778 cm (overall height). 350 cm (sculpture); 428 cm (pedestal)
THE / MARQUIS OF LINLITHGOW / P.C., K.T., C.C.M.C., G.C.V.D., / FIRST GOVENOR GENERAL / OF AUSTRALIA / 1901-02 / GOVERNOR OF VICTORIA / 1889-1895
City of Melbourne Art and Heritage Collection
Marquis of Linlithgow, William Birnie Rhind, Bronze statue with granite pedestal, 1911, Cnr St Kilda Rd & Government House Dr
Summary
Location: cnr St Kilda Rd and Government House Dr
A bronze equestrian statue of Marquis of Linlithgow on a granite pedestal.
John Adrian Lewis Hope, the Earl of Hopetoun, arrived in Australia to serve as the governor of Victoria from 1889 to 1895. During these years he travelled widely, investigating social conditions and alleviating hardship where he could. He returned to England in 1895, with a reputation for being one of the most conscientious governors in Australia. He returned to Australia in 1901 to become the new federation’s first governor-general, but his popularity quickly waned, in part because his expenses were perceived as exorbitant. He resigned from his position a year later and returned to his native Scotland, where he died in 1905. In 1902, the Earl of Hopetoun was made Marquis of Linlithgow.
A handful of anonymous tenders for a commemorative statue to Hope were considered before William Birnie Rhind’s design was selected. Lady Linlithgow had requested that her late husband be represented on horseback to show his admiration for these noble beasts. Rhind’s moulds were made in Scotland and the bronze was cast in Naples. Governor-General Sir John Fuller and acting Prime Minister William Hughes unveiled the statue in June 1911.