Wiltshire architects abington, L. J. ?not an architect



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1864 builders rest Cricklade ch, Ewan Christian archt; Pedley & Son contrs; opened DWG 29.12.64;
PEI, IEOH MING Architect

2000 summerhouse, Oare House, Oare with Nigel Keen of DRA Architects; for Henry Keswick; HGW; completed 2004?


PENCIL & INK Architects, London set up 2012 by Dale Jennings and Sarah Burley formerly of ORMS qv;

2012ff continued Wadswick Green, Corsham retirement village begun by Orms from 2009; Dale Jennings architect; site work began 2014 Phase I complete 2015; Phase 2 began 2016;


PENISTON, HENRY Architect. De Vaux Lodge, Salisbury; 1867 dir; 1832-1911 son of John Michael Peniston 1807-58, grandson of John Peniston c1778-1848, all county Surveyors; resigned over criticism about his handling of additions to County Asylum and the militia cottages DWG 28.1.69; WAM 80 1986;

1858 Police Station, Devizes Rd, Salisbury BN 1858 170; WBR;

1858 cottages, Lushill, ?Castle Eaton, plans WSHC 451/86 for row of four 'adapted from Jn Rigden's model plans';

1860 Militia Stores, ?Swindon; SA 10.4.65 refers to architect's bill, also houses for sergeants;

1863 advert for tenders for gas fittings for new buildings at County Asylum, Devizes, DWG 26.2.63

1866 'additions at Charlton' for Mr Read; WSHC 451/87; also undated plan 451/88 for house and offices ?at Charlton House, Donhead St Mary;

1870 to let No 6 De Vaux Place, Salisbury, apply Mr Peniston SWJ 25.6.70; terrace built c1830 by John Peniston qv;
PENISTON, JOHN Salisbury. c1778-1848. County Surveyor, Wilts, 1822, son of Thomas Peniston bricklayer who worked on New Wardour Castle in 1770s; son was John Michael Peniston 1807-58, grandson Henry Peniston 1832-1911, successive County Surveyors; WBR; HC; was a Roman Catholic, buried at St Osmund RC, Salisbury, almost the first burial there; digest of only 1823-30 part of huge collection of 7000 letters, published by WRS 1996; WAM 80 article by M Cowan stresses his role as RSM and adjutant in the Wiltshire Militia, says that he worked for Lord Palmerston at Broadlands, Hants, and Lord Nelson at Trafalgar House, there installing lavatories;

c1810 reblt No 27 The Close, Salisbury, Wilts; WBR2

1823 Parsonage, Poulshot, D1/11/41 plans for alts refronting W front in brick; now Old Rectory; altered again 1875 by H Weaver qv;

1824 proposed repairs to iron bridge at Bulford, correspondence with Coalbrookdale Company, masonry by Thomas Strong supplanted ?by Beavis of Tisbury; Peniston letters 24

1824 repairs Mrs Moore house, The Close, Saliabury; Peniston letters 34; £285;

1824 work on portico, Council house, Salisbury; Peniston letters 71;

1825 alts Rowdeford House, for Wadham Locke, John White bldr; WBR; has sent two sets of plans to Mr W Locke for comparison Peniston letters 238; WRS; Rowdeford House was sold to Wadham Locke c1808 and rebult in 1812 acc to VCH; up to 1808 had been seat of Thomas Wyatt +1820; his son Matthew Wyatt +1831 magistrate in Ireland to 1818 and father of architects TH and MD Wyatt, MD Wyatt said to have been born there in 1820 but house in 1820 owned by Locke;

1828 delapidations report on Aula-le-stage, The Close, Salisbury, one of the canonry houses, before Rev WL Bowles moved in; WL Bowles biography;

1828-9 rebuilt Clarendon House for Sir William Freemantle; Peniston letters; S front finished 3.5.29;

(1829 RC chapel, Spetisbury, Dorset; dem 1967; McLaughlin Ross report on Cannington Court 2012;

