Bromley, Cartwright and Waumsley

Bromley, Cartwright and Waumsley was an architectural practice based in Nottingham from 1928 to 1948.

History

The practice of Bromley, Cartwright and Waumsley was established in 1928 between Albert Nelson Bromley (1850-1934), Thomas Herbert Waumsley and Thomas Nelson Cartwright.[1] Waumsley had been working for Albert Nelson Bromley for many years before this in the practice of Bromley and Watkins.

In 1948, Cartwright left to join Evans, Cartwright and Woollatt and the partnership was dissolved.

Works

  • Boots the Chemist, 156-162 Western Road, Brighton 1928
  • Boots the Chemist, Argyle Street/Union Street, Glasgow 1928
  • Hospital for Women, Peel Street, Nottingham 1929 with later additions[2]
  • Harlow Wood Orthopaedic Hospital, Ravenshead, Nottinghamshire 1929[3] with later additions
  • Martins Bank, Market Place, Derby 1937[4]
  • Martins Bank, High Street, Coventry 1937
gollark: I don't actually know what you could do with this *except* apioformize some cryptography.
gollark: I mean, in big-O terms, it is "just as fast", sure.
gollark: But has really tiny memory.
gollark: Well, sure, but the basic idea is just that it can execute up to 2^(memory size) operations in a negligible amount of time.
gollark: Oh, maybe if it goes into one state twice it stops, easy™.

References

  1. "Notice is hereby given". The London Gazette. No. 33389. 1 June 1928. p. 3811.
  2. "Nottingham Hospital for Women". Nottingham Journal. England. 15 February 1939. Retrieved 10 March 2018 via British Newspaper Archive.
  3. "News". RIBA Journal. 46: 518. 1938.
  4. "Handsome New Premises for Martins Bank". Derby Daily Telegraph. England. 17 August 1937. Retrieved 10 March 2018 via British Newspaper Archive.
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