Alfred Gresham Jones

Alfred Gresham Jones (1824–1915) was an Irish architect who moved to Australia after 1888.

Jones was born in 1824 in Dublin, and attended the Royal Dublin Society's School of Architectural Drawing in the 1840s and spent time in London and with Irish architect John Skipton Mulvany before beginning his own career.[1]

His architect career in Ireland began in the 1850s, and by 1888 he had emigrated to Australia, but it is unclear if he continued his vocation.[2]

Buildings designed by Jones

Most of Jones' work was in Dublin before 1888:

Personal life

Jones married Julia Charlotte Malyn (died 1929) in 1855 and they had several children (Charlotte Dixon, Alice Johnson, Mary Watson, Alfred, Maude Allen and Walter).

Later years and death

Jones immigrated to Australia, but does not appear to have practised as an architect, as no major work is accounted to him during this time. He developed an interest in verse during this time and died in Melbourne in 1915.[5]

gollark: As opposed to partial ordering, where some pairs of elements can't be ordered.
gollark: There's an ordering relation which works for all the elements, or something like that.
gollark: Also, does the "totally ordered" bit matter at all? Complex numbers *aren't* totally ordered, right?
gollark: You should probably mention some *specific* contradictions.
gollark: According to a random website, zero division causes this problem.

References

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