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Calne
Wiltshire South West England Church Street |
Oxygen - Joseph Priestley Pavement DisplayBirstall, Yorkshire 1733 - Northumberland County, Pennsylvania 1804English Separatist theologian, natural philosopher, chemist, innovative grammarian, multi-subject educator, and liberal political theorist; historically been credited with the discovery of oxygen (Wikipedia) |
Various sculptors
s.d. |
Several round stones with reliefs in a geometric mosaic of brickwork. In the centre is a bronze relief of the symbol of the element Oxygen with a portrait of Joseph Priestley, circumscribed oxygen symbol - 1733 1804 - joseph priestley. Priestley lived from 1733-80 in Calne.
Close around this central piece are six circular stones with low reliefs, of a fish, a ship, flowers, fire, a rooster and a tree.
![]() Ship |
![]() Flowers |
![]() Fire |
![]() Rooster |
![]() Tree |
![]() Fish |
![]() Sulphur |
![]() Copper |
![]() Magnesia |
![]() Silver |
![]() Mercury |
![]() Platina |
![]() Lime |
![]() Gold |
![]() Potash |
![]() Lead |
![]() Phosphorus |
![]() Zinc |
![]() lobster, married bliss and harmony |
![]() butterfly, symbol of the soul & psyche |
![]() magpie, symbol of joy |
![]() owl, symbol of wisdom |
![]() doves, love, peace and concord |
![]() carp, koi symbol of perseverance |
![]() pheasant, health, beauty, good fortune |
Dr. Joseph Priestley This featured paving celebrates the life of Dr. Joseph Priestley LLD, FRS (1733 - 1804) who discovered oxygen - in August 1774, at Bowood House. Here he was employed by Lord Shelburne (later First Marquis of Lansdowne) as librarian and tutor to his sons and provided with a laboratory. Priestley was also very interested in which gases would dissolve in water and often visited the River Marden in Calne - at so-called 'Doctor's Pond' near his home on The Green and not far from this spot. The bronze head of Priestley is encircled by the symbol for oxygen and this in turn by six brass motifs of all that depends on this gas - air, fire, fresh water, plants, fish and land animals. The mosaic therefore illustrates the importance of oxygen, which gives the 'breath of life' to all living things. The remaining motifs are symbols of the other elements discovered by Priesley and his contemporaries. Design and execution of the mosaic was undertaken by David Reeves, Chris Fixsen and Vivien ap Rhys Price, members of the Calne Artists' Group |
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