20?? add Kingsdown School, Stratton St Margaret; RJ Leighfield & Sons builders; two-storey for autism and virtual learning; Leighfield website;
2007-8 Central Library, Swindon; job architects Nic Newland and Tony Currivan; opened 20.10.08, £10m; SB;
2011 Croft Primary School, Hesketh Crescent, Swindon; SBC plannng; Nic Newland head of design;
2016 bridge in Town Gardens, Swindon;
TAIT, JOHN D. Clerk of works and surveyor to Badminton estate, Glos. Designed schools at Acton Turville and Stoke Gifford, Glos;
1880 attrib School, Sopworth; with Badminton crest; AB; 1860 acc to Kelly Directory;
TAIT, THOMAS S. Architect, London of Burnet, Tait & Lorne;
1930-1 West Leaze, Castle St, Aldbourne; C20 Soc Journal; Turner Smaller Eng House; GI; now called Sorbus, built for Mrs Hugh Dalton, A&BN 11.12.31l AR ?August 1933; job architect was Frederick MacManus and he and Edward Armstrong designed a separate timber extension to it in the 1940s for the Daltons. inf Jeremy Gould; Mrs Dalton was responsible for Tait getting commission for Burlington School for Girls, Hammersmith; DSA says that West Leaze was designed by Tait's assistant Frederick MacManus qv who designed separate staff cottage to the SW in 1946;
TALMAN, WILLIAM Architect 1650-1719 born West Lavington, son of William Talman of Eastcott +1663, possibly patronised by Earl of Clarendon from 1678, designed his house at Swallowfield, Berks, 1689-91; Comptroller of Works 1689-1702 and deputy Superintendent Royal Gardens; rival of Wren for position;
(c1702 des for Witham Park, Som; HC; for Sir William Wyndham;
(1698-1704 Dyrham Park, Glos for Wm Blathwayt)
17?? No 64 Fore St, Trowbridge, not actually by WT but copied from the E front at Dyrham, Glos, as illustrated in Vitruvius Britannicus 2 1717; WBR Lloyds Bank, Fore St, Trowbridge built for Thomas Cooper clothier;
c1700 garden terrace, West Dean House; attrib by Peter Smith in GGJ 1999; a drawing atttrib to John Smythson Jr is ill in GGJ 2002 133;
WBR suggests E front Urchfont Manor, 1690s;
TARRING & WILKINSON Architects, 69 Basinghall St, London, John Tarring leading nonconformist architect
1878-9 C chapel, Fisherton St Salisbury; 1879 BoE; WBR; A 6.4.78; BN 20.6.79 large windows in apse by Drake of Exeter; T advert ST 2.3.78;
TATE, JERRY Architect, Jerry Tate Architects; worked for Grimshaws; Tate Harmer Architects from 2008 with Rory Harmer; London E8; designed The Light House at Lower Mill eco estate, Somerford Keynes, Glos, c2010, on passivhaus principles;
2012 Highfield, Main Rd, Winterbourne Earls; website; GI, for – Walker; proposed new house Salisbury, energy efficient, BD 2.11.12; £350K; Anne Keenan landscape architect;
TATE, N.
