- Robert Bakewell (ironsmith)
Robert Bakewell (
Uttoxeter , 1682 — 1752) was an English smith. He took anapprenticeship inLondon as an iron worker and became an extremely skilled ironsmith.In 1706, he started working at
Melbourne Hall forThomas Coke , and living in the town of Melbourne. In the gardens at the hall, a wrought iron arbour created by Robert Bakewell can still be seen today: it is known locally as 'the Birdcage'.Following an affair with a local woman, Elizabeth Fisher, resulting in the birth of a son, Bakewell Fisher, he moved from Melbourne to Derby, where he set up a workshop and forge at Oake's Yard in St Peter's Street. Later, he married Mary Cokayne and had a family of three sons and three daughters. He died in 1752 and is buried in St Peter's Church,
Derby .Examples of his work can be seen at
Derby Cathedral , where he made thewrought iron rood screen and the gates at the west door. There are also wrought iron gates by Bakewell at theDerby Industrial Museum , and ironwork by him in a number of churches in Derbyshire towns and villages:Alvaston , Ashbourne,Borrowash ,Duffield ,Etwall ,Foremark ,Radbourne . In Leicestershire atStaunton Harold church, a splendid screen by Bakewell can be seen.References
* cite book
last = Beard
first = Geoffrey
year = 1966
title = Georgian Craftsmen and Their Work
publisher = Country Life
location = London
id = OCLC|1061927 (2nd edition: published by South Brunswick and New York: A. S. Barnes & Company, 1967. OCLC|1477644)
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