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Beatrice Figure, 1860, made by Edgar George Papworth Jr., now in the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Edgar George Papworth Jnr (25 June 1832 – 20 January 1927) was an English sculptor, who was popular in the later nineteenth century.

Papworth was born in the Marylebone district of London and came from a family long connected with stonework.[1] His father was the sculptor Edgar George Papworth Senior (1809–66), and his grandfather Thomas Papworth (1773–1814), a stuccoist. His mother, Caroline, was the daughter of the sculptor Edward Hodges Baily.[1]

Papworth, Junior showed more than fifty portrait busts at the Royal Academy between 1852 and 1882.[1][2][3] In 1870, Papworth was chosen to make a statue of the Birmingham industrialist Josiah Mason, but Mason vetoed the proposal, and Papworth was paid 150 guineas in compensation. Eventually, a statue of Mason was created posthumously, by Francis John Williamson.[4] Papworth's work then fell out of fashion, and he was not mentioned in a list of English sculptors compiled in 1901.[1] He died at Bexleyheath, where he had lived since about 1911.[1]

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