1829 plans toll-house, Fisherton Anger, Salisbury, Wilts; not used; WBR2;

1829 work at parsonage, Tytherley for Rev A Bouverie; Peniston letters; dilapidations report and also report on work on chancel;

(1829-31 RC chapel of the Holy Name, Cannington Court, Cannington, Som; HC; RL, octagonal domed and E range with E window of chapel; house of the Clifford family was leased to Benedictine nuns and chapel was also parish church for area; dedicated by Bishop Baines 7.7.31; contractor – Haggar, plasterwork by – Padden; MacLaughlin Ross report on house 2012; opened DWG 14.7.31, altar of English and Irish marbles with foreign marble inserts given by Bp Baines;

(1830 alts Upton House, nr Poole, Dorset; HC; Early C19 villa with E wing and chapel added after 1834 in cottage style, no archt named, BoE;

c1830 De Vaux Place, Salisbury; terrace of six, JP moved into No 1;

(1831 alts E wing Prior Park, Bath, Som; MF; with son George (?error for JMP); for RC college est by Bishop Baines, added 2nd floor centre with pediment incl a tympanum from Hunstrete House; SNB;

1832 St James ch, Devizes, Wilts; HC; ICBS, JP examined church in Oct 1831 along with Mr Goodridge of Bath, had already been examined in July 1831 by – Plank builder and - Harrison mason both of Devizes; final plans by JP;

(1834-5 RC chapel, St Ursula’s High School, Brecon Rd, Bristol; ?for RC convent; SNB;

(1835 Yew Tree House, South St, Wincanton, Som, for E Yalden Cooper; HC; RL; George Cooper of Yewtrees, South St, in 1906 Kelly; now called St Audrey’s. Burnt 1836 and rebuilt, PB;

1841-2 Dilton Court, Dilton Marsh, Wilts, with GP Manners qv; D Aust qv builder; WBR; for Phipps family of Chalcot House; looks like a Manners design;

1845 Mr Peniston named as resident engineer for WS&W railway section from Frome to Weymouth, while Mr Ward qv engineer for Thingley Junction to Salisbury and branches to Frome and Radstock, all under IK Brunel. But RJ Ward may have done Frome to Weymouth also as present at opening of Yeovil-Weymouth in 1857; www.freshford.com
PENISTON, JOHN MICHAEL The Close, Salisbury, architect, 1807-58; County Surveyor, City Architect, son of John Peniston qv +1848; father of Henry Peniston 1832-1911; WAM 80 article on family and connection with Wiltshire Militia, he died after a dinner on manoeuvres 'in the arms of Earl Nelson'; lived at No 2 De Vaux Place, Salisbury 1841 then No 1 1846, his father's house;

1853 eighteen modern cottages, Peniston Court, Culver St, Salisbury; WAM 80;

1854 Police Station, Stallard St, Trowbridge, Wilts, dem for Holloway House c1926; WBR2; Rogers contr; TWA ?.5.54;

1857 Police Stations, Chippenham & Warminster; Mr Peniston County Surveyor; BN 1857 342; ?where; was the Chippenham one part of No 10 Market Place?;

1860 Militia Stores, ?Swindon; SA 10.4.65 refers to architect's bill, also houses for sergeants; presumably by Henry Peniston;
PENISTON, WILLIAM MICHAEL Engineer born Salisbury c1815, trained with Timothy Bramah, assistant engineer on Bristol & Exeter, resident engineer for Bristol to Bridgwater section, and later for Wilts Somerset & Weymouth railway; then on railways in Brazil and Natal, died in Pietermaritzburg c1869;

(1845 Mr Peniston named as resident engineer for WS&W railway section from Frome to Weymouth, while Mr Ward qv engineer for Thingley Junction to Salisbury and branches to Frome and Radstock, all under IK Brunel. Ward may have done Frome to Weymouth also as he was present at opening of Yeovil-Weymouth in 1857; www.freshford.com)


