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



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(1862-3 alts Theatre Royal, Bath, Som; 1st pr 1862 RHH; Br 20 608; auditorium completely rebuilt.

1867 Infants' School, River St, Pewsey; dated on rainwater heads but plans 782/82 by CJP are only for rear extension dated 1871;

1872 School and house, Lea; WBR; undated plans for Garsdon & Lea schools WSHC 782/63 school & house, stone banded in red brick; certificated 1.12.73; Br 1872 1323;

1873 adds National School, Pewsey, Wilts; WBR; school by GE Street qv 1861-3; undated plans 782/82 for addition of gabled piece at E end S side and a hhalf-hipped gabled classroom to W

1875 adds Lea Cottage, Malmesbury, for W Forrester Br 1875 426 Br 8.5.75 T: £1220, Light & Smith qv builders; ?Lea House, Lea?

1879 reblt Lea ch; T: Br 15.2.79 restoration and new N aisle; builders Shallon & Knapp £1500; BoE; ICBS: the tower, indeed, seems old. The nave S wall and chancel are coloured the same and thus presumably are medieval. The N aisle and S porch seem wholly new; about to be restored 1872 by CJP Br 1872 153; contract A 18.1.79; tender A 15.2.79 Stratton & Knapp of Garsdon; BN 16.7.80 S chancel window to Adjutant Bradford;

PHIPPS, Hon. PAUL Architect, FRIBA, 2 Boyle St, Savile Row, London; 1880-1953, pupil of Lutyens 1901-4, LRIBA 1911; in British Columbia 1911-13; partnership ship with OP Milne from 1919-24 (M&P), country house specialists; designed 7th Church of Christ Scientist, Kensington, 1926-7;

1929 alts Dean Farm, Oaksey;

1937 summerhouse, and garage additions to cottage, Boyton Manor for Sir Sidney Herbert Bt MP; summerhouse triple-arched SW of Boyton church does not resemble preent open-fronted one, and cottage and garage NW of church have become two cottages;


PICCAVER, J.A. Architect, Northampton

1900-1 PM chapel, Sheldon Rd, Chippenham, plans G3/761/2; Gothic, stone, with brick schoolroom behind;


PICK EVERARD Architects, engineers, founded Leicester 1866, previously Everard Son & Pick, and Pick, Everard, Keay & Gimson, offices London, Taunton, Glasgow, Manchester, Derby, inverness etc multi-discipline practice;

2001 463 homes, MOD, Tidworth; contr BD 28.9.01; to replace 1960s estate; to complete 2003; working with Shepherd Epstein Hunter architects, trad style village;

(200? West Somerset DC offices, Williton, Som)
PICTOR & SNAILUM Architects, Bath, presumably connected with AJ Pictor qv and WW Snailum qv; AJP +1938, WW Snailum had son Terence Snailum qv; firm was Pictor, Snailum & Hutchins 1949;

1940 bungalow, Frome Rd, Bradford on Avon, Wilts; plans WRO G13/760/340, P&S;

1945 bungalow, Elms Cross, Bradford on Avon, Wilts; WRO G13/760/ 362;

1945 Laboratory for G Spencer Moulton & Co, Kingston Rd, Bradford on Avon plans WRO G/13/760/363 P&S; Dated 1848-1948 (centenary year of Moulton's); but GA 51 2006 interview with Alex Moulton says designed by GD Gordon Hake, principal of Bristol School of Architecture;

1949 alts The Hall, Bradford on Avon, Wilts; Pictor, Snailum & Hutchings, Abbey Chambers, Bath, WBR2;
PICTOR, - ; Stone-quarry owning family of Clift Quarry, Box; founded by Job Pictor farmer of Ramsbury, started quarry at Boxfields 1829, had three sons William, Robert and Cornelius; Pictor & Sons in dir 1865; Fogleigh House, Box was built for Cornelius J Pictor 1881 by James Hicks qv; Rudloe Park, Box for Robert Pictor there 1875, Mrs R Pictor 1880, son HRN Pictor 1889. William Smith Pictor owner of extensive Bath stone quarries near Box and Corsham, Wilts, 1847-90, bought Hazelbury Quarry from Thynnes 1868, married 1867, at Pickwick House, Bath Rd, Corsham, 1871 census, founder member of Bath Stone Firms, 1887, his brother Cornelius, manager; Alan Pictor manager from 1932; Mark manager 1940;

