and finishing touches to the sculpture.” He next worked “for Thomas Nicholls, a sculptor who worked for the architect William Burges on Lord Bute’s Cardiff Castle (1868-1881). It is interesting to note that Thomas Nicholls was one of J.L. Pearson’s preferred sculptors, so it is possible to speculate that this is where he might have first met Pearson, a meeting that would eventually lead to such a fruitful working relationship” Between 1885 and 1894,

he completed 32 commissions, only four of which were for architects other that J.L Pearson. (two of the commissions were for WD Caröe, a former pupil of JL Pearson). Amongst those Pearson commissions were works for Westminster Abbey, Lincoln Cathedral, Peterborough Cathedral, Bristol Cathedral, Rochester Cathedral, Sydney Cathedral and of course Truro Cathedral. It is clear that at some point JL Pearson had come across Hitch (perhaps at Thomas Nicholl’s studio?) and admired his work and perhaps suggested that he could guarantee work to allow Hitch to strike out on his own. The great majority of Nathaniel Hitch’s work was in or on church buildings. He was fortunate to work at the tail-end of the Gothic Revival movement in the late nineteenth century. This movement had seen a huge number of new churches being built together with a large number of restorations and so there was a plentiful supply of commissions in this niche market. Of the 32 commissions, a quarter were for the sculpting of a Reredos (8), and indeed throughout his career he specialised in this most demanding of sculpture (27% over his entire career).

Works

Bibliography

Nathaniel Hitch Architectural Sculptor and Modeller.” Truro Cathedral website. 12 August 2011.


Victorian Web Homepage Visual Arts Sculpture

Last modified 12 March 2012