PENNING, WILLIAM H. Architect & surveyor, Pewsey; Advert DWG 25.6.1863 re house to let, Pewsey;

1862 built stations on Berks & Hants Extension Railway from Hungerford to Devizes, designed by R.J. Ward the engineer to the line, at Great Bedwyn, Savernake, Pewsey and Woodborough; The Marlborough Branch; line opened 4.11.62, for passengers 11.11.62; only Pewsey station remains;

1862 Gas works, Pewsey; DWG 15.5.62; architect and surveyor of new gasworks proposed;

1863 contractor proposed alts Calne ch by W Slater qv DWG 3.9.63; £2800;


PENTAGRAM DESIGN PARTNERSHIP see Theo Cosby
PEPPER, R.J.T Borough Architect Thamesdown BC qv; Bob Pepper;
PERCEY, TED Architect with Scherrer & Hicks qv of London & Manchester, Edmund C Percey 1929-2014, specialist on concrete water towers cf Tonwell Herts 1964, Cockfosters, Mx, 1968 and Baydon Wilts 1974

1974 Water tower, Finches Lane, Baydon;


PERRET, Rev JOHN M.C. Vicar of Stanton Fitzwarren, of French birth, ordained as RC priest, later converted to Anglican;

1946-8 murals, chancel St Barnabas ch, Gorse hill, Swindon, also designed hanging rood, made by Warham Guild, faculty BRO;


PERRY, ROBERT

(1792-3 Gallery, Woodlands ch, Frome, Som; Longleat 14/3 2/12 31/12/1792; paid for taking down old gallery and erecting new one with new staircase to the gallery and tower and flooring belfry and blocking windows in chancel; ironwork in gallery by Edward Hammersley; dem;


PETERS, THOMAS, carpenter associated with Lord Burlington, executor to Thomas Board carpenter at Burlington House and Chiswick; worked at Chiswick 1725-7 and 1732, Compton Place, Eastbourne 1725, and perhaps Raynham Hall, Norfolk, 1743-4;

1730 worked at Tottenham House; letter Lord Bruce to Burlington 'Mr Fellows and Peters are come hither' Chatsworth letters 162.2;


PETO, GILBERT see Rolfe & Peto;
PETO, HAROLD AINSWORTH 1854-1933 Son of railway builder Sir Samuel Morton Peto. Articled to J Clemence of Lucas Bros of Lowestoft 1871, then with Karslake & Mortimer, then Ernest George 1875, partner of Ernest George (G&P) 1876-92 doing mostly interiors, dissolved 1892 when Peto came into inheritance, but continied to work with George under joint names until 1895. Noted garden designer esp his own at Iford Manor, Wilts. HGS 218ff partnership dissolved 1892, moved to Landford Manor near Salisbury owned by his eldest sister 1895; cf Robin Whalley, The Great Edwardian Gardens of Harold Peto, 2007 (RW); Graeme Moore list of Peto works in Wilts (GM); Gilbert Peto architect of Rolfe & Peto was nephew and Walter Peto architect of Whiting & Peto; ;

(1887 ?garden details, Glencot, Wookey Hole, Som; house 1887 by G&P; attrib RW inc Glencot Bridge dated 1901

1895-9 minor alts to garden Landford Manor, for elder sister Maude, inc rock garden;

