AudaTours logoAudaTours

Stop 11 of 15

Dickens and Little Nell

headphones 02:33 Buy tour to unlock all 17 tracks
Dickens and Little Nell

Right in front of you, you’ll see a bronze sculpture of a thoughtful man seated on a high chair with a young girl standing below him, both brought to life on a granite pedestal in the shade of Clark Park’s big trees-just look for the shimmering metal among the leaves and the words “Dickens” and “Little Nell” engraved at the base.

Welcome to one of Philadelphia’s most curious treasures: the “Dickens and Little Nell” statue! Picture the scene over a century ago-greasy foundry floors, the clamor of sculptor’s tools, and the artist, Francis Edwin Elwell, sweating over molten bronze, investing his heart into two indelible figures: the famous, bearded Charles Dickens and the ever-sad, ever-hopeful Little Nell from his novel The Old Curiosity Shop. This wasn’t just any sculpture: in the late 1800s, it was a crowd favorite, scooping up prestigious gold medals and making newspaper headlines.

Now, here’s the twist-Dickens himself never wanted a statue. In fact, he downright forbade any monuments! He said, "Let my books do the talking, thank you very much." But the Washington Post’s founder, Stilson Hutchins, first wanted one for London. He bailed out, leaving Elwell with his heroic, two-person statue-and nowhere to put it. The statue crossed oceans and time zones, somehow never quite finding a home. First, it sat on display in Philadelphia, then it chugged by steamship to London, where, thanks to Dickens’s ironclad will, not a single Londoner dared to buy it.

So, off it went to the grand Columbian Exposition in Chicago. Picture festive chaos-a sea of people in petticoats and straw boaters-all flocking to see Elwell’s work. The New York Times called it one of the most popular pieces of the fair! And yet, even with all this attention, the statue spent a spell gathering dust in a Philadelphia warehouse until, at last, the Fairmount Park Art Association rescued it, bringing Dickens and Little Nell to Clark Park.

Since 1901, these two have stood here, rain or shine, tree pollen or snowstorm, with Nell’s youthful hope shining against Dickens’s bemused wisdom. Even vandals tried-unsuccessfully!-to silence their story in 1989. Restored and resilient, they still charm passersby nearly hidden in the greenery, their legacy alive every time someone strolls by and wonders, “Why do we remember?” Well, in Philadelphia, sometimes the story is written in bronze!

arrow_back Back to Philadelphia Audio Tour: Echoes of West Philly’s Storied Streets
Loved by travellers

Thousands of tours started.
Plenty of opinions.

4.8 across the App Store and Google Play. Here's a few we keep coming back to.

starstarstarstarstar
This was a solid way to get to know Brighton without feeling like a tourist. The narration had depth and context, but didn't overdo it.
Christoph
Christoph
Brighton Tour
starstarstarstarstar
Started this tour with a croissant in one hand and zero expectations. The app just vibes with you, no pressure, just you, your headphones, and some cool stories.
download Get the app

Pop your headphones in.
Step outside.

Free to download. Tours in every city. Start in 60 seconds — no account, no card.

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play
starstarstarstarstar_half
4.8
AudaTours app icon
headphones
~ 4 min until your first tour starts
public
1,000+ cities worldwide
all_inclusive
AudaTours
Unlimited

Every tour. Every city. One subscription.

3096 tours2272 cities138 countries50+ languages