Monument to Grace Darling

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TypeFunerary monument
Coordinates55°36′29″N 1°43′09″W / 55.60796°N 1.71911°W / 55.60796; -1.71911
Built1842
Monument to Grace Darling
TypeFunerary monument
LocationBamburgh, Northumberland
Coordinates55°36′29″N 1°43′09″W / 55.60796°N 1.71911°W / 55.60796; -1.71911
Built1842
ArchitectAnthony Salvin
Architectural style(s)Victorian
Governing bodyChurch
Listed Building – Grade II*
Official nameMonument to Grace Darling circa 30 yards West of the Church of St Aidan
Designated22 December 1969
Reference no.1206625
Monument to Grace Darling is located in Northumberland
Monument to Grace Darling
Location of Monument to Grace Darling in Northumberland

The Monument to Grace Darling, in the churchyard of St Aidan's Church, Bamburgh, Northumberland is a Victorian Gothic memorial. The monument was designed by Anthony Salvin, with later renovations by Frederick Wilson, C. R. Smith and W. S. Hicks. Grace Darling was born on 24 November 1815, the daughter of the lighthouseman at Longstone Lighthouse. In 1838, Darling became a national heroine when she and her father rescued nine people from the wreck of the SS Forfarshire, a ship that had run aground off Big Harcar, an island off the Northumbrian coast. Darling died of tuberculosis aged 26 in 1842, and the monument was raised some distance to the north of her grave to make it visible to passing sailors,[1] at the west edge of the churchyard in the same year. It is a Grade II* listed structure.

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