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Statue of Captain Cook in Hyde Park, Sydney
Statue of Captain Cook in Hyde Park, Sydney

Statue of Captain Cook in Hyde Park, Sydney

Photographer (1855-1923)
Datec 1880
Object number00033503
NamePhotograph
MediumSilver gelatin print
DimensionsOverall: 150 x 202 mm
ClassificationsPhotographs
Credit LineANMM Collection
DescriptionA photograph by Henry King of the Thomas Woolner bronze statue of Captain Cook in Hyde Park, Sydney. The statue was unveiled on 25th of February 1879 and the day was proclaimed a public holiday. Built by both public subscription and government grants (over half a million dollars in todays currency), the unveiling was attended by an estimated 30,000 Sydneysiders and can still be seen in Hyde Park today.HistoryThe decision to erect a statue of Cook in Sydney had been decided by 1869 and the foundations tone laid down. But the funding and commissioning process delayed the creation and unveiling by a decade. The artist, Thomas Woolner, was eventually decided upon and with direction by then Colonial Secretary, Sir Henry Parkes, the process moved forward. The statue itself was designed and made in England by Woolner, already a recognised sculptor. Prior to it being shipped to Sydney, the statue of Cook was displayed in London for a few months where is received much attention. According to 'Australian Town and Country Journal on 14 September, 1878, the statue was hugely popular: "The attitude is easy, yet imposing. The great navigator has come on deck bareheaded, and has just made out the new continent showing dimly in the early morning sun. He is thus represented in the moment of a discovery which entitles Cook to rank immediately below Columbus in the list of discoverers. He holds a telescope in his left hand and points in triumph to the Great South Land with his right hand. As he is here represented, there is nothing theatrical or strained in the expression of his joy; what is revealed is rather a thoughtful, foreseeing happiness, softening the severity of features, which Mr. Woolner has, perhaps, made rather too severe... It is remarked by the Pall Mall Gazette that the colony of New South Wales will be much better off than the mother country, for it certainly has no such possession in sculpture to boast of." The unveiling day on 25th of February 1879, was proclaimed a public holiday in Sydney and attended by at least 30,000 people and as much pomp and ceremony as the town could manage.SignificanceIn 1869 the esteem of Cook was very high in the colonies of Australia. A public expression of this esteem in the form of a monumental sculpture was considered a worthy expense and necessary to the town of Sydney to see itself as a sophisticated and an opportunity to put on the biggest "display of patriotism that Australia had seen to date."