1862 portico, Neston Park, Neston for – Fuller;


PICTOR, ARTHUR JOHN. FRIBA. Architect, Bruton and Bath. 1861-1938. Died 29.11.38. Bennett, Pictor & Co, land agents, architects, agents to Railway Passengers Assurance Co, High St, Bruton and Sunny Hill, Pitcombe; Kelly 1906; Architect to Sunny Hill Girls School 1900-39 acc to school history ‘Gleam flying over’ by D Parsons (DP); Pictor’s successor c1938 was called Hamilton. Diocesan Surveyor 1912-19 RL2 66; in practice at 14 Queen Sq, Bath 1931 dir; firm of Snailum & Pictor may be with WW Snailum of Trowbridge +1934, Pictor & Snailum c1945 presumably with Terence Snailum qv, then Pictor, Snailum & Hutchings Abbey Chambers, Bath, 1949, WBR2;

1905-7 Schoolrooms, Box WM chapel; plans G3/760/?, 1905; AJP of Bruton;


PIESS, JAMES builder, Bristol. Bath acc to Russell Lillford list of architects working in Somerset, 65.

(1868 rest Carhampton ch tower, Som; SRO cf/1868/1; design probably by JP St Aubyn qv;

1868 rest Kilmington ch, Som (now Wilts); SRO cf/1868/3;
PIKE (CHARLES) & PARTNERS Architects; Charles W Pike architect in Dorchester, Dorset, 1920;

(1922 War memorial plaque, Poorstock ch, Dorset, by Charles W Pike of Dorchester, photo Br 11.8.22; )

1956ff Swindon College, Regent Circus, Swindon; with FI Bowden, Wilts County Architect, SB; first part 1956-8; £402000 six-storey, built by Gee, Walker & Slater; CTA; opened 1961; lower addition to W 1966-9 (1969-70 SB); all demolished 2012;

1969-71 Swindon Technical College, North Star Ave, phase 3 of college rebuild; new site N of railway on derelict railway land; BoE 1975;


PILKINGTON, WILLIAM Architect London 1748-1848, born near Doncaster, pupil and assistant to Sir Robert Taylor qv, surveyor and architect to Earl of Radnor; exh RA 1780-90 retired to Hatfield nr Doncaster c1842;

1788-95 built Council House, Salisbury to designs of Sir Robert Taylor, for Earl of Radnor;

(1798 No 38 Dover St London for Hon WH Bouverie; HC;

(1800 Chilton Lodge, Leverton, Berks for John Pearse, formerly in Chilton Foliat, Wilts; BoE;

18-- Pearse Mausoleum. Chilton Foliat churchyard; J Brittton Beauties 3, 1825, 266-7; large neo-Grec; plaque mentions John Pearse +1836, wife Ann +1844, sons Randolph +1812, Nicholas + 1850, son-in-law Henry Porcher +1857 and Henry J Porcher +1825; BoE says mentioned in 1814 Beauties of england & Wales;
PINCH, CHARLES Architect 21 Henrietta St, Bath, member of family of architects, designed Tatworth ch, Som, 1850-1. Same address as James Pinch, architect;

1850 letter to WH Fox-Talbot 16.8.1850 asking him to pass onto his half-sister Mrs Thomas Gaisford an account for £6/16/6d first presented in May 1850. Mrs Gaisford died in August 1851, monument in Lacock church; British library Talbot correspondence;


