Thomas Charles Sorby
Thomas Charles Sorby (1836-1924) was a British architect, who emigrated to Canada in 1883, where he mostly worked in Vancouver and Victoria, British Columbia.[1]
Thomas Charles Sorby was born in Wakefield, Yorkshire, and studied architecture in London.[2] He was a pupil of Charles Reeves, with whom he designed Salford County Court.[3]
He emigrated to Canada in 1863.[2]
Notable buildings
- Lambeth Magistrates Court, London (1869)
- Mount Stephen House, a hotel in Field, British Columbia (1886)
gollark: With enough, I don't know, formation planes and an internal ME network, or turtles or something, self-repairing repeatedly-meltdowning reactors could become the power source of the future.
gollark: Oh, cool unrelated thing, my double-fusion system in a compact machine, recently upgraded to 3.
gollark: Think about it! If your reactor is *designed* to constantly meltdown, you won't have to worry when it happens!
gollark: <@404656680496791554> even mekanism fusion reactors?
gollark: (not as a mod feature, I mean as in constructing self-repairing constant-meltdown things with the current version)
References
- "Sorby, Thomas Charles | Biographical Dictionary of Architects in Canada". Dictionaryofarchitectsincanada.org. 1910-03-05. Retrieved 2017-03-30.
- "Thomas Charles Sorby fonds - MemoryBC". Memorybc.ca. Retrieved 2017-03-30.
- Clare Hartwell; Matthew Hyde; Nikolaus Pevsner (2004). Lancashire: Manchester and the South-East. Yale University Press. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-300-10583-4.
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