Nipper, a 28-foot-tall dog statue's future in Albany is up in the air

The residents of Albany have a special fondness for their colossal canine sculpture.

The statue in question is Nipper, a towering 28-foot white dog with distinctive black ears, which has been perched prominently on top of a warehouse for nearly 70 years. This iconic figure is a nod to the famed image of a terrier listening to a phonograph, once a symbol of the electronics and communications giant RCA.

Over the years, Nipper has become a cherished emblem for the community in this Hudson River city. Families make it a point to show their children the statue as they drive by on the highway. The endearing image of Nipper, with his head tilted in curiosity, graces local memorabilia, including key chains, baseball caps, and hoodies.

“When Nipper comes to mind, I immediately think of Albany, and vice versa,” remarked Cody Hitt, who was enjoying a night out with friends at a nearby bar.

However, the pride associated with Nipper is now mingled with worry about the statue’s fate.

Following a protracted legal battle, the four-story warehouse that serves as Nipper’s perch has been tagged with a red sign marked with a white slash. This is a cautionary alert for firefighters and emergency responders to exercise vigilance when entering the building.

“It’s definitely not a good thing for Nipper. He is attached to that building, so if something happens to it, it’s going to be kind of hard to take him off,” said Cara Macri, director of preservation services for the Historic Albany Foundation.

The history of Nipper

The flesh-and-blood Nipper lived in late 19th-century England and earned his name after trying to bite people’s ankles.

His owner’s brother, Francis Barraud, immortalized the dog posthumously in the painting “His Master’s Voice,” which shows Nipper intrigued by the recorded sound coming from a phonograph horn.

The Gramophone Company in London purchased a version of the image in 1899 and it was registered soon after for use in the United States. The “His Master’s Voice” trademark was acquired in 1929 by the company that became RCA.

Albany’s Nipper, with a composite body over a steel frame, was placed by a crane atop the building in the late 1950s to advertise the location of an RCA appliance distributor.

There were many Nipper statues made during his heyday, including a 1958 Nipper statue now at the Maryland Center for History and Culture in Baltimore that’s 14 feet high and paired with a larger-than-life phonograph.

But Albany’s is bigger.

It stands out in a skyline otherwise notable for a modernist state government complex adjacent to the state Capitol, which features a 44-story office tower and theater shaped like a giant egg.

The beloved dog appears on socks, caps, stickers and shot glasses for sale downtown at the Fort Orange General Store, where store owner Erica Cubello said the items are bestsellers.

“He is kind of like our unofficial mascot here at Fort Orange, as well as the city of Albany,” said Cubello, who was wearing a Nipper hoodie.

The dog statue in Albany

Nipper still looks fresh after all these years. But the building below him has sat unused for at least a decade, with paint chipped off the front exterior.

Nothing ever became of plans announced a decade ago to develop apartments and retail space in the newly purchased building. Foreclosure litigation has been going on for years and city tax documents show an attorney acting as a receiver.

Lawyers involved in the litigation didn’t immediately respond to calls for comment.

By 2024, the Historic Albany Foundation put the building on its list of places in peril. In March, the city put the red-and-white caution placard up on the building’s entrance. Times-Union columnist Chris Churchill soon after sounded the alarm in a piece headlined: “Nipper has our love, but needs more protection.”

Albany Mayor Dorcey Applyrs’ office said she is working to add Nipper to the city’s list of historic landmarks, which could help protect the dog and the building from damaging changes.

Separately, a state board last month nominated the warehouse district that includes Nipper’s building for state and national historic registers.

That would make the building eligible for state and federal historic preservation tax credits.

There is no serious talk of moving Nipper from his forever home, which would be logistically challenging and expensive.

Besides, where would the roughly four-ton statue go?

“There’s a whole redevelopment downtown. You could put him there. You could put him on the riverfront,” Macri said. “But he’s a big dog.”

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