PINCH, JOHN Sr Bath c1770-1827. Builder, architect, bankrupt after 1800, then architect-surveyor. 1793 surveyor Pulteney estate, Bath and Darlington estate, Bathwick; worked with son John Pinch Jr qv who helped his father on ‘two new churches, the houses in New Sydney Place and some gentlemen’s seats’ acc to a letter 1823; HC; in dirs to 1819, that year as JP & Son

1814 attrib adds Corsley House, Wilts, for Nathaniel Barton, with J Pinch Jr; WBR2; ?no evidence for Pinch and not really Pinch style;

(1814-16 Hungerford ch, Berks;

(1817-20 Sion Hill Place, Bath;

1817-21 Bishopstrow House, Wilts; WBR; HC; for William Temple;

(1817-20 St Mary ch, Bathwick, Bath;

(1817-30 Cavendish Crescent, Bath;

1819 Hoare mausoleum, Stourton ch, Wilts;

1820 attrib Shurford Mead, Corsley for HA Fussell; attrib staircase same as Corsley House;
PINCH, JOHN Jr Bath +1849; HC; son of John Pinch Sr, helped his father on ‘two new churches, the houses in New Sydney Place and some gentlemen’s seats’ acc to letter of 1823; in dir of 1819 as JP&Son; applied for County Surveyor of Somerset post 1830;

1814 attr adds Corsley Ho, Wilts with J Pinch Sr; WBR2; for Nathaniel Barton; begun 1814 VCH; similar staircase at Shurford Mead, Corsley, of 1820;

(1823 The Nunnery, Isle of Man; HC)

1831-4 S aisle, Box church; plan 1831 D1/61/5/41;

1835 toll-house, Upton Lovell, Wilts; WBR2; William Trapp builder

(1836 top storey, Sydney Hotel, Bath, Som;

1836 adds Grittleton ch, Wilts; HC; WBR; S aisle plans WSHC D1/61/5/46 1835; also the font for Rev WW Burne; JE Jackson, History of Grittleton, 1843, 21; restored 1892 (Kelly 1898);

(1837-8 Downside ch, Som; ICBS; with CR Wainwright surveyor qv; RL;

(1839 Paulton ch, Som; exc tower; ICBS; SNB;

1839 plans conv brewery, Limpley Stoke, Wilts; sale ad WI 13.6.39, sale of dwelling house with grounds to river and extensive buildings where brewing and malting business was carried out, which owner intended to convert to cottages and plans made by Mr Pinch, available to buyer;

18?? ?alts workhouse, Chippenham, WBR, Mr Pinch, surveyor, Bath; but workhouse only built in 1859;
PINCHARD, C. H. BIDDULPH see CH Biddulph-Pinchard
PINCKHEARD & PARTNERS Architects; grew out of Booth & Ledeboer qv joined 1956 by John Pinckheard, became P&Partners 1962; designed Waynflete building, Magdalen College Oxford 1964; John Weston-Lewis qv partner; P&P worked on Natural History Museum London 1972-3; later in 1970s became Weston-Lewis, Clarke & Arnold, Gray & Baynes;

1967-8 St Giles garrison ch, Warminster; by John Weston-Lewis; booklet on School of infantry; stained glass by Hugh C Powell; E Chivers, Devizes, builders;


PINCKNEY & GOTT Architects, Roger Arthur Philip Pinckney and Arthur Gott, both pupils of Sir Giles Gilbert Scott; did churches in Hants and elswhere in 1960s;

1963 Sevenhampton Place, for Ian Fleming +1964 and Ann Fleming +1981; JMR Latest Country Houses 9 and 225-6; on site of Warneford Place which Flemings bought in 1960 and demolished 1963 and retaining one part and some fragments; stables rebuilt 1975 by Nicholas Johnston qv;


PINFOLD, CYRIL GEORGE. Architect, Office of Works qv, born 1907, did Post Offices in Chippenham, Exeter etc in 1950s;

1959 Post Office, Chippenham; MPOA;


PINNEGAR, C.E. Builder, Tytherton; said to be of Salisbury WBR2, error;

