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'A device which during hours of sunlight indicates the time by a shadow cast by a stationary arm (gnomon) on a dial marked in hours. The shadow is cast at different points of the dial because of changes in the position of the earth in relation to the sun'
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| There are two sundials in Greenwich Park
both by Christopher St J Daniel. Dolphins (pictured right) is a polar dial
on the south side of the Maritime Museum between the cafe
and the children's playground. The shadow of the gap
between the tails gives the time to within one minute. It
was made for the Queen's Silver Jubilee in 1977 The Millennium Sundial
is by the boating lake. It should have been on the
meridian but is some 2 metres off due to incorrect
information being supplied. The diallist is unhappy about
this as it makes the sundial incorrect by about 8 minutes
but it is difficult to see how it could be rectified. |
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Seven Dials in Covent Garden was laid out by Thomas Neale in 1694-1714 as a respectable residential suburb. Seven streets radiated from a central polygonal space featuring a Doric column with 6 dials. As the area became less fashionable houses were converted into shops, lodgings and factories, many with immigrant workers. The column was removed in 1773 and re-erected at Weybridge, Surrey in 1882. The replica replacement was put up in 1989. Covent Garden walk
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The building at the east end of Fournier Street in Spitalfields has been a place of worship for Huguenot refugees, Methodists & Jews and is now a mosque. The date of 1743 can be seen on the sundial with the latin message 'umbra sumus' - we are shadow.
Spitalfields walkTo celebrate the millennium two polar dials were set up on the Thames path by the Royal Engineers and Tylers & Bricklayers Company. One is outside the City of London School and the other is on the east side of the Greenwich Peninsula. Designed by Piers Nicholson they are mounted on plinths of 2000 engineering bricks. Roman numerals denote winter time and Arabic numerals summer time.
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There is a large sundial on a mound outside Tower Hill tube station. Constructed in bronze and stone in 1990 it depicts the history of London Transport 1066-1982. Can you spot Margaret Thatcher and why does she feature in 1381?
Aldgate, London Wall and Shadwell & Wapping walksThere is another large dial at St Katherine's Dock on the riverside by the Tower Thistle Hotel. The stainless steel ring supported by chain link cables was designed by Wendy Taylor in 1973.
Shadwell & Wapping walkThe extravagant Burdett-Coutts memorial sundial in St Pancras Gardens around the old church has recently been restored.
There is a wall dial in the outdoor section of the Museum of Garden History housed in the old church of St Mary's Lambeth. Lambeth & Kennington walks
The sundial on the tower of Chelsea Old Church is dated 1692 but was remade in 1957 following WWII bomb damage. Chelsea walk
The Argos store on Wimbledon Hill Road has a mural sundial designed by Christopher St J Daniel in 1996.
Wimbledon walkThere are matching dials on the Cheapside and Milk Street faces of the building occupied by O2.
A vertical declining noon mark and mean time dial has been carved onto one of the new buildings of Paternoster Square.
Sundials can also be found at Cleaves Almshouses (Kingston-upon-Thames), the grounds of Chiswick House (south of the Italian Garden), Whitehall (Cheam) Geraldine Mary Harmsworth Park, Redcross Street Gardens (Southwark) Brockwell Park walled garden and Ravenscourt Park.
On Hilly Fields SE4 you can be a gnomon! By standing on the current month as marked out your shadow is cast on or between one of twelve stones placed in a circle. There is a similar sundial in Charlotte Turner Park in Deptford.
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HORNIMAN'S GARDENS in Forest Hill also
have a 'human' sundial. This dial by Barry Small can be
found by following the Horniman Drive exit from the
centre of the park. A butterfly by Edwin Russell is to
the right of the main entrance path to the museum. A
double polar dial (pictured left) by John Moir &
Richard Klose is on the left of the path to the
conservatory which has a window dial by Roselyn Loftin (pictured
right). There is a Roman dial by David Brown on the
raised bed in this area plus a Tea-time dial by John Moir
& David Young on the adjacent wall. There are ten
sundials altogether. The Horniman Trail is available online [click here] or a leaflet can be obtained at the museum information desk. See also www.foresthill.org.uk/sundials.html |
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For details of a sundial trail along the
Thames [click here] There is also a City sundial trail which includes dials in the Inns of Court and city churches such as St Sepulchre, St Clement Danes, St Katherine Cree and St Dunstans-in-the-East [click here] |
Resources
Sundials a book by Christopher St J Daniel is published by Shire
ISBN 0-7478-0558-X
Find out more about sundials on the British Sundial Society
website [click here]
© london-footprints.co.uk 2006