1860s – St. James Church, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk
An early design for St. James Church in Great Yarmouth, which would have seen a three-gabled west end in the style of the parish church of St Nicholas on the market place,
An early design for St. James Church in Great Yarmouth, which would have seen a three-gabled west end in the style of the parish church of St Nicholas on the market place,
From The Building News, July 19th 1862: “Mr. J.T. Bottle, architect. Great Yarmouth, ha been awarded the premium of £20 for his design for a terrace for first-class houses to be erected upon the building estate of the Corporation of that town.
“The new building which is about to supersede the present chapel of St. John’s College,
“The memorial stone of a new Congregational Church, wag laid on the 6th of last month,
The Bridge Street premises was designed by Alfred Waterhouse (who went on to design the Oxford Union Society’s building) and formally opened on 30 October 1866.
Since 1919, it has been the Great Yarmouth Masonic Lodge.
From The Building News, July 5th 1867: “THE drawings which have been entered for this competition have been very properly exhibited to the public in the TownhaU at Great Yarmouth,
THE designs for these chapels are by Messrs. J. Ladds and J.M. Hooker, and were selected in open competition from about twenty other sets sent in.
House design for Michael Sears Esq., and south-eastern view published in The Building News, December 24 1868.
From The Building News: “THIS building is now being erected at Bedford. The college is arranged to accomodate 300 boys.