91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Person    | Male  Born 6/5/1870  Died 14/6/1940

William George Hunt

Categories: Architecture

William George Hunt

Architect of the 1901 Shoreditch Town Hall Extension and of Campden Hill Mansions. Architect and surveyor of Bedford Gardens, Kensington in 1900 when he was working on houses in Addison Road.

William George Hunt was born on 6 May 1870 in Kensington. He was the eldest of the nine children of William Henry Hunt (1836-1906) and Frances Elizabeth Hunt née Thurston (1846-1917). The 1871 census shows him as an 11-months-old infant living at 15 Abingdon Terrace, Kensington, with his parents together with a female general domestic servant and a housemaid. His father's occupation was recorded as a rates collector.

In the 1881 census he and two of his younger brothers: Albert Henry Hunt (1872-1957) & Arthur John Hunt (1873-1950), were shown as three of the fifteen boarders at the school run by Richard Morton Taylor at 19/21 Bridge Road West, Battersea, (now called Westbridge Road). His parents and three more of his siblings: Henrietta Frances Hunt (1876-1885), Percy Hunt (b.1877) & Ernest Hunt (b.1879), together with female general domestic servant and nurse were shown at 4 Kensington Court, Kensington.

He was described as a draughtsman in the 1891 census living at Victoria House, High Street, Kensington, with his parents and five siblings: Albert H. Hunt, Arthur J. Hunt, Stanley Henry Hunt (b.1881) Harold Hunt (b.1884) & Beatrice Eliza Hunt (1885-1977), together with a cook and a housemaid.

On 28 July 1894 he married Rosa Weaver (1871-1947) at St Barnabas Church, 23 Addison Road, West Kensington, where the marriage register confirms that he was an architect residing at 7 Kensington Crescent, Kensington, whilst his wife's address was recorded at The Limes, Holland Park Gardens. She was the daughter of William Weaver (1844-1913) who was a surveyor.

On 16 June 1899 he was initiated as a freemason in the Gooch Lodge No.1238 that met at the Town Hall, High Street, Twickenham. He gave his occupation as an architect and his address as 2 Norwood Place, Kensington. The 1900 edition of the Post Office London Directory listed him as an architect at 12 Bedford Gardens, Kensington. However, when the 1901 census was undertaken he was again showing as living at 2 Norwood Place, Kensington, with his wife, their two children: Norman Stuart Hunt (1895-1968) and Jeanne Muriel Hunt (1897-1981), together with a female general domestic servant. He continued to be described as an architect and living next door at 1 Norwood Place was his brother, Albert Henry Hunt, his wife & their son.

Telephone directories from 1903 to April 1916 list him as an architect & surveyor at 17 Vicarage Gate, Kensington. The 1905 edition of the Post Office London Directory listed him as an architect at 17A Vicarage Gate, Kensington but the 1910 edition also carried the post nominal letters F.R.I.B.A. and when he completed the 1911 census it was to show himself as an architect residing in a 10 roomed property at 17 Vicarage Gate, Kensington, with his wife and their daughter together with a female servant.

Telephone directories from October 1916 to 1920 list him as an architect & surveyor at 57a Cromwell Road, SW7 and from 1921 to 1925 at 15 Cromwell Road, SW7. The 1939 edition of Kelly's Directory of Kensington lists him as a F.R.I.B.A. architect at 15 Cromwell Road, Kensington, but the 1939 edition of Kelly's Handbook of Distinguished People lists him at both 15 Cromwell Road, Kensington and also at 29 Brunswick Terrace, Hove, Sussex. The 1939 England and Wales Register shows him as architect residing at 13 First Avenue, Hove, Sussex.

Probate records confirm that his address had been 15 Cromwell Road, Kensington and that he died, aged 70 years, on 14 June 1940 at 13 First Avenue, Hove. He was buried on 18 June 1940 in Grave M.218:6x47:6 at Brompton Cemetery, Fulham Road, London, SW10 9UG. Administration was granted to his widow and their son, who was recorded as a chartered accountant. His effects totalled £46,364-8s-1d.

Credit for this entry to: Andrew Behan.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in to see them

This section lists the memorials created by the subject on this page:
William George Hunt

Creations i

Shoreditch town hall extension

A report in the London North Middlesex Standard And Tottenham And Wood Green ...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Other Subjects

Sydney Perks

Sydney Perks

Sydney Perks FRIBA, FSA, was born on 2 January 1864 in Westminster, one of the eight children of Charles Perks (1807-1871) and Emily Marian Perks née Warner (1827-1919). On 22 January 1864 he was b...

Person, Architecture

2 memorials
Edward Welby Pugin

Edward Welby Pugin

Architect.  Born Ramsgate, son of Augustus Welby.  Designed Catholic churches in the neo-Gothic style.  Surviving works in London: St Monica's and English Martyrs in Prescot Street E1.  Died at  ho...

Person, Architecture

1 memorial
Viacheslav Bukhaev

Viacheslav Bukhaev

Architect.  Member of the Russian Academy of Arts.

Person, Architecture, Russia

2 memorials
Stephen Dykes Bower

Stephen Dykes Bower

Church architect.  Born Gloucester.  The official surveyor of the fabric for Westminster Abbey in 1961-73 and restored Martin-in-the-Fields after WW2.  He has worked in parish churches and cathedra...

Person, Architecture

1 memorial
Major Hubert C. Corlette

Major Hubert C. Corlette

Australian architect mainly of churches. Born Hubert Christian Corlette.  Father of English architect John C. Corlette.

Person, Architecture, Australia

1 memorial