1899ff alts and gardens Iford Manor, Westwood, Wilts, for self; WBR; bought house in 1899, lower terraces c1905, loggia on S end of house and steps up to existing terrace added before 1907 CL article, extended Great Terrace to W and added exedra seat copied from feature at Wilton, and moved C18 summerhouse to other end of Great Terrace before 1907, continued garden steps up through woods, took water from spring in woods through existing lily pool through new rock garden with Japanese lanterns, and down to new pool opposite loggia; made 3 patios on E boundarybelow W end of terrace inspired from Italy Spain & Japan and larger patio above terrace end with Casita, GM; placed Britannia on Iford Bridge in 1910 'accepted by Somerset CC 28.6.10; Casita and colonnades on Great Terrace c1910, cloister 1913-14, dated 1914; column to Edward the Peacemaker inscribed 1916 but dedicated before January 1913; CL 28.9.1907 and 2.9.1922; Boke of Iford 1916; gardens house very large collection of Roman and medieval carving, sarcophagi, well-heads, columns, plaques etc, mostly Italian; D Ottewill, The Edwardian Garden; also inserted C15 window in S end stable block in early 1930s (??possibly done by Rolfe & Peto); found C16 fireplace in hall and doorway to left;

(1900 attr gardens Tintinhull, Som, advised Dr SJM Price; HGS 233; evidence?

1901-6 gardens, Heale House, Wilts for Louis Greville, Japanese garden c1901 ?not ny Peto, formal gardens 1906 and 1911, D Ottewill, The Edwardian Garden, 1989, with plan; formal rose garden 1906 away from building works with a well-head, garden terraces 1911 close to the house inc pools near W front and paved terrace walk on a level above and paved garden and landing stage at waterside on E side, Japanese pavilion and bridge beyond slightly earlier, GM;

(1902ff Gardens, Wayford Manor, Som; ASG; HGS 219ff for HPs sister Helen Baker. Lawrence Baker bought Wayford in 1899, enlarged with new wing by George & Yeates, 1902-5; arcaded summerhouse ? later; CL 29.9.34;

c1903 gardens Hartham Park for Sir John Dickson-Poynder; converted old walled garden to water garden with canal and loggia (the canal built over) and raised SW terrace extending into the park to a curved classical seat; D Ottewill, The Edwardian Garden, 1989; CL 1909; c1907 acc to G Moore; new walled garden not by Peto

(1905ff ??gardens Misterton Lodge, Misterton, Som; attrib HGS 221-3; rented from Portman estate 1905 by Major Alwyne Crossley + 1933, Peto’s nephew, bought 1924, changed name to Old Court 1933; B Stacey, Memories of Misterton, 28ff;

(1909ff Gardens, Burton Pynsent, Curry Rivel, Som, for HP’s sister Sarah Crossley +1938, bought house 1909; axial path, transverse path, CL 6.10.1934; ?did Peto design adds and alts to house.

19?? Gardens Hartham Park, Wilts; and pavilion; ?1903 for Sir John Dickson Poynder, but he inherited in 1888, so possibly earlier, Mowl Hist Gardens of Wilts; S terrace with replica of Warwick Vase in Box stone,, exedral seat, water garden w Ital loggia, balustraded bridge,

(1912 interiors SS Mauretania sold 1934 and reused by WH Watkins in Avery’s Wine Bar, Park St, Bristol; ASG; woodwork by HH Martyn of Cheltenham.

1913-14 garden, Little Court, Worton for Basil Peto, youngest brother; house altered by Frank Whiting of Whiting & Peto qv; formal garden with antique features and broad walk ending in octagonal summerhouse modelled on one at Iford; now called Prince Hill House; plans G5/760/54;

1914-15 plans to alter Rowley Manor Farm, near Westwood for nephew Geoffrey K Peto; plans at Iford Manor, not proceeded with; but Graeme Moore says that Peto had already done gardens there when war started, formal axes, broad walks, and pavilions with antique items; farmhouse was Wiltshire Park Farm; GM

(1927ff gardens Widcombe Manor, Bath, Som, HGS 100, 222, for Horace A Vachell. ‘laid out in the last ten years’ CL 28.8.1937;
PETO, Sir SAMUEL MORTON, Bt, Somerleyton Hall, Suffolk; Contractor, railway builder; father of Harold Peto qv; 1809-89, 1st Baronet; firm of Grissell & Peto formed 1830, built Reform Club, Nelson's column etc, as railway contractors built part of GWR including Wharncliffe Viaduct, partnership dissolved 1846; new partnership 1848 with Edward Betts and Thomas Brassey built railways to supply troops in Crimea 1854 for which made baronet; Peto & Betts bankrupt 1866 due to failure of Overend Gurney Bank; Baptist, treasurer of B Missionary Soc 1846-67; MP 1847-68; resigned after failure 1868 and went to Hungary to promote railway;

