From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sir George Gilbert Scott (13 July 1811 – 27
March 1878) was an English
architect of the Victorian Age, chiefly associated with the
design, building and renovation of churches, cathedrals and workhouses.
Born in Gawcott, Buckingham, Buckinghamshire, Scott was the son of a
clergyman and grandson of the biblical commentator Thomas Scott. He studied
architecture as a pupil of James Edmeston and, from 1832 to 1834,
worked as an assistant to Henry Roberts. He also worked
as an assistant for his friend Sampson Kempthorne. [1]
In about 1835, Scott took on William Bonython Moffatt as
his assistant and later (1838-1845) as partner. Over the next 10
years Scott and Moffatt designed over 40 workhouses. A notable example was the Akroydon model housing
scheme.
Meanwhile, he was inspired by Augustus Pugin to
join the Gothic revival of the Victorian era, his
first notable works in this style being the Martyrs'
Memorial on St Giles', Oxford (1841) and the new St Giles, Camberwell
with its fine octagonal spire (1844). Later, Scott went beyond
copying mediaeval English gothic for his Victorian Gothic
or Gothic Revival buildings, and began to introduce
features from other styles and European countries as evidenced in
his glorious Midland red-brick construction, the 'Midland Grand
Hotel' at London's St Pancras Station, from which approach Scott
believed a new style might emerge.
Between 1864 and 1876, the Albert Memorial, designed by Scott, was
constructed in Hyde Park. It was a commission on
behalf of Queen Victoria in memory of her beloved
husband, Prince Albert.
Scott was awarded the RIBA's Royal Gold
Medal in 1859. Knighted in 1872, he died in 1878 and was buried
in Westminster Abbey.
He married Caroline Oldrid of Boston in 1838. Two of his sons George Gilbert Scott, Jr. and
John Oldrid
Scott, and his grandson Giles Gilbert Scott, were also
prominent architects. He was also related to the architect Elisabeth
Scott.
Books
- Remarks on secular & domestic architecture, present
& future, John
Murray, 1857. Google books
- Recollections (London, 1879)
Designs
His projects include:
- workhouses in Brackley, Kettering, Northampton, Oundle and Towcester (all in Northamptonshire), Billericay and Dunmow (Essex), Windsor (Berkshire), Boston
(Lincolnshire), Amersham and Buckingham (Buckinghamshire), Williton (Somerset), Guildford (Surrey), Penzance and Redruth (Cornwall).
- Towcester Union Workhouse
(1836)
- St Mary, Hanwell, London
W7 (1841). [1]
- St Giles', Camberwell (1841-44)
- Holy Trinity Church, Hartshill, Stoke on Trent (1842)
- St. John the Baptist
Church, Beeston, Nottinghamshire (1842)
- Workers Houses, Hartshill, Stoke on Trent (1842-48)
- St Mark's Church, Worsley,
Greater Manchester (1844-6)
- The
Cathedral of St John the Baptist in St John's, Newfoundland (1847)
- Astbury School and Masters House Congleton (1848)
- School and Masters House,Hartshill, Stoke on Trent (1848)
- Brighton
College, Sussex (1848-1866)
- Emmanuel Church, Forest Gate, London (1852)
- St John's Church, Eastnor, Herefordshire Church
(1852) and Monument (1855).[2]
- All Saints Church, Sherbourne, Warwick (1854)
- Holy Trinity Church,
Coventry 1854
- St Peter, Bushley,
Worcestershire. Roof (1856).[3]
- St Mary, Tedstone Delamere, Herefordshire
Chancel (1856-7).[4]
- Lanhydrock House, near Bodmin, Cornwall (1857), formal gardens assisted by Richard Coad
- St
George's Minster, Doncaster (1858)
- St Matthias Church,
Richmond, London, 1858
- Walton Hall, Warwickshire
(1858)
- All Souls church, Haley Hill, Halifax (1859)
- St. Thomas's Church,
Huddersfield (1859)
- Workers' housing at Akroydon, Halifax (1859)
- St Matthew's Church,
Stretton, Cheshire, 1859 and 1867
- St Matthew's Church. Yiewsley, Hillingdon, 1859
- St Mary, Edvin
Loach, Herefordshire (?1860).[5]
- St Stephen's Church, Higham Green, Suffolk (1861)
- Hafodunos, Llangernyw, North Wales
(1861-1866)
- Foreign and Commonwealth
Office, Whitehall,
London (1861-1868)
- the Albert
Memorial, London (1862); in the podium frieze, one of the
images of architects, sculpted by John Birnie Philip shows Scott
himself.
- The Hereford
Screen, (1862), choir screen from Hereford Catheral, now
restored and in the Victoria and Albert Museum
- St Peter and St Paul, Buckingham Parish Church Buckingham, Buckinghamshire. Additions to the
original 1777 church including chancel, buttresses, porch, roof
and nave alterations (1862-1878).
Work continued over the years by his second son John Oldrid
Scott and grandson Charles Marriott Oldrid Scott. [6]
- two lodge houses at Great Barr Hall, near Birmingham
(pre-1863)
- Old Schools, Cambridge (1864–67)
- St Mary's Church, Shackleford, Surrey (1865)
- St Pancras Station, London (1865)
- Clifton Hampden Bridge,
Oxfordshire (1867)
- St Denys Church, Southampton (1868)
- St James' Church, Cradley, Herefordshire
Chancel (1868)[7]
- the main building of the new campus of the University of Glasgow (1870),
often called the "Gilbert Scott Building" in his honour.
