Thomas Lennox Watson

Thomas Lennox Watson (August 21, 1850 – 12 October 1920)[1] was a Scottish architect and interior designer. Born in Glasgow, he submitted designs for the city's City Chambers (1880) and Kelvingrove Art Gallery (1892) competitions, but was unsuccessful.[2]

Works

Wellington Church
  • Adelaide Place Baptist Church, Pitt Street (1875-7)
  • Hillhead Baptist Church, Creswell Street (1883)
  • Wellington Church, University Avenue (1882-4)
  • Royal Marine Hotel, Hunters Quay (1890)
  • Woodcroft, Larbert (1890-1)
  • The South School, Paisley (1893-5)
  • 59 Bath Street (1899–1900, demolished c. 1967)
  • Dr James Hederwick Monument, with a bronze portrait by J. P. Macgillivray, Glasgow Cathedral (1901)
  • Saracen Head tenement, Gallowgate (1906)
  • the interiors for the yachts, Mohican and Meteor, the latter for Kaiser Wilhelm II
  • War memorial of the Royal Technical College (1920)
gollark: (oh, and to clarify a bit, by "binary" I mean the slightly unixy term for executables, not the binary numeral system)
gollark: And that *also* doesn't stop me from just sticking it on my server and not giving you the binary at all.
gollark: Intellectual property law means that you can't, say, freely give someone else a binary I give you. It doesn't mean you have the source code to it so you can make changes, and it doesn't mean I can't make it only work on one computer (based on windows's "hardware ID" or whatever).
gollark: Nope.
gollark: I don't think you can do much about this outside of... I don't know, banning all SaaS and mandating open source code.

References

  1. "Dictionary of Scottish Architects - DSA Architect Biography Report (May 16, 2019, 7:11 pm)". www.scottisharchitects.org.uk. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
  2. "Thomas Lennox Watson". Glasgow - City of Sculpture. Retrieved 16 October 2010.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.