FORD, EDWARD ONSLOW (1852-1901), British sculp tor, was born at Islington on July 27, 1852. He was educated at Blackheath, and studied art at Antwerp, and at Munich, where he married in 1873, Anne Gwendolen, daughter of Baron Frans von Kreuzer. About 1874 Ford returned to Blackheath, and attracted attention in the Academy by a bust of his wife. His more impor tant works include the statue of Rowland Hill at the Royal Ex change (1881) ; "Irving as Hamlet" (1883, in the Guildhall art gallery) ; "Gordon" (1890, examples at Chatham and Khartoum) ; the Shelley memorial in University college Oxford (1892), the equestrian statue of Lord Strathnairn at Knightsbridge (1895) and the memorial to Queen Victoria at Manchester 0900. Among the many busts which he modelled may be mentioned Millais, Huxley, Herbert Spencer, the duke of Norfolk, Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema, and Sir Walter Armstrong. His bronze statuettes became known by his permitting publication of small replicas. The most successful were "Folly" (now in the Tate gallery), "The Singer," "Applause," "Peace" and "Echo." Ford was elected A.R.A. in 1888 and R.A. in 1895. He died in London on Dec. 23, 1901.