17?? work at Wyndham House, Salisbury, cf Garden History 15 1987 19-54;
WOODWARD, JOSEPH Carpenter and wheelwright Lechlade;
1892 builder restoration Inglesham ch, JT Micklethwaite architect; bill SPAB file; took down and rebuilt bellcote, reroofed nave; bill for roof on S aisle 1888 by Joseph Bowley builder and contractor of Lechlade;
WOODYER, HENRY. Architect. Grafham near Guildford. 1816-96 pupil William Butterfield 1844. Churches at Dorking 1866-77, Clewer 1853-96, Greenham, Highnam 1847-52, Tenbury 1854-6, Wokingham, Hascombe, Grafham. Worked for Vivians of Swansea and Gibbs of Tyntesfield. Cf Elliott & Pritchard, Henry Woodyer, 2002;
(1850 unex des for Kingweston ch, Som; ch built 1851-5 by CE Giles qv; VCH; spec and letters SRO D/P/kingw/8/3/2; for F Dickinson;
1860 St Edmunds School, Salisbury, Wilts; WBR;
1861 rest Berwick St John ch, Wilts; WBR; G 7.5.62 two windows ordered but not completed, a third in contemplation;
(1863 Alverstoke ch new church Newtown, FS SWJ 11.7.63, Robert Futcher of Fisherton Works, Salisbury contractor;
1865-6 rest Compton Bassett ch, Wilts; WBR; DWG 8.2.66; G 18.4.66 E window by Hardman to Rev W Dalby; plans 1865 D1/61/17/14 new chancel, side chapels, £968, iron railings and gates put into medieval stone screen, new stalls, reredos of Caen stone, tiles by Minton & Hollins; N porch looks C19 but already there in Woodyer's plans;
(1870 Easton ch, Hants, consec SWJ 3.12.70; erected Newman & Son of Winchester;
1879 Sotheron Estcourt fountain, Market Place, Devizes; reputedly by HW, VCH; statue by Nicholl of London acc to DWG 18.9.79 when unveiled; design has echoes of Burges design for Sabrina fountain, Gloucester, 1856, inf to David McLees;
WOOLDRIDGE, JOSEPH Surveyor. Involved with Benjamin Ferrey qv at East Grafton church 1839-44 and Great Bedwyn church 1840-1; ICBS;
WOOLFALL & ECCLES. Architects, Castle St, Liverpool. John Woolfall & TE Eccles. Architects to N & S Wales Bank, then to London Joint City & Midland Bank, later London City & Midland. TM Alexander associated in 1920s, Woolfall retired before 1922 when TE Eccles FRIBA and DG Mackintosh LRIBA partners; firm designed Midland Bank branches across Britain.
1919-20 Midland Bank, High St, Melksham, Wilts; plans WSHC;
1920 Midland Bank, 2 Market Place, Chippenham WSHC G19/760/102 new bank front to C19 building;
1920-1 Midland Bank, 141 High St, Marlborough G22/760/11; disused 2017; LJC&M Bank
1921 Midland Bank, 1 Wood St, Swindon, G24/760/ 2607; pedimented ashlar; dem behind facade;
1921-2 Midland Bank, Bridge St, Swindon corner King St, G24/760/2598 plans new ground floor bank frontage 29.12.20; dem; G24/760/ 2621 same plans 10.3.21; demolished?
1922 Midland Bank, Market Place, Warminster; similar to Melksham; HSBC archives have note that a historic photograph is among W&E plans, but cannot find it; opened 19.2.23;
1922 Midland Bank, No 142 High St Wootton Bassett plans G4/760/ 257 conversion of ground floor of Victorian building on corner Station Rd;
1922 Midland Bank, The Strand, Calne plans WSHC G18/760/71 no elevation;
1922 alterations to No 4 High St, Calne, G18/760/76, new shopfront and window, for the Midland Bank but not apparently to be used by bank;
(1924 Midland Bank alts, 2 Fore St, Wellington, Som; HSBC archives)
Attributed: Midland Bank 23 High St, Malmesbury, 1923 according to HGM but pre 1922 according to HBSC archives; ?1920-1:
WREN, Sir CHRISTOPHER 1632-1723, born East Knoyle, knighted 1673.