1875 rest Donhead St Andrew ch; WBR;
TATHAM, CHARLES HEATHCOTE Architect London 1772-1842; HC; in Rome 1794-6,
c1805 Roche Court, Winterslow, for Francis Egerton; HC; 1804 WBR;
c1810 Broxmore House, Whiteparish, for R Bristow, RA 1809 and 1818; dem;
1814 enl Cowsfield House, Whiteparish, for Sir Arthur Paget, dem; HC; before 1825 WBR
TATHAM, H Architect, Norfolk Farmhouse, Pyrford, Surrey; ARSM, Dic FRIBA;
1937 alts West Wick Farm Pewsey for BG Catterns; Heritage Statement 2015; G10/760/282; minor internal alts, a fireplace from the Bank of England was brought in, Catterns was Chief Cashier there, later Deputy Governor; Percy C King of Pewsey, bldr;
TAYLOR & YOUNG Architects, Manchester Isaac Taylor qv and W Cecil Young FFRIBA; Isaac Taylor was son of J Medland Taylor architect, the firm did much church work around Manchester;
1929 remodelled St Denys Convent, vicarage St, Warminster; plans estate bursar Warminster School signed T&Y; neo-Georgian; by Isaac Taylor, Warminster in the C20;
TAYLOR, ALFRED JOHN. Architect, 18 New Bond St, Bath, Kelly 1906. FRIBA. 1878-1938. Worked with Arthur C Fare perspectivist (T&F) later joined by Taylor’s daughter Mollie (later Mollie Gerrard) and son A Rowland Taylor and AW Hind as AJT&P. Later firm was called Gerrard Taylor & Ptnrs qv; 4-5 Bridge St Bath 1931 dir
1909 alts Crown & Anchor Ramsbury for G&T Spencer brewers of Bradford on Avon; WSHC 1248.1; G8/760/8;
1927-9 Hospital, Trowbridge, Wilts, T&F with WW Snailum qv; WBR)
1929 alts, St Margaret St, Bradford on Avon, Wilts, plans WRO G13/760/190)
TAYLOR, BARRIE see BTA Warminster
1973 alts No 2 Fore Street, Trowbridge; BoE 1975;
TAYLOR, E. BROUGH Engineer Westminster;
1899-1900 proposed reservoir Kingston Deverill; Longleat estate papers;
TAYLOR, ISAAC Architect, 7 Chapel Walks, Manchester see Taylor & Young; son of J Medland Taylor architect, did much church work around Manchester;
1908 rear alt St Denys Convent, 20 Vicarage St, Warminster plans G16/730/234 ext on garden front with new gable; over new sitting-room and vestry addition to first-floor chapel;
1929 remodelled St Denys Convent, Vicarage St, Warminster; plans estate bursar Warminster School signed T&Y; large neo-Georgian extensions including a tower-like link block and ?refacing or rebuilding of range beyond; by Isaac Taylor, Warminster in the C20;
TAYLOR, JAMES Builder, Bradford on Avon
186? Prospect House, Frome Rd, Bradford on Avon WT 26.1.1996; WBR;
TAYLOR, JOHN Mason, builder, Hilperton Lane, Trowbridge, 1842 dir; built The Cedars 1858-62 and Rodwell Hall, both Victoria Rd, Towbridge, Rodwell Hall, possibly both by Manners & Gill qv; WBR;
TAYLOR, PIERS Architect Bath, see Mitchell Taylor Workshop (MTW); founded Invisible Studio Architects (ISA) 2012,
(2006-7 adds Starfall Farm, Northend, Batheaston Som; for Xa Sturgis & Anna Benn; MTW;
(2006-7 Moonshine, house for himself, The Rocks estate, Marshfield, Glos; AR July 2006; AJ small projects award 2009;
(2007-15 Stilllpoint clinic and dojo, Bath; riverside site below Walcot St; MTW
(2008-9 boarding house, Badminton School, Bristol AJ 16.4.09; Kris Eley project architect for MTW;
2010-11 Dining hall, Colerne Primary School, PT with Charley Brentnall AJ 31.03.11; also timber bicycle shed;
(2014 offices for Invisible Studio, in woodland behind Calton Gardens, Bath; £15K; ISA
(2016 staff mess-room and wide-span timber shed for tree management centre, Westonbirt Arboretum, Glos; ISA with Charley Brentnall; AJ 8.4.16;
TAYLOR, WILLIAM Surveyor, London. Fl 1668-89;
(1667-8 design for Pewterers' Hall, London;
c1682 worked at Longleat for 1st Viscount Weymouth who inherited in 1682; fitted up chapel in W wing, the gallery in E wing, and extensive works in office buildings, HC; letter from Lord Weymouth 1683 refers to 'pulling all downe in the country' and desiring better advice than his own or Mr Tayler's so asks opinion of Wren qv; letter re progress of work 1684;
