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



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WHITE, JAMES Builder, worked on Bowood House 1765 to c1770; WAM 41; WBR;
WHITE, WILLIAM, Architect 1825-1900, FSA, in practice 1847 Truro, then 30A Wimpole St, London. 1849 Rectory St Columb Major Corn; 1852 All Saints ch, Notting Hill, London; 1855 shops Audley Staffs; 1855 St Michaels Home Wantage Berks; 1858-69 Lyndhurst ch Hants; 1860-62 Bishop’s Court, Sowton Devon; 1865 Winscott, Torrington, Devon; 1866-70 Humewood Co Wicklow; 1873 St Mark ch Battersea Rise, London; obit RIBAJ 7 1900 146; article on WWhite BA 16.9.1881 465; his tenure as architect to Marlborough College c1862-6 was terminated when he was sued over costs of Humewood mansion in Ireland; biography 2010 by Gill Hunter (GH);

1851 des Westbury Leigh ch, Wilts, not built until 1876-80; BoE; confusing entry in GH, instigated by Rev WD Morrice originally for site S of road;

1856 alts Axford ch, Wilts; WBR; adapted work begun by a local builder, GH; E 17 1856 154, £415; consec WI 9.10.56 no details; 1857 acc to ED Webb, History of Ramsbury, 1890, 34; cost £425 BoE;

1856-7 School and house, Back Lane, Ramsbury, GH flint and brick intended to have boys and girls schools separated by teacher's house but only girls' built; E 18 1857 67;

(185? Rest roof Meare ch, Som; before 1859, W White FSA acc to Kelly 1906; not in GH;

1857-9 School and house, Chute, Wilts; WBR; opened WI 13.10.59; GH flint and brick L-pan with later extensions to W, house to the N, £700 probably for Rev HM White when vicar of Andover; E 19 1858 268 and 414, plans 782/31

1860 alts and adds vicarage, Chute, Wilts; WBR; GH £600 additions mostly demolished since, plans D1/11/147; builder – Annett; new lean-to study, butlers pantry, larder dairy with bedroom and garret over;

1860 School, Monkton Deverill for Rev WD Morrice, brother-in-law of WW's first wife, GH, E 21 1860 114, single storey L-plan;

(1860 School, Hinton Charterhouse, Som; GH 275;

(1861 Ruishton School, Som; FS Br 4.5.61 306 Dec Gothic small 32x17 by 25ft high, Monkton stone and Bath dressings. Present school 1861 is larger and not Gothic and accords w plans signed WW in SRO DD/C/EDS/1, purple stone w Bath drs w house at right-angles; not in GH;

1861-3 alts and adds Preshute House, Preshute, for Rev JF Bright to take in college boarders; GH extensive 3-storey and 2-storey additions 1861-3; alts 1925 G22/760/52;

1862 rest Brixton Deverill ch, £300 new chancel roof, windows and pulpit, GH D1/61/4/22, CB1863 71;

(1862-3 rest Combe St Nicholas ch, Som; reseat; ICBS; SRO; Br 8.8.63 572 aisles extended W, pews and gallery removed, open benches, choir stalls, tiles by godwin, open roofs; simple stone reredos; perspective in church shows much more elaborate proposal, roofs with angels, pews, screen right across; GH 277 £1830; reopened TC 26.7.63, Hawker & Keetch bldrs;

1862-7 adds Marlborough College, architect to the college through the 1860s until removed because of ?lawsuit over Humewood, inf Niall Hamilton:

1862-3 Sick House adjoining B-House, £1900, with top-floor reading room for junior boys accessed by separate staircase, GH, E 24 1863 131;

1863 Barton Hill, Bath Road, house for bursar Rev JS Thomas, planned as part of unex boarding-house around a courtyard only house built ; extended 1936 plans G22/760/176; nice patterned glass window on stair well 1863 ill in GH pl 9.3;

1863 Elmhurst, Bath Road, similar house to Barton Hill but simpler, much altered including tile-hanging, E 24 1863 131;

1865-7 new porch to the masters lodge, E 26 1865 227; GH builder, Hillier; alts 1923 G22/760/43;

1866 unex buildings for Marlborough college; GH proposed stone and brick three-storey buildings for schoolrooms, classrooms, studies for 18 boys and master's accommodation; plans college archive ;

1868-9 unexecuted boarding house Marlborough college of stone, £10,300, three storeys accommodation for master and dame with carriage entry under a tower, GH, plans college archive;

