The Chatham Vase, a stone sculpture commissioned as a memorial to William Pitt the Elder by his wife, Hester, Countess of Chatham, was originally erected at their house in Burton Pynsent in 1781; but it was moved to the grounds of Chevening House in 1934, where it currently resides.
It was subsequently moved to Stowe House but sold in 1848, then purchased in 1857 by a member of the family and installed at Revesby Abbey.
Chatham | Chatham Islands | William Pitt, 1st Earl of Chatham | Chatham, Kent | Chatham House | Rhys Chatham | London, Chatham and Dover Railway | FA Vase | Chatham, New Brunswick | vase | Chatham, New Jersey | Chatham Dockyard | Chatham County, North Carolina | Chatham County | HMS Chatham | Chatham, Virginia | Chatham, Massachusetts | Chatham Island (Chile) | Chatham Head, New Brunswick | Chatham Head | John Pitt, 2nd Earl of Chatham | Earl of Chatham | Chatham—Kent | Chatham Island | Woodlawn Vase | The narrator declares that Marcas is "semblable à Pitt, qui s'était donné l'Angleterre pour femme" ("like William Pitt, 1st Earl of Chatham | The "Harvesters vase" from Hagia triada | HMS Chatham (F87) | HMS ''Chatham'' | Edward Allington's sculpture "Tilted Vase" in the centre of Ramsbottom |