1848 B chapel, Fleet St, Swindon for Rev Richard Breeze, Italianate; SB; Thomas Barrett qv builder; opened 4.1.49, apsidal N end, 5-bay front, 7-bay side to Bridge St; dem; schoolroom added in Bridge St 1868 by TS Lansdown; schoolroom survives but without little octagonal NE turret; photo C&F 67;


PETO, WALTER see Whiting & Peto
PETTER & WARREN Architects, Sarum House, Yeovil, 1931 dir. John Petter & Percy J Warren. Son of James B Petter 1846-1906 of James B Petter & Sons, engineers. Sons were Harry, John, Claude, Guy B, Percy W and Ernest W. Percy and Ernest twins born 1873 des an early horseless carriage 1895. JB Petter started as ironmonger in The Borough, invented the Nautilus grate. Henry B Petter and Hugh Petter, ironmongers, 15 & 20 High St, Kelly 1906. JBP & Sons Nautilus Works, Reckleford, Yeovil, blt 1901-10, manufactured Petter Oil Engines. Petter & Edgar ironfounders name on Yeovil bollards. Sir Ernest W Petter was knighted 1925, president British Engineers Association.

P&W later became Petter, Warren & Cooper (PW&C) with William Reginald Roydon Cooper qv (WRRC) qv, later Roydon Cooper Associates (RCA) qv.

1929-30 Westminster Bank, No 61 Market Place, Warminster; opened 14.4.30; closed 1973;
PHILLIMORE, CLAUD Architect, London. 1911 2nd son of 2nd Lord Phillimore. Leading country house designer after WWII, designed over forty, cf JM Robinson The latest country houses, 1984. Practice 1947, with Aubrey Jenkins 1948. New houses at Belsay, Northumberland; Lockinge, Berks (unex but CP enlarged Betterton farmhouse nr Lockinge instead); remodelled Clovelly Court, Devon, post-fire; remodelled Knowsley Hall, Lancs 1953-6 and designed new house Knowsley 1963; dower house Arundel Park; Swanstead, Northumberland; Aughentaire, Tyrone; Bartlow, Cambs; Tusmore, Oxon 1960 (1964-5 BoE); Aske Hall, Yorks; retired 1970s, Donald Insall was pupil.

1957-8 Fosbury Manor, Wilts; JM Robinson 209;


PHILLIPS, MESSRS Builders, Swindon, see John Phillips;
PHILLIPS, C. Builder, Swindon, see John Phillips
PHILLIPS, F.H. Chippenham, agent to Poynder estate;

1897 gardener's cottage, Hartham Park, Corsham, plans WSHC G3/760/12;


PHILLIPS, GREGORY Architect, Gregory Phillips Architects, London.

2001 Annex, The Hermitage, Little Durnford; Salisbury Civic Soc award 2003; within wooded grounds of listed building, small boarded 250sq metre; for Ted Baker; GI;


PHILLIPS, JOHN Architect, builder, Devizes Rd, Swindon; architect, contractor, marble-mason, builder c1852-74; WBR2; Mrs Susannah Phillips builder and quarry owner, Devizes Rd, Swindon 1875, Messrs Phillips builders 1876 with W Phillips by 1877 and C Phillips by 1885, WBR2