1872 vicarage, Figheldean, Br 247.4.72 335 polychrome brick; GH, builder T Gregory of Clapham Junction, brick L-plan with a triangular oriel, now Cleveland Lodge care home;

(1875 rest Witham Friary ch, Som; SRO; GH; dem 1828 tower by Charles Long, removed gallery, remove plaster, added W bay and narthex and bell-gable, 10 flying buttresses, floor, benches, lectern, stalls and notice board; old font found in foundations of tower restored; SANHS 24 1878 25-32 account by WW; McGarvie, Witham Friary, 1989, also refaced wlls, restored curve to the apse; £3600;

1876-7 Westbury Leigh ch; ?designed 1851 BoE; ICBS 1888-9 application says nave and chancel built 1877, SW tower completed 1888-9 and S aisle; plaque in church says tower 1890;

1878 rest Fittleton ch, £400 new benches; GH;

187? new wing, training college Salisbury mentioned in article on WW in BA 16.9.1881 465 and in obit described as new wing to training college, not found by GH;

1888-9 Westbury Leigh ch tower and S aisle; foundations of S aisle and half tower built ?in 1877; ICBS application July 1888;

1894-5 School, School Lane, Westbury Leigh; WBR2;
WHITEHURST, JOHN Horologist, FRS, geologist, inventor; 1713-88, invented a type of hydraulic ram, born Congleton, worked in Derby until 1774 then in London;

178? plan for cascade, Bowood, cf E of Kerry in WAM 42 26; but cascade accto john Britton was 1785-7 by Hon C Hamilton qv and Johua Lane qv;


WHITING & PETO Architects, Frank E Whiting MSA and Walter S Peto, 30 Bedford Row, London;

(1911 altered Royal Comedy Theatre, Panton St, Haymarket London; altered vestibule and bars, now Harold Pinter Theatre)

1913-14 altered Little Court, Worton for Basil Peto work finished by Frank Whiting as Peto fighting abroad acc to Graeme Moore, garden by Harold Peto qv; now called Prince Hill House; an old house was incorporated at rear SE but entirely remodelled;

WHITWELL, THOMAS STEDMAN Architect Birmingham and Coventry. 1784-1840, born Coventry, exh RA 1806ff, assistant probably to D Alexander at London Docks. 1819 inv with Southville proposed development at Leamington Spa; 1825-6 inv with New Harmony, Indiana, Robert Owen utopian community project; des New Library Birmingham 1820-1, Brunswick Theatre London 1827-8 collapsed 1828, ruined his career; HC;

182? involved at Fonthill for George Mortimer; designed the admission ticket for Fonthill sale 1823; CL 25.4.1968;
WHITWORTH, ROBERT Canal engineer, Sowerby, Yorks; pupil of James Brindley, his chief surveyor by 1767, worked on Forth & Clyde and Thames & Severn canals; 1734-99; worked with his sons William Whitworth and Robert Whitworth Jr; final section to Thames at Inglesham complete Nov 1789;

1782 surveyed two routes for Thames & Severn Canal;

1783-9 Thames & Severn canal built 1783-9 by RW with Josiah Clowes qv as resident engineer, through Glos and small part in Wilts (Latton, Marston Meysey); H Household, The Thames & Severn Canal, 1983; roundhouses for linesmen at Cerney Wick (Latton) and Marston Meysey, brick bridges at Marston Meysey, Ruck's Bridge Eisey (rebuilt late C19; locks at Eysey (restored 2007-12)

(1784 survey for possible link from Thames & Severn Canal to London from Kempsford to Abingdon;)

1788-9 advised on Western Canal between northern route from Reading via Calne and Chippenham to Bath and southern route proposed by John Rennie, which he chose and became Kennet & Avon Canal;

1793-9 engineer to Wilts & Berks Canal with his son William; 1793 asked to survey route to Thames at Wallingford or Abingdon; RW determined the summit level and water supply, WW surveyed the rest; route modified to meet new southern route of Kennet & Avon; proposed branch to junction with Thames & Severn canal at Dudsgrove from Longcot, Berks; bill for canal passed 1795; Semington end lock complete and most of route to Foxham report 23.6.97, Queensfield lock complete, Lacock under way; aqueduct over R Marden under way, branch to Calne progressing and branch to Chippenham almost complete; 1798 tunnel and wharf at Chippenham; link to K&A 1799; complete to Foxham when he died, continued by WW;