1663 doorway Longleat, probably for visit of Charles II in 1663, certainly before 1676 when shown in Jan Siberecht's painting; Wren worked at Longleat in 1662 and 1669 acc to history of the school, consulted only in 1683 acc to HC; in 1704 removed and re-erected at Lord Weymouth's School, Warminster, 1707; BoE; original doorway had paired columns and a cresting over cornice, R Hope, AR June 1966 478-9; new main staircase at Longleat also by Wren acc to R Hope hist of the Lord Weymouth School; Thomas Strong mason said to have worked on it; Thomas Strong +1681 was working at Longleat in 1662 for Sir James Thynne who acc to an early C18 account made the stone terrace from the outward gate to the hall door and made the door by the direction of Sir Christopher Wren (doorway now at Warminster School) also new made the Great Stairs, paved the hall and passages with stone, finished the Blue Parlour and Drawing-room adjoining it and walled and planted the old Kitchen garden and made the door out of the hall into the Great Parlour'.
1668 report on Salisbury Cathedral; HC
1671-3 bishop's throne and choir furnishings, Salisbury Cathedral; HC; WAM 57 1958 and 76 1982;
1683 consulted by Lord Weymouth over alts Longleat; HC;
WRIGHT & WRIGHT Architects Sandy Wright
2006-8 proposed housing Swindon for Kevin McCloud company Hab; £19m, with further phases by David Chipperfield and DSDHA; but sacked BD 8.8.08 over fees; replaced by Glenn Howells Architects;
WRIGHT, A.G. Architect, Trowbridge, architect to Ushers Brewery
1936 Sir Audley Arms inn, Audley Rd, Chippenham for Ushers Brewery; WSHC G19/760/361; Tudor style brick and stone;
1938 rebuilt Royal Oak, High St, Marlborough, plans G22/760/192; new front, new rear wing, £3000;
WRIGHT, STEPHEN Architect, died 1780, clerk of works at Hampton Court 1746, probably a clerk of William Kent; took over Henry Flitcroft posts of Master Mason and Deputy Surveyor when HF elevated to Comptroller of Works 1758;
1745 working at Tottenham Park, writes letter to Lord Burlington on behalf of Lord Ailesbury asking for some prints; Chatsworth letters 315.0; inf R Hewlings;
WRIGHT, THOMAS. Astronomer, instrument maker born Durham, 1711-86. Designed garden buildings, two collections of six designs ‘Arbours’ 1755, and ‘Grottos’ 1758. Embellished grounds at Berkeley Castle c170-5; Badminton c1750-6, Beckett Pk Berks; Culford, Oaklands, Stoke Gifford nr Bristol; Shugborough, Wallington & Wrest. Retired to Bishop Auckland 1762.
17?? signs bronze sundial on terrace at Lacock Abbey; possibly a reproduction;
17?? laid out garden Netheravon House, Wilts, WBR2;17?? Doric Temple, landscape and garden buildings, E Harris, Thomas Wright, 1979; not in HC;
WRIGHT, WILLIAM contractor, failed 1875.