(1688-9 Minsterley ch, Salop for Lord Weymouth; HC finished 1689)
(1689 Halswell House, Goathurst, Som; HC)
1705-9 attrib Lord Weymouth's School, Church St, Warminster; but all payments to workmen are by William Langford qv; HC has no evidence for William Taylor alive after 1689;
TEAM 4 Architects. Firm established 1963 by Su Brumwell (later Su Rogers), Wendy Cheeseman (later Wendy Foster), Norman Foster and Richard Rogers none of whom had qualified;
(1964-6 Creek Vean, Falmouth, Cornwall, for Su Brumwell's parents;
1966-7 Reliance Controls, Drakes Way, Greenbridge, Swindon; AR Jan 1966 60; AR Jun 1967 431-3; AR July 1967 18; last building before practice split; RIBAJ May 1977; details AJ 8.8.79; dem; RIBAJ 88 June 1981 35-9; BoE1975; Anthony Hunt qv engineer; SBC, 3200 sq mtrs, large steel rectangle, flexible interiors, single canteen, won first FT Industrial Architecture Award, extended later by Foster Associates (??); dem 1991;
TECTONIC ARCHITECTURAL SYSTEMS, Architects;
1987 offices, Windmill Hill, Swindon, for Tarmac Design & Build; AJ 9.12.87; glass -clad, ?used by Galileo, later Vodaphone;
TERRY, QUINLAN Architect, classicist trained by Raymond Erith, worked with son Francis Terry;
2001 Ferne House, Berwick St John for Viscount Rothermere; inf P Nokes; R Moulding qv builders;
2011-12 library, Old Rectory, Pewsey for Barnabas Fund, Christian charity run by Patrick Sookhdeo; article re opening in newsletter September 2012 of British Orthodox Church; new library proposed Gazette & Herald 5.1.2007 no architect named;
2011-13 refurb Tedworth House, Tidworth as rehab centre for Help of Heroes; Victorian roller skating rink converted to gym/ sports centre; by Quinlan & Francis Terry, inf Pippa Card; iron gates by Peter Weldon;
2014 proposed house near Ramsbury; for Ramsbury Estates; ?the Palladian house for Stefan Persson, foundations only laid by 2017 on Ramsbury airfield
TETLOW KING Architects, Romsey and Portishead, founded c1982 as Oldfield King; renamed Thrive Architects in 2014; Peter Morgan, architect, managing director, 2017;
(1998ff Field Farm development, Shepton Mallet, Som; Mendip DC multiple housing award 2007; Tadley Acres, 600 houses Poundbury style for Duchy of Cornwall; by Oldfield King; begun c1994, to masterplan by Robert Adam qv BoE Somerset N;
(199? Chandler's Yard development, Burry Port, Carms, website;
(2001-2 Thicket Mead development, Midsomer Norton, Som, Poundbury style for Ducky of Cornwall; BANES Design Quality Award 2002 and 2003;
2004-8 Angel Ridge development Okus Road, Swindon, for Bloor Homes, redevelopment of Princess Margaret Hospital site; 520 units, around oval piazza/garden; also care home,
2009ff Archer's Gate and King's Gate developments, off Boscombe Rd, Amesbury; Archer's Gate 720 units, King's Gate will take total to 1600 units; 'Wiltshire vernacular' with a 'striking crescent' at the heart; also Archer's Gate local centre in brick vernacular style with statue of 'Amesbury Archer';
2015 Community Hub, Wilton on Erskine Barracks site; Place & Placemakers Award 2016; part of redevelopment by Redrow homes;
2016 Tidworth Civic Centre approved, inc council chamber, community centre etc; by Thrive Architects
TETLOW, ROBERT Architect with ADP qv, Bob Tetlow, designed Water Research Centre, Blagrove, Swindon;
TEULON, SAMUEL SANDERS Craigs Court, Charing Cross, London. Architect 1812-73, pupil George Legg and George Potter, set up c1840, churches and country houses. Matthew Saunders, The Churches of SS Teulon, Ecclesiological Society 1982, and ‘Samuel Sanders Teulon, 1812-1873’ in The Architectural Outsiders, 1985, (AO) with abbreeviated list of works at back, longer lists with references deposited with RIBA and Victorian Soc.