1848 involved with restoring St Mary ch, Rodbourne Cheyney, Swindon; ICBS/ Geoff Brandwood: 1848 fine. Bit of a puzzle re the architect. TH Wyatt, reporting on the work then in progress in July 1848 says ‘no architect has been employed’ though he makes reference to a clerk of the works. It looks very much as though it’s a DIY job by the vicar the Rev. Henry T Streeter. The plan in the file says ‘Enlarged Restored & Repaired under the superintendence of the Revd. Henry Thomas Streeter in the year 1848.’ However, the plan also has, under the names of three principal inhabitants, ‘Architect John Phillips’ (no place stated). There is no mention of Sage who appears in BoE. The old tower was taken down and a new one built at the W end. Wyatt was none too keen on this but could not persuade Streeter: also N aisle and arcade and vestry are new. Reseating. My reading of this is that Streeter is our man and that Phillips has just signed off the plan to give it authority. WBR gives Sage qv;

1857 builder rest Winterbourne Bassett church, Field & Hylton (sic) architects, Philips (sic) of Swindon builder acc to parish history of 1868 1506/25;

1857 schoolroom, British School, High St, Wootton Bassett, undated plans but 1857 written on schoolroom; 782/115 infant school addition undated by Robert Little qv; 1857 building is single room, four bays of ogee-headed windows, porch on uphill side; there was a Methodist schoolroom of 1842 on site;

1862 builder inn, Swindon; W Brown architect; WBR2;

1865 bldr C chapel, Victoria St, Swindon, WJ Stent arct; dem; WBR2; SB, builder with John Ponton qv; £3569;

1866 builder Corn Exchange, Old Town, Swindon Wilson & Willcox architects; SB;

1868 cottages, Westcott Pl, Swindon; WBR2;

1870 bldr brewery near High St, Swindon, Arthur Kinder archt; WBR2; North Wilts Brewery behind Nos 10-12 High Street for Richard Bowly, SB;

1871 house, Bath Rd, Swindon; WBR2;

1871 fifteen houses, King St, Swindon; WBR2;

1872 builder rest of Purton ch, W butterfield architect; Br 1872 972;

1873 add to National School, Purton for Rev W Mitchell, additional infants schoolroom; WSHC 782/83; in same file are different unsigned plans for same addition; original school 1859 by EW Mantell qv;

1873 two houses, The Quarries, Swindon; WBR2;

1873 builder Belmont Brewery, off Devizes Rd, Swindon for William Godwin of Belmont House, Quarry Rd, Kinsey & Merritt qv of London architects; SB;

1874 shop and cottage, Prospect Hill, Swindon; WBR2;

1874 builder, vagrants' ward, Highworth & Swindon workhouse, Stratton St Margaret, WH Read architect; WBR2;

1876 bldrs organ chamber, St Mark ch Swindon, JJ Smith architect; Messrs Phillips builders;

1876 bldrs alts Queen's hotel, Swindon. WH Read architect; Messrs Phillips, WBR2;

1877 house, Kingshill Rd, Swindon by W Phillips; WBR2

1885 four houses, Devizes Rd, Swindon by C Phillips; WBR 2;
PHILLIPS, NIALL Architect, 35 King St, Bristol. Born 1952 Bristol, SPAB scholar, practice from 1977 with P Simons and John Schofield as Form Structures Ltd qv from 1978-80 specialising in reuse of old buildings: Arkwright House, Preston, Lancs 1978-80, Luggs Farm Stockford Devon 1978-80, Hanbury House stables Pontypool Glam 1978-80 converted to museum, repairs Gelligroes Mill, Blackwood, Mon, 1978-80; Niall Phillips Architects est 1980 with P Simons: did major conversion works inc Ebley Mills, Stroud, Glos; Spike Island Studios, Bristol; amalgamated with Purcell Miller Tritton c2008 but survives as distinct office of Purcell;

(1978-9 conv No 35 King St, Bristol to offices;

(1980 new Riding School for disabled, Lawrence Weston, Bristol;

1989 feasibility study, Seven Stars maltings, Newtown, Bradford on Avon; GA17 1995, not used;

