William Congreve

William Congreve, dramatist, has a memorial near his grave in the south aisle of the nave of Westminster Abbey. The marble monument is by sculptor Francis Bird and consists of a sarcophagus with various scattered books, theatrical masks etc. with a large oval medallion in a black marble frame containing a half length portrait of Congreve, based on Sir Godfrey Kneller's painting of him. The inscription reads:

Mr WILLIAM CONGREVE, dyed Jan ye 19th 1728 aged 56 and was buried near this place. To whose most valueable memory this monument is sett up by HENRIETTA, Dutchess of MARLBOROUGH as a mark of how dearly she remembers the happiness and honour she enjoyed in the sincere friendshipp of so worthy and honest a man, whose virtue, candour and wit gained him the love and esteem of the present age and whose writings will be the admiration of the future.

The date is given in Old Style dating, now called 1729. Horace Walpole wrote of the erection of the monument:

When the younger Duchess exposed herself by placing a monument and silly epitaph of her own composing and bad spelling to Congreve...her mother, quoting the words, said 'I know not what pleasure she might have had in his company but I am sure it was no honour'.

He was born in Yorkshire in January 1670, a son of William (died 1708) and his wife Mary (Bright). The family moved to London and then to Ireland where Congreve senior managed the estates of Richard Boyle, Earl of Cork. He was educated at Kilkenny College and Trinity College Dublin. Moving back to London he studied law and had already started writing. His play The Old Batchelor opened in 1693. He was unmarried but had alliances with actress Anne Bracegirdle (who is buried in the Abbey cloisters) and Henrietta Godolphin, later 2nd Duchess of Marlborough. His most successful plays were probably Love for Love, The Mourning Bride and The Way of the World. In September 1728 he had an accident when his coach overturned and he may have died from an injury sustained at this time. He left his fortune to Henrietta and she arranged his funeral. His body lay overnight in Jerusalem Chamber, part of the Deanery.

Further reading

Oxford Dictionary of National Biography

Died

19th January 1729

Occupation

Writer; playwright

Location

Nave

Memorial Type

Grave; tablet

Material Type

Marble

William Congreve
William Congreve studio of Sir Godfrey Kneller, Bt

© National Portrait Gallery, London [Creative Commons CC BY-NC-ND 3.0]

William Congreve
William Congreve monument

This image can be purchased from Westminster Abbey Library

Image © 2024 Dean and Chapter of Westminster