1853 Vicarage, Fosbury, AO; DoE says 1856 now Buchan House; VCH says built by 1856; BoE says 1854-6;
1854-6 Fosbury ch, Wilts; WBR; consec 30.9.56, WI 9.10.56, SWJ 4.10.56 DWG 2.10.56 all with no details; AO for RCL Bevan of Fosbury House, planned spire 1859 unex, parsonage 1853 or 1854-6, and school; PR/1542/10; plans D1/60/5/60 sent in by J Frederick Parkinson pro SST;
185? school, Fosbury 1850s AO; but VCH says school near Fosbury House built c1810; marked on OS now called New Estate Office, looks 1850s with bellcote and attached house;
185? attrib South Lodge, Fosbury House
185? attrib alts Fosbury House for RCL Bevan, remodelling of brick outbuilding range to NW;
(1856-7 St Thomas ch, Wells, Som; SRO; RL inc Vicarage and St Thomas Terrace; 1856-7, for Troth Jenkyns, widow of Richard Jenkyns, Dean of the Cathedral and former Master of Balliol whose idea the church had been but who died in 1854. After her death in 1857, the completion was overseen by Revd Henry Blisset. Reredos (coloured by Fisher) and font, 1857, by Forsyth, altar rails by Skidmore, chancel windows by Wailes, south-west window by Clayton, the rest by Wilmshurst. South aisle added 1864. Also by Teulon, Vicarage, 1859, Church school 1859, and St Thomas’s terrace; Peter Howell & Ian Sutton (eds.), Victorian Churches, 1989, 121. consecrated Bn 1858 27 five two-light ws in chancel presented by a fellow of Balliol in mem Dean Jenkyns;
1857-8 Alderbury ch, Wilts; WBR; Br 17.7.58 three light transept window by Clayton & Bell also a window on S side, centurion and X blessing children; AO FS 9.5.57, consec 24.6.58 for E of Radnor, Sir F Harvey-Bathurst and George Fort of Alderbury House (chancel), £2800; SWJ 26.6.58; DWG 1.7.58;
1857-8 Oare ch , Wilts; WBR; DWG 23.9.58 and WI 30.9.58 consecrated, Norman style, stained glass by Powell, Mitchell of Pewsey cont; £1100; built for Rev M Hillier of Oare House, vicar of Wilcot; ICBS, consecration 16 Sept 1858; AO Romanesque style on instructions of client Mary Goodman, £1900 with £1000 from Mrs Goodman; to commemorate life of Mr Goodman;
1858-9 cottages, Great Bedwyn, AO; not identified ?the cottages in Church St, Little Bedwyn one dated 1860;
(1859 Vicarage, St Thomas ch, Wells, Som; SC notes; RL;
(1859 Church school St Thomas ch, Wells, Som; SC notes; TC 2.11.59 £1565, Mr Davis of Langport bldr;
(1859? St Thomas Terrace, Wells, Som; SC notes; RL; AO no date;
1859-60 Mortuary chapel, Cemetery, Marlborough; Br 1860 563, also lychgate; dem; plans for chapel 1861 D1/60/7/26; AO says unexecuted plans prepared 1859 for cemetery chapel for use of workhouse to cost no more than £475;
1860ff estate cottages. Little Bedwyn for RCL Bevan of Fosbury house, three pairs on Church St, one dated 1860; row of four on Kelston Rd with Bevan heraldry;
1861-3 estate cottages Oxenwood village, Fosbury for RCL Bevan of Fosbury House; AO; seven or eight former pairs several since extended; Nos 9-10 dated 1861, Bennetts chequered brick unlike the others which are flint and brick; No 16 L-plan, No 17 with some timber in gable, No 18-19 dated 1861; The Hassock No 21-22? least altered; 29-30 1863 extended both ends; No 31 plain half-hipped perhaps not Teulon;
