Collections •
Lambeth Palace holds Gladstone's diaries. • The
British Library holds the Gladstone Papers, which contains Gladstone's political correspondence and papers. •
Gladstone's Library holds Gladstone's personal collection of books used to found the Library in its Foundation Collection and the Glynne-Gladstone Archive, which contains Gladstone's personal papers and correspondence. They also hold copies of the papers, on
microfilm, related to Gladstone and held by the
British Library and the
National Library of Wales. • The
National Library of Wales holds many pamphlets that were sent to Gladstone during his political career. These pamphlets show the concerns of people from all strands of society and together form a historical resource of the social and economic conditions of mid- to late nineteenth-century Britain. Many of the pamphlets bear the handwriting of Gladstone, which provides direct evidence of Gladstone's interest in various topics. •
Thomas Edison's European agent, Colonel Gouraud, recorded Gladstone's voice several times on
phonograph. A wax cylinder of one of the recordings is held by the BBC Sound Archive. According to H.C.G. Matthew, the voice on the recording has a "slight North Welsh accent".
Statues • A statue of Gladstone stands prominently in the front grounds of the eponymous
Gladstone's Library (formerly known as St. Deiniol's), near the start of Gladstone Way in Hawarden. , London. Note the hands, painted red by activists. • A statue of Gladstone by
Albert Bruce-Joy, erected in 1882, stands near the front gate of
St. Marys Church in
Bow, London. Paid for by the industrialist Theodore Bryant, it is viewed as a symbol of the later
1888 match girls strike, which took place at the nearby
Bryant & May Match Factory. Led by the socialist
Annie Besant, hundreds of women working in the factory, where many sickened and died from poisoning from the
white phosphorus used in the matches, went on strike to demand improved working conditions and pay, eventually winning their cause. In recent years, the statue of Gladstone has been repeatedly daubed with red paint, suggesting that it was paid for with the "blood of the match girls". • A statue of Gladstone in bronze by Sir Thomas Brock, erected in 1904, stands in
St John's Gardens, Liverpool. • The
Gladstone Memorial, erected in 1905, stands at
Aldwych, London, near the
Royal Courts of Justice. • A Grade II listed statue of Gladstone stands in
Albert Square, Manchester. • A monument to Gladstone, Member of Parliament for
Midlothian 1880–1895, was unveiled in
Edinburgh in 1917 (and moved to its present location in 1955). It stands in Atholl Crescent Gardens. The sculptor was
James Pittendrigh MacGillivray. • A statue to Gladstone, who was
Rector of the University of Glasgow 1877–1880, was unveiled in
Glasgow in 1902. It stands in
George Square. The sculptor was Sir
William Hamo Thornycroft. • A bust of Gladstone is in the Hall of Heroes of the
National Wallace Monument in
Stirling. • Near
Hawarden in the town of
Mancot, there is a small hospital named after
Catherine Gladstone. • A statue of Gladstone stands in front of the
Kapodistrian University building in the centre of Athens. • A statue of Gladstone was unveiled in Front Quad at
Glenalmond College in 2010. • A Gladstone memorial was unveiled on 23 February 2013 in
Seaforth, Liverpool, by MP
Frank Field. It is in the grounds of Our Lady Star of the Sea Church facing the former site of St Thomas's Church where Gladstone was educated from 1816 to 1821. The Seaglam (Seaforth Gladstone Memorial) Project, whose chairman is local historian Brenda Murray (
BEM), was started to raise the profile of Seaforth Village by installing a memorial to Gladstone. Funds for the memorial were raised by voluntary effort and the Heritage Lottery Fund provided additional funding. Sculptor
Tom Murphy created the bronze bust. • A statue of Gladstone was unveiled on the Boulevard in
Blackburn, Lancashire on 4 November 1899 by the
Earl of Aberdeen. The statue, sculpted by
John Adams-Acton at a cost of £3,000, bears the inscription "The most brilliant intellect that has been placed at the service of the state since parliamentary government began – Salisbury". It was later moved to Blakey Moor and in 1983 was moved again to Northgate. In 2020, there were calls for the statue to be removed.
Namesakes •
Gladstone Park in the
Municipal Borough of Willesden, London, was named after him in 1899.
Dollis Hill House, within what later became the park, was occupied by
Sir Dudley Coutts Marjoribanks, who subsequently became Lord Tweedmouth. In 1881 Lord Tweedmouth's daughter and her husband,
Lord Aberdeen, took up residence. They often had Gladstone to stay as a guest. In 1897 Lord Aberdeen was appointed
Governor General of Canada and the Aberdeens moved out. When Willesden acquired the house and land in 1899, they named the park Gladstone Park after the old Prime Minister. • Gladstone Rock, a large boulder about 12 ft high in Cwm Llan on the Watkin Path on the south side of
Snowdon where Gladstone made a speech in 1892, was named for him. A plaque on the rock states that he "addressed the people of Eryri upon justice to Wales". •
Gladstone, Oregon;
Gladstone, New Jersey;
Gladstone, Michigan; Gladstone, Missouri; and
Gladstone, New Mexico, in the United States are named for him. The city of
Gladstone, Queensland, Australia, was named after him and has a 19th-century marble statue on display in its town museum. •
Gladstone, Manitoba, was named after him in 1882. • Streets in the cities of Athens,
Sofia (including a school),
Plovdiv,
Varna,
Burgas,
Ruse,
Stara Zagora,
Limassol,
Springs,
Newark-on-Trent,
Waterford City,
Clonmel, Baltimore, MD.,
Brighton,
Bradford,
London (in
Lambeth,
Merton Park and
South Acton),
Scarborough,
Swindon,
Vancouver (including a school),
Windsor,
Ottawa,
Toronto,
Halifax and
Brisbane are named for him. There is also Gladstone Avenue and adjoining Ewart Road in his hometown of Liverpool in a part of the city where he was a landowner. • There is an imposing 'Arts and Crafts' pub in
Dulwich Hill, a suburb of
Sydney, Australia, named for him on the corner of Marrickville Road and New Canterbury Road; also a street is named for him in Dulwich Hill (Ewart Street) which crosses into the adjoining suburb of Marrickville. On Ewart Street there is a mansion called 'Gladstone Hall' built in 1870 by William Starkey, founder of Starkey's Ginger Beer and cordial factory in 1838 which became the largest of its type in the southern hemisphere for some time. Gladstone Park is in the Sydney suburb of
Balmain. The Lord Gladstone Hotel is on the corner of Meagher and Regent Street in
Chippendale, Sydney. • At the
University of Liverpool, there is Gladstone Hall of Residence, and the
Gladstone Professor of Greek. • The
Gladstone bag, a light travelling bag, is named after him. • The Gladstone Theatre is in Port Sunlight, Wirral, across the Mersey from Liverpool, where Gladstone was born. • The
London, Brighton and South Coast Railway B1 Class steam locomotives were known as the "Gladstones", after the first member of its class. ==Gallery==