1857-8 toll-houses for Beckhampton turnpike Trust: at Beckhampton Crossroads nr Avebury (dem, not attrib to Pinnegar by IS), Shepherd's Shore nr Bishops Cannings (£107) and Preshute (£120); Ivor Slocombe;

1860 school, Clack (Bradenstoke) WBR 782/68 unsigned, similar to plans for Lyneham schools;

1862 builder, schools, Lyneham; WBR; CEP of Tytherton; according to DWG 26.6.62 architect was GE Street qv but plans 782/67 are unsigned and do not look like Street;

1869 Schools, Stratton St Margaret; by Pinniger of Chippenham opened DWG 27.1.70, £1300, Gothic of Swindon stone with Bath dressings, contractor Mr Drew of Highworth;
PINNEGAR, J. Builder

1835 Union Chapel, Middle Common, Kington Langley; reputedly inscribed J Pinnegar, Builder; DoE; not legible;


PINNIGER, - Architect. Chippenham, probably same as CE Pinnegar of Tytherton;

1869 Schools, Stratton St Margaret; opened DWG 27.1.70, £1300, Gothic of Swindon stone with Bath dressings, contractor Mr Drew of Highworth;


PIPER, -

1791-3 builder Chilton Lodge, Chilton Foliat for William Morland by John Soane qv, apparently demolished soon after John Pearse bought estate in 1796 as new house on different site built for Pearse by W Pilkington qv in 1800; Soane Mueum catalogue; Soane sent drawings to Piper in 1791;


PITT, T. E. SANDFORD Architect, Heddington; in dirs 1907 to 1915, but not 1899 or 1920;

1908 alts Willow House, Biddestone, rear add dining-room WSHC G3/760/294, also plans by the Hartham agent JS Corbett for servants' hall and conversion of malthouse to stabling, coach house and bedrooms; all for Sir J Dickson Poynder;

PKA Architects, Devizes, see Peter Kent

2015 converted former Lucent Technologies offices, Cowbridge, Malmesbury to Cedar Court flats; WC planning;

POCOCK, HENRY Builder, Seend

1861 Providence Strict B chapel, Southwick; FS 1.4.61 opened 31.7.61, for Strict Baptist secession from Southwick B chapel;


POLLARD, IAN surveyor, property developer, owner of Hazelbury Manor 1972-90 and then Abbey House, Malmesbury; his company Flaxyard Plc built in London incl Marco Polo House, Battersea, 1987-8, one of most notable Po-Mo buildings, dem 2014; Homebase store, Kensington 1989 also Po-Mo, to be demolished 2015; Ryan Institute for Marine Sciences, Galway, 1991;

1972ff restored Hazelbury Manor, Box, and greatly added to the gardens created for GJ Kidston after 1920; garden design with wife Dinny; Juliette Pollard: They initially replanted the herbaceous borders around the main lawn - setting these out as a series of colour themed beds in yellows, oranges, and reds through to purples , mauves and blues. Behind these beds they created a series of interconnecting garden 'rooms', each with a different theme; a foliage garden, a silver garden, a knot garden with a topiary chess pieces and a rose garden all framed by new yew hedge planting used to frame the 'rooms' and create vistas throughout the garden. A laburnum tunnel was also added and the original garden pavilions restored and modified to allow views the pig and across the garden. The main lawn / garden was further enhanced by the addition of a large reflective pool and fountains set against a 'stage set ' of yew hedges which provided a magnificent focal point at the end of the sunken lawn. (Sadly the pond was filled in by the current owners who at the time of purchasing the property from my parents had small children.) Having restored the main garden, my parents went on to replant the walled garden to the side of the property; to make significant improvements to the entrance to the house where they created a 'cottage garden' with raised beds and a series of stepped terraces; and to create a formal 'potager' garden which was linked to the side of the house by a woodland garden.

