
Indeed she is (in fact, she's handily standing on a name label) - some twenty years younger than her Holborn counterpart. Unlike big sister, she carries not the mirror of self-knowledge but a snake symbolising wisdom. In the other hand is a large book: presumably an insurance ledger! Interestingly, the company's logo has always featured Prudence with a mirror, making Lewisham's version something of a departure from the company norm.
By the time Prudential Buildings opened, the Pru was Britain's largest life assurance company, insuring a third of the population. Founded in 1848 in Hatton Gardens, it had begun selling 'penny policies' to the working classes in 1854: agents ('the man from the Pru') would call door-to-door, collecting payments. It was also the first City company to employ female clerks, from 1871. Today, Prudential is a huge international business with a wide range of products including the internet bank egg.
Further reading: Prudential Assurance at Ornamental Passions.
2 comments:
Lovely. I must have passed this lots of times when I lived in SE London and not noticed it.
Prudence normally carries not a book but a mirror (because you should 'know yourself' as the old proverb says) and the serpent, which is a symbol of wisdom. She also sometimes has a sieve, to sort out false arguments or sort the good from the bad, and sometimes had two faces, so she can look two ways at once. The book could be a symbol of wisdom like the snake, but, yes, it's just as likely to be an insurance ledger.
"Prudence - the ability to see oneself as one truly is" - hence the mirror.
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