(1864 S aisle, St Thomas ch, Wells, Som; SC notes;
TEW, ERNEST FREDERICK Architect, Bath, 1905-81, pupil AN Paterson of Glasgow, worked for Birkenhead Corporation 1930, Exeter City Council 1934, Blackburn Corporation 1936, Bristol City Council 1939 (assistant city architect); private practice Bath 1945, FRIBA 1951; DSA;
(1958ff restored Ston Easton Park, Som, for Stephen Clark)
1967 Bradford Porch, buuilt as summerhouse, Corsham Court, reusing Perp fan-vault from porch at The Priory, Bradford on Avon dem 1938; BoE;
THAMESDOWN BOROUGH COUNCIL Formed 1974, Director of Environmental Services J Winter, 1975; Chief architect 1986 Bob Pepper; Nigel Honer joined 1974 from Powell & Moya influenced house style; architects included Mark Allen (Bob Allen?), Dick Bailey, Ray Jones, Jack Konynenburg qv, Dave Oldrieve, Dave Pearce; profile of department BD 17.10.86;
1969-78 rest Railway Village, Swindon; project begun by Swindon BC, bought village in 1966, Housing Design Award 1975 (1973?); RTPI Jubilee Award 1979, BD 29.6.79, job architect Eric Golding; AJ 29.10.75 300 cottages converted, J Winter Director of Environmental Services, Thamesdown BC;
1983-5 conv of four-storey maisonettes, George Gay Gardens, Wolsley Ave, Park S, Swindon, to elderly persons group dwelling; Jack Konynenburg; opened 1984; housing award 1987 BD 30.10.87;
1985 Link Leisure Centre, Swindon; lead architect Nigel Honer, co-ordination Richard Emery, also Pepper, Pearce, Bailey (Macrae), Oldrieve architects; BD 17.10.86; BD 5.7.85, £9m, Bovis contrs; Anthony Hunt Associates engineers; also includes a Library;
1984 Bus station and multi-storey car park, Swindon; Nigel Honer and Ray Jones architects; BD 17.10.86; BD 22.3.85 car park completed in 50 weeks, £2.5m; also the Octagon cafe in New Bridge Square; car park demolished, bus station to go in Kimmerfields development;
1984 Westward Community Centre, Swindon
1985 ext Civic Offices, Euclid St, Swindon; BD 17.10.86;
198? refreshment pavilion, Lydiard country park, Lydiard Tregoze; Ray Jones and Mark Allen architects;
198- The Holbeins, Grange Park, Swindon, courtyard family housing; Jack Konynenburg, part of Area 59 housing dev of 144 units around central square, job architect Jaap Konynenburg qv; two squares in the development and streets of houses;
198- Three community centres, Swindon: inc Gorse Hill by Ray Jones; Westlea by D Macrae; also ?Freshbrook, Even Swindon, Toothill;
198- Cockram Court, Medgbury Rd, Swindon; 3-storey flats for elderly and single people; Bob Pepper;
198- Sheltered housing, Frobisher Drive, Walcot East, Swindon; D Pearce architect;
198- David Stoddart Gardens, Omdurman Rd, Swindon, sheltered accommodation, 80 flats with communal facilities for elderly; G Stewart and Bob Pepper architects;
198- Public toilets, The Park, Faringdon Rd, Swindon, SE corner public park near railway village; Dave Pearce;
198- Shops, Freshbrook village centre, Swindon; Nigel Honer and Dick Bailey architects; ridge-and-furrow roof and front canopy; also Community centre by Bob Allen
Community Centres: Even Swindon; Freshbrook c1983 by Bob allen acc to Michael Gray; Toothill; Gorse Hill; Westlea;
