Adams, Alfred J. (1838-)
Alfred J Adams was born c.1838 and is recorded as being Scottish, but nothing is yet known of his early years.
Alfred J Adams was born c.1838 and is recorded as being Scottish, but nothing is yet known of his early years.
This appreciation was reprinted in Aberdeen in 1925 by W. Jolly & Sons Ltd from the Scottish Ecclesiological Society’s Transactions by J.
November 1883 to 1888, remaining as assistant for a few months after completing his apprenticeship. In the latter year he won the Soane Medallion,
Isaac Barradale FRIBA (1845-1892) was a leading architect in the Arts & Crafts movement in Leicester and the East Midlands in the latter part of the 19th century.
Son of Sir Charles Barry, Barry worked in the office of T.H. Wyatt before joining his father’s office where he helped prepare drawings for the Palace of Westminster and Houses of Parliament.
Known for his Arts and Crafts and Queen Anne-style houses and commercial buildings in the Birmingham area and for his sensitive vernacular restoration and extension work in the Cotswolds.
George Bodley was articled to the famous architect Sir George Gilbert Scott, under whose influence he became imbued with the spirit of the Gothic revival,
English firm of Architects founded in 1862 by Jonas James Bradshaw (1837-1912). The style Bradshaw Gass & Hope was adopted after J.
Robert Alexander Briggs was born in London and educated at Smallwood, Hampstead and Sherbourne. He was articled to Gilbert R. Redgrave from 1876 until 1879.
As a young man Brooks was influenced by the writings of Pusey and other members of the Oxford Movement. When he moved to London in 1847 he became a pupil of the architect Lewis Stride,