1793 proposed canal from Bristol to the Thames head and Glos coalfield; RW reported scheme impractical; W&BC
WHITWORTH, WILLIAM Canal engineer son of Robert Whitworth qv; worked for father on Leeds & Liverpool Canal 1790; brother Robert Whitworth Jr worked with him;

1793-1811 engineer to Wilts & Berks Canal with his father; 1793 Robert asked to survey route to Thames at Wallingford or Abingdon; RW determined the summit level and water supply, WW surveyed the rest; route modified to meet new southern route of Kennet & Avon; proposed branch to junction with Thames & Severn canal at Dudsgrove from Longcot, Berks; bill for canal passed 1795; Semington end lock complete and most of route to Foxham report 23.6.97, Queensfield lock complete, Lacock under way; aqueduct over R Marden under way, branch to Calne progressing and branch to Chippenham almost complete; 1798 tunnel and wharf at Chippenham; link to K&A 1799, Dauntsey lock; lake at Tockenham; 1800 navigable to Dauntsey; Seven Locks built 1802 by Brown & McIlquham; 1802 open to Wootton Bassett and wharf at Calne finished also Chippenham tunnel; 1803 last four locks to the summit, bridge at Chaddington Common; 1804 open to Swindon Wharf; row of houses Cetus Buildings W of wharf on N bank; 1805 stretch to Marston top lock and to Longcot; 1807 open to Challow; Abingdon reached 1810; £255,262/10/9½ WW final report 5.4.11; 29 locks in Wilts: Semington; Melksham Forest; Queensfield; Lacock; Pewsham (3); Stanley (2); Foxham (2); Wood Commmon; Dauntsey; Seven Locks (7); Dunnington (2); Chaddington; Summit (1); Marston (4); Longcot Berks (2) etc; Calne branch had Conigre locks (2) and Calne Wharf lock; Chippenham and Wantage branches both without locks;

(1801 report on proposed Abingdon to Aylesbury canal; W&BC)

(1810 prop Western Junction Canal Abingdon to Marsworth on Grand Junction Canal;

1810 prop Bristol Junction Canal from Wilts & Berks to Bristol via Coalpit Heath and Pucklechurch;

1810-19 North Wilts Canal, proposed as Severn Junction Canal from Wilts & Berks at Wooton Bassett to Thames & Severn at Ewen; renamed North Wilts Canal routed from Swindon to Latton, bill 1812, built from 1813 very slowly, opened 1819; tunnel at Cricklade, £59.750; Coate reservoir Swindon built 1821-22 of 52¼ acres; started from Wilts & Berks in centre of Swindon, dropped 60' via 12 locks: Swindon (5); Moredon (2); Pry; Crosslanes; Hayes Knoll; Latton; basin survives at Latton just before junction with Thames & Severn; aqueducts over R Ray N of Swindon at Moredon, over R Key S of Cricklade, over R Thames at top end of north Meadow Cricklade, and over R Churn at Latton;


WHYTE, E. TOWEY

1886 House at Coombe, near Shaftesbury, Wilts ill Br 4.12.96; the present St Mary's School, Shaftesbury in Donhead St Mary; Br 4.12.86 823 for MH Beaufoy now building, local green sandstone from quarry on estate with red Farleigh dressings, two-storey great hall; Mr Dart, Crediton, builder; stable court with enormous baronial tower Br 28.04.88;


WICKHAM, GEOFFREY EARLE Sculptor 1919-2005, taught at Regent St Polytechnic;

1966 The Cube, waterfall sculpture, The Parade, Swindon; demolished in 1970s, SB;


WILDE, JOHN Architect Ivybridge Devon; principal architect for Hydrock developers 2001ff;

2011 rebuild Civic Centre, Trowbridge, for Hydrock;


WILKINS, HENRY Builder, High St, Malmesbury

1901-2 No 52 High St, Malmesbury for Adye & Son, grocers; £1204/16/6d; CV;


WILKINS, PAUL Architect, Havant. Paul Wilkins Partnership, founded in Havant by Chris Wilkins 1920, followed by his son Paul Wilkins, retired 1986, PWP Architects since 2000; architects to Warner Leisure at Corton coastal village, Suffolk, Studley Castle, Warws, convereted Hunstrete House, som, to The Pig Near Bath and other hotels for The Pig chain;

1996 allts Littlecote House for Warner Hotels, WBR files; lare new hotel, restaurant cum reception building, facilities etc;


WILKINS, WILLIAM Architect, London,1778-1839, born Norwich, educ Caius College, Cambridge, travelled in Italy Greece etc 1800-4, in practice in Cambridge 1804-9 then London. Leading Greek Revivalist but also did much Gothic esp Cambridge collegiate buildings; designed National Gallery;