Libraries: Link Centre;
Also ?Wat Tyler House, Princes St, offices for Thamesdown BC;
THOMAS, EDWARD RIDDIFORD Architect and surveyor, Swindon, fl 1879-83; WBR2;
1882 cottages, Thomas St, Swindon with HW Thomas; WBR2;
THOMAS, JOHN Engineer, second resident engineer on Kennet & Avon in succession to Dudley clark, sacked in 1800. In 1802 procured a second-hand Boulton & Watt steam engine bought in 1800 for the West India Docks Co for £835 to install at Crofton; The Crofton Story;
1806 planned house near Crofton Pumping Station site £350 near springs that fed R Dun; Crofton Story;
1807 Crofton Pumping Station built to a design supplied by the engineers Boulton & Watt qv;
THOMAS, JOSEPH CHARLES Builder, contractor, Swindon St, Highworth in 1875 dir; at No 2-3 Sheep Street by 1890s;
THOMAS, MARK HARTLAND Architect, Bristol, son of Percival Hartland Thomas qv; worked with him as Hartland Thomas Architects F&ARIBA
1937 All Saints ch, Southbrook St, Swindon; Blackford & Sons bldrs; WBR2; by Percival Hartland Thomas H&F; by MHT acc to BoE; G2/760/ 3431;
1938 Vicarage, All Saints ch, Southbrook St, Swindon G24/760/ 3497 by HT F&ARIBA 10 John St Bristol;
THOMAS, PERCIVAL HARTLAND 2 Codrington Place, Clifton Park, Bristol; LRIBA; 1879-1950; GJL; one of surveyors of dilapidations to Bath & Wells diocese 1912-19. In 1930s worked with son Mark Hartland Thomas qv as Hartland Thomas Architects, 10 John St, Bristol; MHT designed modern movement houses. PHT was a partner in C & C Thompson qv architects, land agents, surveyors with Charles E Thompson LRIBA.
1930 porch, St Mary's Rectory High St, Cricklade; PR/1632/61; utilitarian kitchen porch; note that complete 1931;
1932-4 repairs Inglesham ch; SPAB files; GW King, Lechlade, builder; restoration of fragmentary C13 reredos, under advice of Prof EW Tristram; drawing 11.10.32; wall paintings conserved by Prof EW Tristram;
1937 All Saints ch, Southbrook St, Ferndale, Swindon; Blackford & Son, Calne, bldrs; WBR2; H&F; by MHT acc to BoE; plaque just says Hartland Thomas;
1938 Vicarage, All Saints ch, Southbrook St, Swindon G24/760/ 3497; by Hartland Thomas FRIBA FSI, F&ARIBA;
1947 steeple repairs, St Mark ch, Swindon; BRO EP/J/SwStM/5; EW Beard builder;
THOMAS Sir PERCY Architect Cardiff, London. Percy Thomas Partnership; PRIBA;
1970-2 altered White Hart Chippenham to supermarket keeping facade only; BoE;
THOMPSON, FRANCIS Railway engineer, architect. Designed stations etc of North Midland Railway;
1841-2 consulted over Swindon Station, letter 10.1.42 from Brunel asking for invoice for 'time and trouble and expenses incurred by you on the subject of the refreshment rooms' , possible that he designed external elevations for the two blocks at the station, C&F 37-8; originally stuccoed; one section drawing of northern block showing interiors is signed by Brunel and Rigbys the contractors; Thompson's offer to design cottages of Railway Village declined by Brunel, C&F 43;
THOMPSON, JOHN BELL LANGHORN Borough Surveyor Swindon 1891-1961, born Carlisle, articled City engineer, Carlisle, officer in RE, MC, in Carlisle, then Hastings, then Swindon 1924-48, see Swindon.