1996ff gardens, Abbey House, Malmesbury, with wife Barbara;

POLLEN, JOHN HUNGERFORD Architect, artist, 1820-1902, 2nd son of Richard Pollen +1838 of Rodbourne and Ann sister of CR Cockerell qv; nephew of Sir John W Pollen Bt of Redenham Hants; JHP's elder brother Richard Hungerford Pollen 1815-81 became 3rd Bt and lived at Rodbourne; fellow of Merton College 1842, ordained 1845, left Anglican church for RC in 1852, professor at Catholic University of Ireland, 1855-7, designed University Church, Dublin; designed carvings for University Museum Oxford and worked on murals of Oxford Union 1858; designed painted dec scheme for Oxford Museum 1860 (unex); dec Blickling Hall, Norfolk, 1860; 186? RC ch, Rhyl, Wales; dem; assistant keeper at South Kensington Museum 1863; biography 1912 by Ann Pollen;

(1842 restored aisles Wells Cathedral, Som; not in SNB;

(1844 ceiling St Peter ch, Oxford, where he was curate)

(1850 ceiling Merton College hall;

18?? uncertain works in Rodbourne village for his brother Sir Richard Hungerford Pollen 3rd Bt +1881 and nephew Sir Richard H Pollen 4th Bt 1846-1918; Ann Pollen says only that the stone terrace at Rodbourne House was a gift from JHP to his mother; there are additions to Rodbourne House dated 1859 the NE block with pyramid-roofed tower and brick and stone banded chimneys;, with staircase of pierced flat balusters and acorn newel-finials; the tower and baptistery added to Rodbourne church in 1862 presumably also some furnishings, the oak lectern, the stone font, and the lychgate (unknown date); also the chancel was restored in 1849; also in the village the school 1851 extended 1893; additions to Parsloe's Farm 1852 with window heads and leaded glazing like the school; additions to Roman Cottage 1845 and later, with striped chimney as on Rodbourne House; Cleeve House 1899 with striped chimneys as on Rodbourne House; Manor House was previously Manor Farm but enlarged with new N wing before 1860s probably for JHP, architecturally less interesting; perhaps also the restoration of the medieval Village Cross;


PONTING, CHARLES EDWIN. Marlborough. Architect 1850-1932. Articled 1864 to Samuel Overton, agent to Savernake estate, set up c1871; Diocesan Architect for Wiltshire part of Salisbury Diocese 1883-1928 and for Dorset half from 1892-1928 and for part of Bristol diocese 1887-1915; surveyor Marlborough College; architect and agent to the Meux estate according to VCH; practiced from Lockeridge Cottage (now called Lockeridge Down), Lockeridge, West Overton, Wilts, in dirs 1875-99, and in 1905 bought Wye House, 8 Barn St, Marlborough, in dirs 1907-15, there until 1920; in 1925 address was Lockeridge, Parkstone, Dorset, when partnership of Ponting & Crickmay is noted in Weymouth. List of Wiltshire works in WBR; ASG; died 19.1.1932 buried Cadley churchyard under Celtic Cross memorial to his father Henry +1901 mother Ann +1876 and wife Martha Margaret +1873; Tony Nicholson is researching (TN) a.nicholson@waitrose.com;

1870-1 ?School and house, Savernake; 1871 WBR; by St Katharine church; VCH says built between 1861-1864, church guide says opened 1865, WSHC plans 782/91 for school 1870, certified 1871, are for a plain school with the house attached at W end with half-hipped roof I.e not the detached school house to W of present school;

1873-5 School and House, Lockeridge, West Overton, Wilts; T Br 3.5.73 £1008 Overton cum Fyfield Schools; erroneously in WBR list as two separate schools; now Kennet Valley Primary School; brick Gothic; plans 1870 782/81;

1877 adds School, Avebury, Wilts; plans dated 1875 782/5; classroom at right angles at W end of school of 1842-4 and 1849 by Benoni White; stepped Tudor N end window in early C19 style; ?also teacher's house added later;

