1857 – Little Aston Hall, Staffordshire
Little Aston Hall was originally constructed around 1730 by Richard Scott of nearby Great Barr Hall,
Little Aston Hall was originally constructed around 1730 by Richard Scott of nearby Great Barr Hall,
Interior perspective view looking east and west showing proposed reredos, screen, throne and stalls. During the Victorian era,
“MANY of our readers will doubtless remember that within the last two years an effort was made to raise subscriptions for the purpose of erecting a monument to the late Josiah Wedgwood,
From The Building News: “THIS school, of which we give an illustration, was recently erected to meet the urgent educational wants of an outlying populous locality in one of the first of the new district parishes formed under Sir Robert Peel’s Act.
Now part of the University Hospital of North Staffordshire, the Royal Infirmary at Hartshill was one of the earliest hospitals to be built on the pavilion system favoured by Florence Nightingale.
From The Architect and Contract Reporter, April 17 1869: This building is announced to be opened on tho _’
Robert Griffiths was the county surveyor of Staffordshire, England and an architect, noted mostly for asylum architecture,
Published in The Building News, April 5th 1872: “WE give this week illustrations of a church about to be erected on a commanding site on the high road between Wednesbury and Walsall.
Christ Church was demolished in the 1970s, and the site is now occupied by a mosque.