THOMSON, JAMES. 1800-83 London. Born Melrose, brought up in London, pupil JB Papworth from 1814-21, worked on Nash terraces at Regents Park 1827-54, Polytechnic Regents St 1838 enlarged 1849. APSD lists also Union Bank, Argyle Place, London; buildings Clements Inn; Polygraphic Hall, King William St; architect to Grittleton estate of Joseph Neeld probably from 1828: Alderton church and village, Leigh Delamere church and village, Sevington school and village, farms and cottages, also a school-house at Chippenham, almshouses Leigh Delamere; parsonages Alderton and Leigh Delamere; Grittleton House begun in 1830s, exh RA 1853, then completed to H Clutton designs, stable yard designs undated by JT at Courtauld Institute; alts Derbyshire Bank, Derby; houses at Derby for W Baker; laid out Roy estate Notting Hill; built houses at E end Hanover Terrace, Ladbroke Grove 1842-3; Russo-Greek chapel Welbeck St 1863; 1870 staircase Charing X Hospital; obit Br 1883 44 705; Canon JE Jackson (1805-91) papers at Society of Antiquaries, Neeld papers at WSHC; author of 'School Houses' designs for schools for Neeld, 1842, with examples of Norton St Philip, Alderton and Hullavington, also 'Retreats, designs for cottages, villas and ornamental buildings' 1827; DNB; Obituary Br 1883a 705;
(1827 School, Norton St Philip, Som; for Joseph Neeld of Grittleton; AEBTD; exh RA 1830; plans WRO 1305/285 also for pair of thatched cottages there; it seems that Neeld designed the school crudely and his drawing was given to Thomson who redrew it entirely, letter 20.6.27; plans in Thomson, School Houses 1842;
1832 School, Alderton illustrated in James Thomson, School Houses, 1842, converted into a single cottage and illustrated in Thomson's History of the church and village of Alderton 1845; now Church Cottage, converted c.1844-5 when the larger school by Thomson was built further down the street;
1832 School, Hullavington published in James Thomson, School Houses, 1842, very small with central porch and arched window in each end wall; WSHC
c1831-45 Cottages, Alderton, part of rebuilding of Alderton illustrated in 1845 unpublished history of Alderton by Thomson; 1. a cottage row of three (W) inc Fern Cottage; 2. pair (E) New Farm Cottages 1831-2; 3. pair (W) Mistletoe Cottage/Wychwood; 4. Torri Cottage (W) a single with catslide central dormer; 5. Primrose Cott/ the Cottage (W) row of three with gabled centre and each end recessed porches on timber posts; 6. The Bakehouse (W), pair with centre gable and two inset porches; 7. Cherry Tree Cott/ Yew Tree Cott pair with double porch under centre catslide; 8. Rose Cottage/ ?, pair with canted bays, porch on each end; also c1830-40 alts to existing houses: porch added to Storm Cottage/ Porch Cottage (E), illustrated in 1845, also c1830-40 alts to Manor Farmhouse illustrated in 1845, bargeboards and porch; also porch on The Forge House (W) c1830-40; porch on Townfield Farm; porch on New Farms; porch on Hughes Farm; also Church Cottage the school of 1832, and the Old School house, the school of 1844-5;
c1832-56 Grittleton House for Joseph Neeld; two phases c1832-40 and 1847-56; Neeld bought estate from Colonel Houlton in 1828; work began in consequence of a fire, but WHSC 1305/313 has a sketch made in 1828 by Thomson of previous house (or copy of it made in 1856); Canon JE Jackson History of Grittleton 1843 has 3 elevations showing its gradual enlargement to that date and a view of interior halls to the N of central crossing; much building work in 1847, E front has 1851 date on block S of N end; another phase in 1852-6 with brief period 1853-4 when design was handed to Henry Clutton qv; Br 1853 279 and 281 has plan and elevation by Thomson; Grittleton House now in course of erection, DWG 12.5.53, description with sizes of rooms etc, all taken from Builder; WRO accounts c1847-56 1305/83; in 1855 payments to Joseph White of London stone carver; Thomas Potter of Hampstead, London, ironwork; Parsons of London plasterwork; 1305/313 letters re building dispute 1854 and court case when White sued Neeld and Neeld sued Clutton; WSHC 1305/313 has ground floor plan of proposed enlargement by Thomson 1856; 1DWG 10.4.56 has history of house taken from Autobiography of John Britton; design for porte cochère exh RA 1856 by JJ Thomson qv; work on interior still going on Br 1860 484; CL 22.12.1966;
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