18775 contractor, Swindon, Andover & Marlborough Railway, began on 773 yard tunnel under Old Town, Swindon, but workings collapsed and work ceased;
WYATT & BRANDON see T.H. Wyatt
WYATT, BENJAMIN DEAN Architect, 1775-1855, son of James Wyatt qv, took up architecture 1809; des Theatre Royal Drury Lane 1811 and unbuilt palace for D of Wellington 1815-16; bankrupt 1833;
1814 Market Cross, Devizes for 1st Visc Sidmouth; HC; with L J Abington acc to BoE; JMR lists an earlier design for the Market Cross, 1803 by James Wyatt qv, no mention of Abington;
WYATT, JAMES 1746-1813; HC; 1762 went to Venice pupil of Antonio Visentini, then Rome, returned c1768. Worked w father & brother Samuel. Made his name with Pantheon, London, 1772; JMR; 6th son of Benjamin Wyatt of Weeford, younger bro of Samuel & Benjamin II, father of Benjamin Dean Wyatt +1852, sculptor Matthew C Wyatt +1862 and architect Phillip Wm Wyatt +1835;
1777-83 New Park, Roundway, dem 1954-5; exh RA 1784 by JW's draughtsman John Dixon; for James Sutton MP; called Roundway Park after 1840, stables remain called Roundway House; begun 1780, VCH; Simon Baynes 'A Forgotten House' unpubl 2017 incomplete accounts include payments to JW £50 1779 £100 1780 for improvements at New Park as an early C18 house was incorporated; accounts 1777-82 include stable 1777, raising garden wals 1778, preventing smoking chimneys 1781, total c£2400 spent; plasterwork oval dining-room estimate 1782 by Joseph Rose to JW design £76, drawing-room ceiling £82/5/0d; landscape by Repton qv Red Book 1794;
1782 attrib rebuilding Heytesbury House for Gen William Ashe A'Court MP; attrib by Anthony Dale, James Wyatt, 1956 217; not in HC; plans dated 1782 show old house had 11-bay front range, as refaced, so rebuilding was 1782-4; GM 1795 373-5 says house rebuild about 12 years ago; only connection with Wyatt was that he designed the mon to Ashe A'Court's first wife Katherine A'Court +1776 in St Mary, Cheltenham; infill single-storey hall between wings of N front 1820 in Soane style but no evidence that by Soane; JMR gave attribution in his book on The Wyatts but not in subsequent book on James Wyatt; on balance unlikely;
1787ff rest Salisbury Cathedral; survey 1787, work 1789-92; HC; SWJ 9.11.89 oak ceiling of choir taken down, do not know why it was ever erected, most disgusting to the eye; choir screen cf Arch Hist 27 1984 481-7; 1787-92 JMR, exh RA 1787
1790-5 Hartham Park, Wilts; HC, for Lady James; enl 1858 and 1888;
1792 New Hall, Nunton, Wilts; HC, dem 1881; for JT Batt;
1794 Bulbridge Ho, Wilton alts for Lt Gen Goldsworthy; CL 28.2 and 7.3.1963;
1794? memorial to 10th E of Pembroke +1794, Wilton ch, Wilts; made by Westmacott;
1796 Bowden House, Wilts; HC; Bowden Park for Barnard Dickinson, JMR; New Vit Brit;
1796 alts Longford Castle, for 2nd E of Radnor; HC, work carried out 1802-17 by DA Alexander qv; CL 12-26.12.1931;
1796 unex des for alts Corsham Court; JMR; FJL; dismissed in favour of John Nash;
1796-1812 Fonthill Abbey, Wilts, for William Beckford; dem; Arch Hist 23 1980; first proposed 1790 BC 18.3.1790 Mr Wyatt has had conference with Mr Beckford re building edifice 100' square at base and 250' high at Fonthill cost estimated at £20,000;
1801-11 alts Wilton House, Wilts; HC, for 11th E of Pembroke, remodelled N and W fronts, and erected cloister; N front rebuilt by E Warre qv 1913-15; Arch Hist 35 1992;
1803 unex des for Market Cross, Devizes, Wilts; WBR2, erected 1814 by BD Wyatt qv;
