February 08, 2013 <Back to Index>
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Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins (8 February 1807 – 27 January 1894) was an English sculptor and natural history artist renowned for combining both in his work on the life - size models of dinosaurs in the Crystal Palace Park, Sydenham, south London. He was also a noted lecturer on zoology and related topics. Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins was born in Bloomsbury, London, on 8 February 1807, the son of Thomas Hawkins, an artist, and Louisa Anne Waterhouse, the daughter of a Jamaica plantation family of apparent Catholic sympathies. He studied at St. Aloysius College, and learned sculpture from William Behnes. At the age of 20, he began to study natural history and later geology. He contributed illustrations to The Zoology of the Voyage of HMS Beagle. During the 1840s, he produced studies of living animals in Knowsley Park, near Liverpool for Edward Stanley, 13th Earl of Derby. The park was one of the largest private menageries in Victorian England and Hawkins' work was later published with John Edward Gray's text as "Gleanings from the Menagerie at Knowsley" . Over the same period Hawkins exhibited four sculptures at the Royal Academy between 1847 and 1849, and was elected a member of the Society of Arts in 1846 and a fellow of the Linnean Society in 1847. Fellowship of the Geological Society of London followed in 1854. Meanwhile, possibly due to Derby's connections, Hawkins was appointed assistant superintendent of the Great Exhibition of 1851 in London. The following year (1852), he was appointed by the Crystal Palace company to create 33 life - size concrete models of extinct dinosaurs to be placed in the south London park to which the great glass exhibition hall was to be relocated. In this work, which took some three years, he collaborated with Sir Richard Owen and other leading scientific figures of the time – Owen estimated the size and overall shape of the animals, leaving Hawkins to sculpt models according to Owen's directions. Although it is often claimed that a dinner was held inside the Iguanodon, in fact the dinner was held inside the mold that was used to make the large sculpture. Nonetheless, the dinner party, hosted by Owen on 31 December 1853, garnered attention in the press. Some of the sculptures are still on display at Sydenham Crystal Palace Park. In 1868, he traveled to America to deliver a series of lectures. Working with the scientist Joseph Leidy, Hawkins designed and cast an almost complete skeleton of Hadrosaurus foulkii which was then displayed at the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia. Supported on an iron framework in a life - like pose, this was the world's first mounted dinosaur skeleton. Hawkins was later commissioned to produce models for New York City's Central Park museum similar to these he had created in Sydenham. He established a studio on the modern site of the American Museum of Natural History in Manhattan, and planned to create a Paleozoic Museum. However, the corrupt local politics of William M. "Boss" Tweed intervened,
the project was shelved in 1870, and the models that Hawkins had
created were said to have been buried in the south part, probably not
far from Umpire Rock and the Heckscher ballfields, in Central Park.
Hawkins then turned to dinosaur skeleton reconstruction work at the
Smithsonian Institution in Washington. He returned to England in 1874,
but almost immediately returned, doing dinosaur reconstructions at
Princeton University (then called the College of New Jersey) in
Princeton, New Jersey, (where he also created paintings of dinosaurs).
These paintings remain in the collection of the Princeton University
Art Museum. Hawkins also worked at the Centennial Exhibition of 1876 in
Philadelphia. He again returned to Britain in 1878. Hawkins
had married in 1826 to Mary Selina Green, and by her had six children,
one of whom died in infancy. In 1835, he met and fell in love with
artist Frances 'Louisa' Keenan, and the next year he left his family
and bigamously married her. He kept in touch with Mary and her
children, but lived with Louisa, having two additional daughters. On
his 1874 return to England, he seems to have become estranged from
Louisa. He was living with his son by Mary, amidst what he described a
"climax of domestic troubles" thought to indicate that Louisa had
finally learned that their 38 year marriage had been invalid, and this
may have led to his precipitous return to America in 1875. After his
second return, he moved to West Brompton to be near his first wife,
Mary, who was ill. Mary died in 1880. In 1883, Hawkins again married
Louisa, although since they were not cohabitants at the time this was
probably done for legalistic reasons (to legitimize their children),
and they apparently never reconciled prior to her death the next year.
Hawkins suffered a debilitating stroke in 1889, leading to erroneous
reports of his death, and finally died on 27 January 1894. Over 100 years later in 2002, Barbara Kerley's book The Dinosaurs of Waterhouse Hawkins, illustrated by Brian Selznick, won a Caldecott Honor citation. |