Statue of Sherlock Holmes, London

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Year1999; 27 years ago (1999)
TypePedestrian statue
MediumBronze
Sherlock Holmes
ArtistJohn Doubleday
Year1999; 27 years ago (1999)
TypePedestrian statue
MediumBronze
SubjectSherlock Holmes
LocationLondon, NW1
United Kingdom
Coordinates51°31′21″N 0°09′24″W / 51.52250°N 0.15659°W / 51.52250; -0.15659

A statue of Sherlock Holmes by the sculptor John Doubleday stands near the supposed site of 221B Baker Street, the fictional detective's address in London. Unveiled on 23 September 1999, the sculpture was funded by the Abbey National building society, whose headquarters were on the purported site of the famous address. As no site was available on Baker Street itself the statue was installed outside Baker Street tube station, on Marylebone Road. Doubleday had previously produced a statue of Holmes for the town of Meiringen in Switzerland, below the Reichenbach Falls whence the detective fell to his apparent death in the 1893 story "The Final Problem".

The 3-metre-high (9.8 ft) statue depicts Holmes wearing an Inverness cape and a deerstalker, attributes first given to him by Sidney Paget, the illustrator of Arthur Conan Doyle's stories for The Strand Magazine,[1] and holding a calabash pipe (which appears to be a later addition).

It is located outside Baker Street tube station on Marylebone Road, two blocks from the detective's fictional home at 221B Baker Street,[2] and near the Sherlock Holmes Museum between numbers 237 and 241.

History

Other statues of Sherlock Holmes

References

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