Also ?Pembroke Hotel, Wilton, to accommodate men working at Wilton House, WBR2; ceilings at Fonthill House (Fonthill Splendens) for William Beckford also a fishing-lodge, house dem c1800, JMR; attrib Salthrop Park, Wroughton c1795, VCH;
WYATT, JEFFRY see Sir Jeffry Wyatville
WYATT, Sir MATTHEW DIGBY Architect, 1820-77 son of Matthew Wyatt +1831 of Rowdeford House, apparently born there (see below), brother of TH Wyatt qv; MDW allegedly was living at Rowdeford House 1850 when he gave font to Rowde church, no evidence that he ever returned to Rowde; RIBA Gold Medal 1866; designed India Office, brother of TH Wyatt qv; cf JM Robinson, The Wyatts, 1979; attribution of Railway Village, Swindon to him is without foundation, designed by Brunel and his office, C&F42; family connection with Rowdeford house is confused (see Thomas Wyatt) as house was owned by the Locke family from at least 1808 and rebuilt by Wadham Locke in 1812 and 1823;
1850 font, Rowde ch; JMR; WBR;
WYATT, THOMAS Land agent, Rowdeford House, Rowde, Wilts; 1748-1820 land agent to Earl of Uxbridge in Staffs, in succession to his father William Wyatt 1701-72, land agent to Lord Paget; married first cousin May Wyatt (1742-1815), parents of Matthew Wyatt 1773-1831 barrister who married Anne Hillier d of General G Hillier of Devizes, Matthew became magistrate in Co Roscommon Ireland to 1818, and agent to Marquess of Downshire and Viscount Dillon, retired to Rowde in 1818 (?returned to London 1825 and eventually to Rowdeford); another son Arthur 1775-1833 was land agent to Duke of Beaufort in Monmouthshire, lived at Troy House, Mon, and his daughter married her first cousin TH Wyatt qv; Matthew was father of TH Wyatt born 1807 and Sir MD Wyatt born 1820 qqv; connection with Rowdeford House is confused TW is the first Wyatt of Rowdeford House (in 1790s) but house was sold in 1808 to Wadham Locke, banker, +1835; altered (?rebuilt) for Wadham Locke in 1812 (VCH) and again for him by John Peniston in 1825, and Locke is called of Rowdeford House on his memorial in Seend ch 1835; JMR 201;
WYATT, THOMAS HENRY. 1807-80. 77 Gt Russell St, London, and Weston Corbett House, Hants. Born Lough Glin Co Roscommon son of Matthew Wyatt +1831, magistrate in Co. Roscommon, Ireland, until 1818, and in London 1825, retired to Rowdeford House, Wilts, house of his father Thomas Wyatt +1820 (some confusion as Rowdeford House sold in 1808 to Wadham Locke, who rebuilt 1812 and altered it in 1825 (by John Peniston qv) not Matthew Wyatt. Wadham Locke is called of Rowdeford House when he died in 1835. Brother Sir Matthew Digby Wyatt qv born 1820 said to have been born in Rowde; THW was nephew and son-in-law of Arthur Wyatt, agent to Duke of Beaufort in Mon. Leading Victorian architect, designed over 400 buildings; pupil of PC Hardwick (impossible PCH born 1822, surely Philip Hardwick as was JL Pearson) until he set up in 1832, District Surveyor Hackney 1832-61. Numerous works in Wilts and Mon, partnership with David Brandon qv (W&B) 1838-50, then on own; pupils and assistants incl Stephen Salter, clerk was Henry Pope; architect to Salisbury Diocesan Church Building Assoc from 1839 (unpaid DWG 21.11.39); FRIBA 1838, member of Council RIBA, PRIBA 1870, RIBA Gold Medal 1873, Hon Sec RIBA 1879; honorary architect to Institution of CE, the Athenaeum Club, Middlesex Hospital, the Governesses Benevolent Institution, consulting architect to ICBS, Commissioners in Lunacy, & Salisbury Diocesan Church Building Society. President Architects Benevolent Society. Left £30,000; Sons Matthew 1840-92 and Thomas