George Phillips Manners

George Phillips Manners (1789 – 28 November 1866) was a British architect, Bath City Architect[1] from 1823 to 1862.

In his early career he worked with Charles Harcourt Masters and after about 1845 was in partnership with C.E. Gill. He retired in 1862.

Architectural practice

The architectural practice of George Phillips Manners from the early 19th century into the mid-20th century (compiled by Michael Forsyth in Pevsner Architectural Guide: Bath, 2003):

  • George Phillips Manners: 1820–1845
  • Manners & Gill: 1845–1866
  • John Elkington Gill: 1866–1874
  • Gill & Browne 1874–1879
  • Browne & Gill: 1879–1899
  • Gill & Morris: 1899–1903
  • Wallace Gill: 1903–1909
  • Mowbray A. Green: 1909–1914
  • Mowbray A. Green & Hollier: 1914–1947
  • Frank W. Beresford-Smith: 1947– (and later acquired by Beresford-Smith’s son)

From 1846 to 1909, the practice was located at No. 1 Fountain Building.

List of works

His works include a number of churches, initially in Perpendicular or Norman style, latterly in Gothic.

He was also involved in design of a number of other civic buildings including

  • Victoria (on reaching her majority) Monument Column Royal Victoria Park, Bath (1837)
  • Bath City Gaol (1843) in East Twerton (often referred to as Twerton Gaol)
  • Bluecoat School
gollark: For instance, you can build a dependency graph and efficiently execute everything concurrently and in the right order.
gollark: In any case, a declarative syntax allows some optimizations.
gollark: It may have been me using it wrong, but runit doesn't seem to properly terminate processes created by a shellscript unless I make *another* script with `killall` in it.
gollark: Anyway, I figure you could probably capture *most* of systemd's nice bits - parallel execution of stuff, no shell scripts, pleasant unit files, sandboxing - without depending on a hundred horribly interlinked C binaries doing everything ever.
gollark: It would of course still contain TOML.

References

  1. "The Building News and Engineering Journal – Google Books". Books.google.com. Retrieved 2016-04-25.
  2. "Church of Holy Trinity". National Heritage List for England. Historic England. Retrieved 2 April 2017.

Further reading

  • H.M. Colvin, A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects, 1600–1840 (1997) ISBN 0-300-07207-4
  • Michael Forsyth, Bath, Pevsner Architectural Guides (2003) ISBN 0-300-10177-5
Preceded by
?
Bath City Architect
1823–1862
Succeeded by
John Elkington Gill
Preceded by
John Lowder
Bath City Surveyor
1823–1862
Succeeded by
John Elkington Gill
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.