Architect. HIs extant work in London includes: , Knight’s Hill (1887); Outdoor Relief Station, Norwood (1887); Tate Free Library, South Lambeth Road (1887); Durning Library, Kennington (1889); Tate Free Library, Streatham (1890); Tate Free Library, Brixton Oval (1892); Cripplegate Institute, 1 Golden Lane (1896); National Gallery of British Art (Tate Gallery) (1897); 16–19 Dunraven Street, Mayfair (1897); , Telford Park, Streatham Hill (with Spencer William Grant); Tate Mausoleum, West Norwood Cemetery (c.1890).
This section lists the memorials created by the subject on this page:
Sidney R. J. Smith
Creations i
Cripplegate Institute
Prince George (later King George V) was made Duke of York in 1892 when he bec...
Other Subjects
Samuel Knight
Architect. Born Exeter. Knight was a captain in the Bloomsbury Rifles, which probably has something to do with the commission he was given to design their Drill Hall in 1882-3. Later he became an H...
Charles Walter Clark
Architect. Chief architect for the Metropolitan Railway Company, designing 25 London Underground stations. Also designed houses for Metro-land, which that railway opened up for housing. His Wikiped...
Whinney, Son and Austen Hall
Architects active at least 1929 - 1977. 30 Cannon Street being their modernist masterpiece.
Sir Ebenezer Howard
Founder of the garden city movement. Born 62 Fore Street. Travelled to America in 1871 where he tried farming and was in Chicago at the time that it was being rebuilt after a great fire. The new su...
Jeremy Robert Feakes
Designer, entrepreneur and founder of the Urban Golf Tournament. Â Urban Golf seems to be exactly what you'd imagine it might be and has been played in the East End, Siena, Hong Kong, Canada and Ven...
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