Henry II 1841-1920 architects, Matthew was a partner from 1860; Marble Halls 30; cf J.M. Robinson The Wyatts, 1979 (JMR); numerous drawings sold by Mrs J Don at Sothebys 8.11.1976; obituary Br 14.8.80 (obit) died 5.8.80 aged 73 refers to his grace and geniality, was with PC Hardwick when Euston Arch was designed (unlikely Euston Arch proposed 1837 and built 1837-8 by P Hardwick), read the first paper of Architectural Society on 'the advantage of friendly intercourse amongst the members of a profession deemed polite and liberal'; office at 77 Gt Russell St for 45 years, when he received Gold Medal attributed his work to the help of others, his assistants; buried at Weston, Hants. Friends were CH Gregory the engineer and Hannen the builder; 'can scarcely be described as a great architect though he was neither a brilliant wit nor a powerful leader of men, - professionally his advice was sought by some of the best men in England, and socially he had few equals'; ' he could write a business letter which a client could read with interest and understand without difficulty'; 'he was conciliatory and polite, always modest and a gentleman' he built 5 assize courts for Hampshire, Wilts, Monmouthshire, Brecon and Cambridgeshire; 4 gaols; 17 hospitals including county asylums fo Bucks and Wilts, also Brompton Hospital; the railway station at Florence, 2 THs at Ringwood and Crickhowell, 5 market houses, 4 in Wales and one in Warminster; the mansion in Poland for Prince Woronzoff, 4 mansions in London, 1 in Poland (for Prince Worontsoff), 1 at Cascais near Lisbon (for Duke of Palmela); 18 mansions including Fonthill; Palmerston House in Dublin; altered seveal more mansions including Clarendon Park and Wilton House,; list of schools includes Warminster, Westbury and Dilton Marsh; list of new churches includes in Wilts: Crockerton, Westbury {??} Chittoe, Steeple Ashton, Charlton, Fisherton,East Harnham, Cadley, Laverstock, Bemerton, Winterbourne Earls, Fonthill Gifford, Savernake, Cadley, Cholderton, Semley, Hindon, Warminster Christ Church new chancel; also list of restorations, new parsonages inc in Wilts Burbage, Upton Scudamore, Alvediston, Little Langford, South Newton, Broad Chalke, Broughton Gifford;
(1833-4 TH, Crickhowell, Brec; JMR; Cadw list;
(1834-5 Llantarnam Abbey, Mon; JMR; Exh RA 1835;
(1835 St Paul ch, Newport, Mon JMR)
1834-5 Assize Court, Devizes, Wilts; JMR; WBR; call for plans DWG 21.8.34; complete DWG 7.1.36 £6300 spent; THW; abandoned c1985 derelict;
1836-7 Shaw ch, Wilts; 1836-8 WBR; JMR; THW ICBS, all built within 1837 it seems. Wyatt only named on plaque inside, Young & White builders, remodelled entirely in 1905 by CE Ponting qv;
(1837 mon to 6th D of Beaufort, Badminton ch, Glos, carved by John Edwards; JMR)
(1838-51 alts Badminton House, Glos; JMR, new entrance on W front; offices; W&B)
(1839-42 Shire Hall, Brecon, Brec; opened 1842; 1839-43 Cadw list;
1839-40 Derry Hill ch, Wilts; W&B; WBR; dated 1840, ?did TH Wyatt design National School 1843, no evidence, unsigned drawings,
1840 unex des for church at Calne; JMR;
1840-50 Cholderton ch BoE; 1841-50 WBR; consec SWJ 13.4.50; W&B;
(1840-3 Assize Court, Cambridge, JMR; W&B exh RA 1842;
(1840-5 rest Llandaff Cathedral, Glam; JMR)
1841 unex design for Golden Gates, Bowood; Byzantinesque, CL 22.6.72; two drawings in Bowood archives Moorish style gate, second includes an Italianate lodge with tower adjoining gateway;
(1841? work for M of Lansdowne at Lansdowne House, London, no date inc new gallery adjoining Sculpture Gallery for 3rd M of Lansdowne, JMR;