1816-17 Grecian Lodge, Stourhead for Sir RC Hoare; HC; RA 1817;


WILKINS, WILLIAM HENRY Architect Trowbridge son of William Webb Wilkins +1884 of West Croft, patron of church at Studley. 1831-53 Died aged 21 10.1.53, only designed Studley church, buried there behind E end;

1852-4 St John ch, Frome Rd, Studley, Trowbridge; dedicated Sept 1854; 1858 BoE WBR;

1855 ?School, hall and school house, St John ch, Frome Rd, Studley; dated, DoE; 1856-7 acc to Wilts CC; error, by CE Davis qv, Wilkins was dead in January 1853;
WILKINSON EYRE see Chris Wilkinson
WILKINSON, CHRIS Architect London. Chris Wilkinson RA worked with Foster, Rogers, and Hopkins, set up Chris Wilkinson Architects 1983 became Wilkinson Eyre 1987 with Jim Eyre, known for high-tec buildings, Stratford station and market E London; Magma Science Centre Rotherham; Milennium Bridge, Gateshead; National Waterfront Museum Swansea;

1998-9 Dyson Factory, Tetbury Hill, Malmesbury; Anthony Hunt Associates engineers;

2015-2016 remodelled part of Dyson Factory, Malmesbury to canteen and offices; also new research building Dyson 9;
WILKINSON, GEORGE, FRIBA 1814-90. Witney, Oxford, later Dublin. Architect to Poor Law Commissioners, responsible for the standard 'square' plan a cross of rear buildings behind a front range, 1835; first work was Thame Workhouse, Oxon, designed many more including Witney and Chipping Norton. Bampton TH Oxon 1838. Moved to Ireland c1840 as architect to Poor Law Commissioners; Harcourt St Station, Dublin, 1858-9, in Ireland to 1888; Colvin; brother William Wilkinson qv 1819-1901, was architect in Oxford; see workhouses.org website;

Nicholas Cooper & Kathryn Morrison, ‘The English and Welsh Workhouses of George Wilkinson’, Georgian Group Journal, XIV (2004), 104-30 (GGJ) discusses a folio of drawings for workhouses 1835-40 in the V&A collection.

(1836-8 Chard workhouse, Som; dem; GGJ says that a competition was held; £5000; similar to Devizes

(1836 Dorchester Workhouse, Dorset)

1836 Devizes workhouse, Wilts; Young & White bldrs; WBR; dem; brick with single-storey front, very plain;

(1836-7 Wincanton workhouse, Som; Maurice Davis bldr; dem;

1837 Cricklade & Wootton Bassett Union Workhouse, Purton, Wilts; WBR; 11-bay classical front with cruciform rear, rear demolished;

1837 Malmesbury workhouse, Bremilham, Malmesbury; dem 1971-2; single long range, two storeys rising to three-bay three-storey centre;


WILKINSON, NORMAN Architect, garden designer +1934, remodelled garden Strawberry House, Hounslow Mx c1924;

1929 plans for garden Bolehyde Manor, Allington nr Chippenham; inf WHGT notes in WBR files;


WILKINSON, WILLIAM Architect, 5 Beaumont St, Oxford 1819-1901, designed much in North Oxford, practice continued by nephew H Wilkinson Moore; published own designs in English Country Houses, 2nd ed 1875; article by Andrew Saint, Three Oxford Architects on Wilkinson and nephews H W Moore and CC Rolfe in Oxoniensa 1970s;

1859-60 Stalls Farm, model farm on Longleat estate, Wilts, BoE; ILN supplement 10.12.59 aerial view reproduced on front cover of WBR, not exactly as built; J Bailey Denton The farm homesteads of England, 1863; S Copland Agriculture ancient and modern 1866 vol 2, has plans; included are Stalls Farmhouse and attached dairy and Braeside nearby; the Park Farm 1860 mentioned in BoE is an error from ECH where Stalls Farm is called Park Farm;

1864 farm at Fifield, Wilts, AESD, probably error, new farm buildings 1864 at Fyfield Wick, Berks ?Oxon for St John's College, Oxford, plans Berks RO;

(1870 addn Rectory, West Huntspill, Som; SRO Bbm/180; VCH 8;

