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Head of 'Dix'

Contributed by Cornwall Museums

THIS OBJECT IS PART OF THE PROJECT 'A HISTORY OF CORNWALL IN 100 OBJECTS'.

CONSTANTINE HERITAGE CENTRE. Harry Phillips, nicknamed Dix after Dixie Dean the footballer, was a granite worker all his life and died recently. Small of stature and with a physique like Popeye, Dix was very pleased to be included in the museum. Whenever he visited he would stand in the door by himself or with a friend and look in a his head with pride.

Annie Mulaly, a local sculptress in clay, wanted to do a series of heads of all the Constantine village notables. In the end she only did this and one other. She captured Dix's chiseled features well - he could only be a granite worker!

Granite was a major industry in Constantine. It was shipped out of Gweek and Penryn for the streets and bridges of London. The most famous local landmark - a granite outcrop called the Tolmen - was destroyed in 1869. The museum is in a new annexe of the Tolmen Centre.

Photo: Bernie Pettersen




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Location

Cornwall, Constantine

Culture
Period
Theme
Size
H:
37cm
W:
38cm
D:
25cm
Colour
Material

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