(1841 St Andrew ch, Bethnal Green, London; W&B;
1841 Worton ch; W&B; ICBS consec Sept 1841; 1843 WBR, BoE error; JMR; ashlar, cruciform with octagonal W turret;
1841-5 Wilton ch; W&B; BoE £20,000 for Rt Hon Sidney Herbert; WBR; D&C Jones qv bldrs; consec 9.10.44, WI 16.10.45 W&B, work carried out under Edmund A Spurr with D&C Jones bldrs, chancel decs by Willement apart from lettering of Creed and Commandments by William Osmond Jr, organ from Wilton House; SWJ 28.3.46 church contains ancient mosaic work of great importance part of shrine in Sta Maria Maggiore work of Pietro Cavallini c1236 brought back by Sir William Hamilton, Horace Walpole built a chapel for it at Strawberry Hill, sold to S Herbert; WI 21.6.1849 work continues under Mr Wyatt, marble pavement in front of chancel; front elevation ?in RIBA Drawings, photo in Courtauld; JMR 1840-5 based on churches of S. Maria and S Pietro in Toscanello (???) outside and S Clemente basilica Rome inside; pulpit incorporates Cosmati work from C13 shrine in S Maria Maggiore, Rome, bought at Strawberry Hill sale of 1842; some marble columns from Temple of Venus at Portovenere; E 2 Oct 1842 20; E 6 1846 169-74; Exh RA 1840, 1843; JBAA 1859; obit says described by Sir GG Scott as a magnificent building; £20,000
1841-50 Cholderton ch, Wilts; WBR, W&B; THW with Thomas Mozley 1840-50, JMR; Cholderton ch, consec SWJ 13.4.50, builder John Crook of West Dean, FS 29.4.41, flint and Tisbury stone, parallelogram with NW tower, Evang symbols on N and S walls, beautifully carved screen with armorial bearings in cornice to outer chapels, roof of dark oak from ancient edifice in Ipswich, royal arms copied copied from Pugin's new House of Lords, four 2-lt windows each side, 3-lt E and W with stained glass, W with emblems, E Agony/ Xion/ Resur; NE and Se windows; seats of carved oak with emblems copied from Norfolk and Suffolk, carved altar table, octagonal font by Osmond, pulpit of Caen stone by Osmond, W oak door based on one in Ipswich, stonework by Alford of Tisbury, carved work by G Howitt, seats carved by Ringham of Ipswich; altar rails, pulpit, pews, stalls, prayer desk, lectern by Holland of Bloomsbury, cost c £5000; G 24.4.50 E window and NE window, 2-lt SE chancel, W window 3-lt all gift of family of late incumbent Rev T Mozley;
1843 lodge and coach-house and stables, Bishops Palace, Salisbury, Wilts WBR2;
1842-3 Crockerton ch, Wilts; W&B WBR; JMR; BoE; neo-Norman; now a house; ICBS suggests started 1842; exh RA 1842; opened SWJ 29.4.43, stained glass by W Miller,
1843-4 rest Codford St Mary ch; THW, WBR; W&B 1842-3 JMR; ?1843-4, rebuilt and enlarged by Mr Wyatt, the diocesan architect, Norman arch restored, WI 12.9.44; WSHC D1/ 61/6/8 W&B plan new S aisle, new buttresses on nave N, new windows, new opening from chancel into SE chapel, plans show octagonal piers not as now and these are in published engraving, perhaps built differently or altered by Lingen Barker qv; SWJ 28.9.44 three churches to be consecrated next week, Dilton, Horningsham & Codford St Mary; consecr SWJ 5.10.44 all rebuilt except tower and small portion of S wall, additional aisle in the Decorated style, Early English windows on N side of chancel, Perp E window, all done with due regard for economy, Ew filled with stained glass heraldic, also E window S aisle; S window to Dr Ingram with texts in diagonal lines; beautiful tablet designed by Mr Wyatt to Ingram family over S door;