1877-8 West Overton ch, plans 1877 D1/61/28/8 old church to be wholly taken down exc tower, raise tower arch, £3120, £2800 from Lord Ernest Bruce and Viscount Malden and Bishop; spec for nave and porch, old internal entrance door to be kept,3-lt s window to be repaired and 3-lt to have new arch head and tracery; Devon marble shafts to chancel arch; 'Sarston' facing; present chancel arch, E window and square-head S window to be replaced in new positions, old stone cornice of chancel roof to be repaired and reused; Perp S windows kept and old chancel arch and E window tracery reused in N organ chamber, old Norman stone reset over S door found in E wall, two consecration crosses reset in outside E wall; font kept; tower originally to be kept but proved too poor to save; FS 25.76.77; MT 4.8.77 tower now level with ground, new church will be 12' longer with an addition on the N, Early Dec style, chancel at the cost of the Meux trustees, fine coloured E window and floor of Minton tiles intended, oak choir seat, to cost £3000, Meux trustees gave £1000; opened 25.9.78, MT 28.9.78, organ by Vowles, lectern gift of architect in memory his wife, chancel S window gift Mrs Angell, pulpit lectern choir stalls made by Hems of Exeter, out of old roof timbers; metalwork by Hardman, tiled floors in nave and tower by Godwin from design of architect, architect has introduced Michaelmas daisy into decoration of E wall used also in border of the credence window, whole of windows and mural decoration by Horwood of Frome, reredos and floor tiling in chancel by Minton Hollins & Co, heating by Haden & Co, lighting by Jones & Willis who also supplied font cover; tower not completed until 1883; chancel decoration gone, E window and chancel S by Horwood Bros, chancel N 1888 by Hardman;

1879-80 rest Broad Hinton ch; SA 6.11.80 T Barrett qv builder, c£2000, Mrs Meux gave lamps, Mr Eatwell two chancel S windows; tower underpinned, pinnacles to be restored, chancel E had brick casing, fine old capital and base of Norman date found in chancel E wall, also piece of old reredos, new reredos given Mrs Lloyd, foundations of nave were Anglo-Saxon, several pieces found and old rood loft stair; under porch tombstone of a nun, uin vestry an ancient stone coffin now in organ chamber, very unique old dole window uncovered by splaying the porch, glass of St Nicholas inserted; chancel walls distorted by bad roof, taken down rebuilt part of walls and added organ chamber, using chancel arch of old C17 work. Monument of Sir Thomas Wroughton moved here, formerly blocked up in chancel; E window has been raised to make room for reredos of Beer stone with alabaster cross filled with mosaic, red Mansfield retable; under tomb a slab with indent of missing brass; Br 4.12.80 E window by Clayton & Bell enlarged by copy of Last Supper, two windows in chancel N, and E window of organ chamber by Alexander Gibbs, dole window by Hardman of St Nicholas after Botticelli; plans 1879 D1/61/30/8 show initial intention to have smaller organ chamber with the Wroughton monument on the E wall and not to add the two western lancets to the N and S walls ; spec mentions Swindon stone; ?lychgate 1884;

1879-80 attrib vicarage, Savernake; built 1879-80 VCH; but WSHC has correspondence re new vicarage 1878-82 by RW Edis qv;

1882 prop ch near Mere, Wilts, at Wet Lane where several roads converge; WG 10.2.82; WG 17.3.82 £1000; ?Redlynch

1882-3 rest Avebury ch, Wilts WG 17.11.82; restoration had been by RJ Withers qv 1878, but ICBS says that he was 'superceded' by CEP, Withers rebuilt the chancel, and restored S aisle, CEP restored N aisle, replaced aisle roof, repaired nave roof, did he design the new screen;

1883 tower completed, West Overton church; church of 1877-8 by CEP, tower begun; completion paid for by Lady Meux in memory of father-in-law Sir H Meux +1883; vaulted, with arms of Sir HB Meux on N, clock face on W in Venetian gold mosaic, sundial on S; 74 ft to parapet, 84 ft to top of pinnacles, Sarsen stone and Box ground;

