Patric Park

Patric Park (born 12 February 1811, Glasgow; died 16 August 1855, Warrington[1]) was a Scottish sculptor.

[1] With Cornell, when aged only 16, Park was entrusted to carve the family coat of arms over the entrance of Hamilton Palace.

[2] His subjects included the miniaturist Kenneth Macleay (1802–78), who in turn made a posthumous portrait of Park, from a photograph, shown above.

He died suddenly at Warrington Railway Station, when he ruptured a blood vessel helping a porter with a heavy trunk.

[1] Two of his busts, depicting Admiral Thomas Cochrane, 10th Earl of Dundonald, and Sir James Young Simpson, discoverer of chloroform, are in the Scottish National Portrait Gallery.

Charles Tennant's tomb
Sir John Watson Gordon by Patric Park 1852
A Scotch Lassie by Patric Park, 1856