1872 two lodges, Warneford Place, Sevenhampton, Wilts; BoE; ill in ECH; one on W drive one on N drive, nearly identical;
WILLCOX & AMES Bath name of James Wilson qv firm after Wilson, Willcox and Ames (WW&A) qv. WJ Willcox qv and Thomas Ames in 1886 Bath Directory; Henry Marcus Brown LRIBA born 1868 who practiced in Wolverhampton was articled to W&A, WwinA 1926

1884 Woodlands, Limpley Stoke, Wilts W&A RIBAD;

1885 Adds Lucknam Park, Colerne Wilts – service wing W&A RIBAD
WILLCOX, WILLIAM JOHN Architect 1838-1928 1 Belmont, Bath. Artic James Wilson qv 1853, witnesses drawings of Iford Manor c1859, worked with WE Nesfield in London before returning to Bath c1865, then partner James Wilson as Wilson & Willcox qv from 1865, Wilson, Willcox & Wilson qv, c1872; Wilson, Willcox & Ames qv c1884, Willcox & Ames qv c1886, and c1888-1924 WJ Willcox. County Surveyor East Somerset 1886 held County Surveyorship jointly with Charles E Norman (prev W division Surveyor) to 1891, and singly 1892-1908. Acc to RL never County Architect, as post not created until 1922. Lived at Hampton Hall, Bathampton, Som (Kelly 1906). Obit RIBAJ 36 82. ARIBA 1863, resigned 1892.

1862 1st prize Wesleyan Schools, Frome, Som, Mr Willcox previously of Bath, now practicing in london, WI 15.5.62; 2nd prize CJ Phipps qv;

1893 attrib enlarged Board School, Colerne;

1893 attrib Walmesley Memorial, Market Place, Colerne; column to Richard Walmesley of Lucknam Park +1893;

1900 attrib reblt Manor House, Colerne, Wilts, WBR; for Mrs Ann Walmesley widow of Richard Walmesley of Lucknam Park; R Walmesley died 1893; but plan in WSHC by JH Turnedge qv the Lucknam agent;

1905 remodelled Derriads, Chippenham, Wilts, for Goldney family; RIBAD,


WILLIAMS & COX Architects, 34 Henrietta St, London WC;

c1910 large adds to Marridge Hill House, Ramsbury, now Baydon Manor, for Moses Woolland owner from 1909, g8/760/35; including tempietto entrance to gardens on S and large W service wing, never built or all demolished;


WILLIAMS & CROSS Architects

1915 Fewacombe, Wilts, site not given, foundations only of large castellated house for Horace Joy; ill Br 5.2.15;


WILLIAMS, CHARLES Builder 12 Victoria Rd, Swindon, bankrupt c1900, WBR2; built extensively 1884-1902, built Clarence St and Euclid St Board Schools; Charles Williams I born 1815 in gloucester, Charles II born 1849 in Swindon died 1922, Charles III born London 1872, father and son were builders of County Ground Hotel, Swindon, 1897, on land owned by CW II, son became first landlord;

1895 Hotel, Cricklade Rd, Swindon, WBR2;

1897-8 built New Queens Theatre, Groundwell Rd, Swindon, SBC 38; dem 1959;
WILLIAMS, HENRY Architect, Royal Insurance Buildings, Corn St, Bristol fl 1874-1907; GJL, superb draughtsman, without stylistic principles;

1876 Nos 7-8 Silver St, Bradford on Avon, Wilts; WBR, T Jones bldr;

1877 Bartlett's Brewery, 19-23 High St, Warminster plans WSHC G16/760/55 plans show three floors, present building has four but is otherwise same; possible that building not built until 1883;

WILLIAMS-ELLIS, BERTRAM CLOUGH. Architect. Born 1883. Plas Brondanw, Llanfrothen, Mer. Son of Rev JC Williams-Ellis of Glasfryn, Caerns. Partner with James Scott (W-E&S). Lived at Plas Brondanw, created Portmeirion nearby from 1920s. Author: Architect Errant 1971; catalogue of works RIBA by R Haslam; entry Whos Who in Wales 1920 532; worked with Lionel Brett c1950; office 27 South Eaton Pl london, 1921; 22B Ebury St 1925; Romney's House, Hollybush Hill, Hamprstead; designs in RIBA Drawings PA 475 mostly;

(1906 Pair of cottages, Cricket St Thomas, Som; Architect Errant 277; RIBAD PA484/20 (1-4), for FJ Fry; roughcast first floor with two gables; now Longmoor Cottage, the windows spoilt and extra ones inserted.