1883 rest Bishops Cannings ch, Wilts; WBR; stalls under crossing;

1883 village dispensary & parish room, East Kennett, Wilts; opened DWG 22.1.83; illustration in BN 16.5.84 reproduced in Ivor Slocombe, Wilts Village Reading rooms pl 19; partly tile hung; for executors of Miss Mathews of East Kennett Manor; S Elliott of Newbury builder, FS laid June 1883 by E Fisher, niece of Miss Mathews, opened November 1883; MT 28.4.83, 9.6.83

1885 rest Marden ch; BoE; ICBS: application says chancel restored by the Ecclesiastical Commissioners 1858. Letter 3 Nov 1888 says restoration was begun in 1884 and the tower completed in 1885. However, the work had not all been completed by then and corresp in 1889 says they are gathering more funds. 14 Nov. 1889 from vicar says ‘I hope the work will soon be continued’. But letter in 1894 says still ‘unrestored’, although it makes clear the tower and chancel had indeed been restored: nave in a bad state.

1885-6? rest Liddington ch; 1880s BoE; c1885-6 AB;

1886 WM chapel, Poulshot; VCH;

1888 chancel, Stanton St Quntin ch; paid for by Mrs Buckley wife of Rev FJ Buckley rector 1880-1905; church guide; retained C15 canopied piscina; plans BRO EP/J/6/2/191 1888 with design for reredos; also designed lychgate presumably;

1887-1930 tile-mosaic panels St John ch, Boreham, Wilts; N aisle panels 1887 and 1893, expanded to full scheme in 1911 when chancel done, but not completed as plans of 1915 for S and W walls abandoned in favour of baptistery, last panel was 1930; all executed by Powell & Sons;

(1888 Re-erected Temple Bar from The Strand, London, at Theobalds, Hertfordshire for Lady Meux; since returned to London;

1888 rest Netheravon ch; DWG 2.8.88; ICBS mainly reseating;

1888 reredos Steeple Ashton; DWG 10.1.89; timber, with three paintings since destroyed by vandals; also altar?;

1888-9 rest Tilshead ch; proposed DWG 26.7.88;

1889 reseat and rest Winsley ch, Wilts; DWG 5.9.89;

1889-90 rest Pewsey ch; ICBS W extension of nave and reseating and repairs. C.E. Ponting 1889-90; plans 1888 D1/61/34/7 proposed to widen N aisle keeping NW window, and resetting first 3 N windows, new porch and last two N windows; chancel N 2-lt window moved to S wall of 1861 SE chapel, to allow for new NE organ-chamber and vestry; remove 1861 reredos to SE chapel; remove font to under tower, remove nave ceiling and roof, remove N and S galleries; new seats in n aisle and SE chapel and two benches in tower; new oak reredos; DWG 17.4.90 reopened, George Wiltshire qv of Swindon contractor; rebuilt N aisle and new porch, new chancel N addition for organ and vestry reusing old timbers from Ivychurch, galleries removed; new baptistery in tower raised five steps, new nave and aisle roofs, inc two hammerbeams with angels at nave W end; reflooring, tiles in chancel and baptistery; all windows of old N aisle reused; and two new windows in this part; new aisle and porch late style, chancel additions EE style; porch statue carved by rector; porch stone-vaulted with Agnus Dei boss; rich screen between N aisle and vestry, lower part of a chancel screen with curious iron gates picked up by rector in S of France; screen design prepared; roof of vestry reuses C14 timbers from mansion at Ivychurch near Salisbury recently pulled down; altar rails worked and carved by rector from mahogany out of the San Josef captured by Nelson at Trafalgar; new oak reredos designed by CEP, carved by Mr Hitch with four statues carved by rector and three painted panels by him; old reredos (by Street) transferred to chapel with new centrepiece Pieta carved by rector; rector painted decoration over chancel arch; also needlework of altar and banner by rector; squint and remains of piscina found; carved work wood and stone by Sheppard of Trowbridge; screen made 1893 by H Hems;


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