1991-2 renov Nos 9-11 Market St, Bradford on Avon, Wilts, for BoA Preservation Trust; appointed GA1 1990;
PHILLIPS, W Builder, Swindon see John Phillips;
PHIPPS, CHARLES JOHN. Bath & London. 1835-97. Architect, theatre specialist, son of John Rashleigh Phipps of Lansdown, Bath. Articled Wilson & Fuller qv until 1857, set up in Bath 1858, at Cornhill, London, 1863-7 and then at Mecklenburgh Sq 1867-97. FSA, FRIBA. Advisory architect to Theatre Royal Drury Lane for 15 yrs, exh RA 1863-97, designed business premises, blocks of flats, the Devonshire Club, St James St, London, the Carlton hotel as part of same block as Her Majesty's Theatre carried out and modified after his death by his son in law and partner A. Blomfield Jackson (1868-1951). Doyen of theatre architects for thirty years, built or altered: alts Theatre Royal Bath 1863; alts Theatre Royal Nottingham 1865; Theatre Royal South Shields 1865; alts Theatre Royal Brighton 1866; Prince's Theatre Bristol 1867; Royal Swansea 1867; alts Queen's Long Acre London 1867; Gaiety1868; Variety Hoxton 1869; Vaudeville 1870; Gaiety Dublin 1871; Tivoli Aberdeen (with JM Matthews) 1872; Theatre Royal Edinburgh 1873; alts Theatre Royal Portsmouth 1874; alts Theatre Royal Worcester 1875; alts Theatre Royal Dumfries 1876; alts Theatre Royal Dunfermline 1876; Opera house Cork 1877; Opera House Leicester 1877; Royal Opera House Londonderry 1877; alts Theatre Royal Worcester 1878; Rotunda Liverpool 1878; alts Sadlers Wells 1879; alts Theatre Royal Haymarket London 1880; Theatre Royal Glasgow 1880; alts Princess's Theatre London 1880; Savoy Theatre London 1881; Theatre Royal Belfast 1881; Gaiety Hastings 1882; alts Strand 1882; Theatre Royal Leamington 1882; Lyceum Edinburgh 1883; Hippodrome Eastbourne 1883; alts Olympic 1883; alts Theatre Royal Edinburgh 1884; Theatre Royal Northampton 1884; alts Theatre Royal Portsmouth 1884; Prince of Wales 1884; alts London Palladium 1884; alts Lyceum london 1885; Theatre Royal Exeter 1885; alts Vaudeville London 1887; Theatre Royal Darlington 1887; alts Theatre Royal Northampton 1887; alts Theatre Royal Torquay 1888; Lyric London 1888; Shaftesbury London 1888; Garrick London (with W Emden) 1889; Empire Devonport 1890; alts Theatre Royal Glasgow 1890; alts Toole's London 1890; alts Vaudeville 1890; Daly's London 1893; Grand Wolverhampton 1894; Pavilion Whitechapel (w E Runtz) 1894; alts Theatre Royal Glasgow 1895; Her Majesty's London 1897; Royal Hippodrome Dover 1897; alts County Kingston 1897; alts Opera house Coventry 1898; Holloway Empire 1899; cf Mackintosh & Sell eds. Curtains!!!, 1982;

(1860 alts Racecourse, Lansdown, Bath, Som, WI 29.12.59 weighing room and covered stand for the Duke (?of Beaufort)'s party, stewards and friends, to be built by spring 1860; grandstand to be altered DWG 29.12.59 from Bath Journal;

(1861 Bandstand, Sydney Gardens, Bath DWG 28.2.61 'elegant orchestra' for the Hanoverian Band Committee;

1861-3 Cemetery, Pewsey, Wilts; competition 1861 RHH; unanimously selected DWG 13.11.62; chapel and lychgate, Wilcot Road; plans 1863 D1/60/8/19; also lychgate; consec 22.9.63;

1861 Cox Memorial drinking fountain, by St James ch, ?Devizes, Wilts DWG 13.6.61, to be built; CJP of Bath;


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