(1920 alts Steart House, Burnham on Sea, Som; RIBAD PA431/9 1-6; Steart House is former Baths & Spa c. 1830, on the Esplanade; alts to garden front inc two bay ws; dormers both sides’. Probably not the ‘House near Burnham, Som’ is in list of works in Architect Errant p280;

(19?? ‘House near Burnham, Som’; list of works in Architect Errant p280;

(1920 Alts Kilve Court, Som; Architect Errant; RIBAD PA/441/9 (1-2); added porch and inner screen wall; new dining-rm French ws; remove dining-rm stack; minor alts inc servants hall fireplace.

1921 and 1925 adds Oare House for Geoffrey Fry; James & Yerbury Modern English Houses, 1925 p xxx 111, two exterior two interior photos, built-in library bookcases and a corridor; library was added 1925, plans for library in with 1921 plans, G10/760/76 two new wings added to W side, S elevation SW wing with Venetian doorway, new saloon on gr floor, addition of plain L-plan NE service building; hipped roofed, ground floor of NW wing was remodelled earlier kitchen; reference in letter of 14.5.25 refers to new library wing added to SE; also urns on corners of 1740 houses;

1921 dower house, Oare PA475/11 (1-4); ?The Pennings

1922 heating chamber Wilsford Manor PA442/7

1922 Cold Blow, Huish Road, Oare CL 10.2.23 p195; for Capt WHC Rollo MC; G10/760/76;

1923 alts Fry's Farm, Pewset design PA482/87

1924 design for parsonage, Oare; unex; PA469/2;

1924? summerhouse, Oare House, Oare possibly the apple and garden house Oare 1924 PA475/14;

1924 two cottages Oare for Geoffrey Fry PA47512 (1-3)

1925 library wing, Oare House, Oare for Geoffrey Fry, letter 14.5.25 G10/760/76 apologises for not having sent in plans for library wing; not on plans for 1921 extensions;

1926 Martinsell Cottages, terrace of six cottages, Oare, for Sir Geoffrey Fry; 1921 DoE, probably later; cf design for block of six cottages for Mrs Fry PA469/1 1926;

1927 design for house at Pill Hill, Wilts for Miss Poore PA472/9 (1-18) and for chauffeur's cottage 1927 PA472/10; where? ?Whiteparish;

1928-39 College of Sarum St Michael, Salisbury 1585/234; proposed residential block, laboratory, gymnasium;

1932 groom's cottage and stables, Cold Blow, Oare for Capt WHC Rollo G10/760/128; two L-plan ranges opposite each other, boarded stable NW and groom's cottage and garage in SE; contractor Goodnor;

1936 Lutyens Cottage & Meadow View, Oare; cottages for Sir Geoffey Fry Bt, in one block, brick and boarded with hipped roof, Rudge Lane NE of Oare House; plans G10/760/268;

19?? additions to Pennings, Oare PA475/13 (1-2) no date in catalogue;

(1947? proposed alts Hadspen, Som, for – Hobhouse; drawings at house undated by Clough Williams-Ellis & Lionel Brett of Watlington Park for alts to first floor; inf Robert Dunning; corresp seen by Robert Dunning shows nothing done as permission to proceed not given; the architect initially consulted was Ronald Vallis qv of Frome but there are letters from Clough Williams-Ellis from whom owner wanted ideas; minor adaptation of one wing then done in 1948-9 by Lionel Brett;

(1950-2 House off Stafford Place, Weston s Mare, Som; house for a doctor, Architect Errant 282, by CW-E and Lionel Brett; SNB; SW bedrooom 1954; kitchen c1954;

(19?? Alts Manor House, Curry Mallet, Som; inf owner Sheridan Tandy; RIBAD PA485/8 (1-2) shows alts to outbuilding, remove boundary wall to make entry to a service court, plans for covered way around an inner courtyard entered through a hall from the main courtyard. From opposite side go out 3 radiating paths to an upper terrace which ‘the garage is under’ but appears as if parapetted terrace is over upper end of outbuilding (coal store etc); for Mrs Stackafine; builder Vile of Puckington; mason Wallace Taylor;

Attrib Cottages Nos 1&2 on lane S of Oare House; The Pennings, Oare, further S on same lane, substantial brick hipped house;
WILLMAN, J.H.H. Architect Taunton, partner of FW Roberts (+1932) in Roberts & Willman (R&W) firm continued by Willman ARIBA and AP Stoner ARIBA; JHHW designed RC churches at Keynsham, Som, 1935, Glastonbury, Som, 1939-40, and Dursley, Glos, 1938-9, all as R&W;


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