1844 rest Wylye ch; W&B WBR; rebuilt 1844-6 W&B, WBR, JMR; plan D1/61/6/9 1844 including undated plan of existing church by W Sleat qv; new N aisle and arcade, new buttress SW and SE new nave S window, buttress chancel S, new chancel S and N windows and vestry, new chancel arch; petition referes to entire demolition of nave;
1843-53 rest Shrewton ch; W&B WBR;
1843-4 Newton Toney ch; W&B WBR; JMR; ICBS: a rebuild. Consecrated 3 Oct 1844, they might have started in 1843 (Geoff Brandwood); DWG 10.10.44 fourth of THW churches consecr in two weeks; by Mr Wyatt, D&C Jones qv of Bradford on Avon contrs; plans 1843 W&B D/1/61/6/6 new church with SW tower and spire;
1843-4 Dilton Marsh ch, Wilts; W&B acc to plaque; THW BoE; Brown of Frome bldr DWG 3.10.44; FS 5.7.43, consec 30.9.44 SWJ 5.10.44 Mr Wyatt and Mr Brown the contractor communion table of massive oak, chancel and transept windows of painted glass; neo-Norman;
1843-4 reblt Horningsham ch; W&B, WBR; exc tower; new nave aisles, chancel and chancel chapels; faculty 15.6.43; opened 1.10.44; account 16.12.44: GW Hale & W Grant builders; D&C Jones qv of Bradford masons; John Kemp involved; font made by George A Howitt; stained glass by W Miller fifteen small scriptural subjects, ornamental background and borders for 3 chancel windows; Decalogue by Thomas Willement on vellum mounted on pine; £5108; Longleat accts; a plan was drawn up c1835 but work delayed by death of 1st M of Bath in 1837; pictorial E window is this also by Miller?; large Gothic stone pulpit; plans D5/33/5 signed W&B showing tower and S wall of nave kept with new windows and buttresses and chancel S and E walls, also piers 1, 3 and 4 of old N arcade (now S) and one pier between old chancel and new one;
1844 attrib School, Horningsham; no evidence but same date as church rebuilding by W&B;
1844 ?reblt Monkton Farleigh ch; THW BoE; but plans WSHC are by John Hicks qv; JH plans are not entirely as built as chancel is not rebuilt and nave has windows in every bay, five on S and four on N whereas in JH design windows are three on N and two on S, but roof looks same;
1844-5 rest Melksham ch, Wilts; crossing-tower taken down and bell-stage re-erected on new W tower; W&B 75 Gt Russell St, T: WI 6.6.44; 1845 JMR; ICBS: Wyatt & Brandon reseating. Also apart from moving the tower, a new chapel built between N porch and N transept and a new NE vestry; new fifth bay of arcade and chancel arch to replace crossing tower, new tower arch; Date as 1844-5, rather than 1845; plan and elevations 1844 D/1/61/6/10, accompanying letter is from THW;
1845 Chittoe ch, Wilts; THW, BoE, new church; now a house; some glass moved to Bromham; organ moved to Great Chalfield;
1845 reblt Woodford ch, except tower; WBR; JMR; about to be taken down and rebuilt DWG 23.1.45; ICBS W&B rebld exc tower and pier in line with W pier of porch; plans D5/33/5 W&B;
1845 rest Coombe Bissett ch; WBR; JMR; W&B ICBS, W end rebuilt;
1845 ?rest Mere ch; WBR; c1865 JMR;
1845-6 alts Tilshead ch; W&B; WBR; JMR; ICBS 1846 new N aisle, W end, porch and seats; plan 1845 D1/61/6/12 with engraving, new roofs, N aisle, vestry, W gallery and nave W wall;
1845 East Knoyle ch; W&B, WBR; ICBS, filled in space E of porch and added vestry;
1845 Monkton Deverill ch; rebuilt except tower; 1845 BoE; or 1852??; now house;
1845-6 Boys National Schools, Vicarage St, Warminster Wilts; DWG 22.1.46; WI 5.2.46, THW, Mr Hale of Warminster builder; £2000 inc house for teacher and rooms for committee; 1846 W&B, plans 782/108;
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