- All Saints church, Ryde, Isle of Wight
(1872)
- St. Thomas of Canterbury Church, Chester
(1872)
- St Peter and St Paul, Priory Church Leominster, Herefordshire Quatrefoil piers
(1872-9).[8]
- The Cathedral Church of St
Mary the Virgin, Glasgow (1873)
- St
Nikolai, Hamburg, the tallest building in the world from 1874
to 1876.
- Christ Church,
Bradford-on-Avon (additions) (1875)
- The Clarkson Memorial in Wisbech. Scott first put
forward designs in 1875, but work did not start until 1880. The
eventual design was a slightly altered version of Scott's original
design.
- All Souls, Blackman Lane, Leeds (1879) - his last work, large
lancet-style church
- St Mary The Virgin, Speldhurst Kent 1879
- St. Michael and St.
George Cathedral, Grahamstown (tower and spire completed in
1879)
- St Paul's Church, Fulney, Spalding, Lincolnshire
(completed building 1880)[9]
- Christ Church Cathedral, Christchurch, New
Zealand
- Exeter
College Chapel, Oxford
- Hall
Cross School's library in Doncaster
- Leeds General Infirmary
- St John The Baptist Church, Busbridge, Godalming, Surrey
- St Mary's
Cathedral, Edinburgh (Episcopal)
- St Mary's Church, Mirfield, West Yorkshire
- St Mary, Timsbury, Somerset[10]
- St Michael, Stourport-on-Severn, Worcestershire
designed (1875) started (1881) by son John Oldrid Scott, never finished and
partly demolished.[11]
- McManus
Galleries - Formerly the Albert Institute, Dundee
- St Nicholas's, Newport, Lincoln, Lincolnshire.
- St Peter's Church, Elworth, Cheshire.
- Sandbach
School, Sandbach, Cheshire.
Restorations
Scott was involved in major restorations of medieval church
architecture.
- St.
Mary's Church, Temple Balsall 1849
- St Mary's Church,
Nottingham (1850s)
- Church of St Editha,
Tamworth 1850s
- Church of St.
Mary Magdalene, Newark-on-Trent (1850s)
- Tower of Durham Cathedral (1854–1859)
- St John the Baptist Church, Aconbury, Herefordshire Restoration (1863)[12]
- St John the Baptist Church, Bromsgrove, Worcestershire Restoration of Norman
and 13th century church (1858)[13]
- St John the Baptist Church, Upton Bishop, Herefordshire Restoration (1862)[14]
- St Leonard, Yarpole, Herefordshire
Restoration of chancel(1864)[15]
- St Mary's Island church on the Orchardleigh Estate (1878) [16]
- St
Peter's Church, Prestbury (1879-1881)
- St Andrews Parish Church, Spratton,Northamptonshire
- Church of St Mary the
Less, Cambridge
- Priory
Church of St. Mary, Bridlington
Cathedrals include:
Plus Bath Abbey, Pershore Abbey,
Great
Malvern Priory, St Margaret's, Westminster,
St Mary's of Charity in Faversham, which was restored (and
transformed, with an unusual spire and unexpected interior) by
Scott in 1874, and Dundee Parish Church (St
Mary's), and designed the chapels of Exeter College, Oxford, St John's College,
Cambridge and King's College London. He also
designed St Paul’s
Cathedral, Dundee. Lichfield Cathedral's ornate West
Front was extensively renovated by Scott from 1855 - 1878. He
restored the Cathedral
to the form he believed it took in the Middle Ages, working with original
materials where possible and creating imitations when the originals
were not available. It is recognised as some of his finest
work.
References
- ^
'Hanwell:Churches', A History of
the County of Middlesex: Volume 3: Shepperton, Staines, Stanwell,
Sunbury, Teddington, Heston and Isleworth, Twickenham, Cowley,
Cranford, West Drayton, Greenford, Hanwell, Harefield and
Harlington (1962), pp. 230-33. Date accessed: 21 July 2007.
- ^
The Buildings of England: Herefordshire, Nikolaus Pevsner,
1963 p122-123 ISBN 0-14-071025-6
- ^
The Buildings of England: Worcestershire, Nikolaus
Pevsner, 1968 p113
- ^
The Buildings of England: Herefordshire, Nikolaus Pevsner,
1963 p299 ISBN 0-14-071025-6
- ^
The Buildings of England: Herefordshire, Nikolaus Pevsner,
1963 p126 ISBN 0-14-071025-6
- ^
The Book of Buckingham, John Clarke, 1984, p145 ISBN
0-86-023072-4
- ^
The Buildings of England: Herefordshire, Nikolaus Pevsner,
1963 p106 ISBN 0-14-071025-6
- ^
The Buildings of England: Herefordshire, Nikolaus Pevsner,
1963 p226 ISBN 0-14-071025-6
- ^
visit Ayscoughfee Hall museum, Spalding for
further information
- ^
"Church of St. Mary the
Virgin". Images of England. http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/details/default.aspx?id=32876. Retrieved
2007-09-29.
- ^
The Buildings of England: Worcestershire, Nikolaus
Pevsner, 1968 p271
- ^
The Buildings of England: Herefordshire, Nikolaus Pevsner,
1963 p63 ISBN 0-14-071025-6
- ^
The Buildings of England: Worcestershire, Nikolaus
Pevsner, 1968 p109
- ^
The Buildings of England: Herefordshire, Nikolaus Pevsner,
1963 p304 ISBN 0-14-071025-6
- ^
The Buildings of England: Herefordshire, Nikolaus Pevsner,
1963 p327 ISBN 0-14-071025-6
- ^
"Church of St. Mary, causeway
bridge, and gates". Images of England. http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/details/default.aspx?id=267143. Retrieved
2007-11-20.
- ^
The Buildings of England: Herefordshire, Nikolaus Pevsner,
1963 p146 ISBN 0-14-071025-6
External
links