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  1. Born in London, the second son of Sir George Gilbert Scott, and uncle of Sir Giles Gilbert Scott (1880-1960), he trained with his brother, George jnr, in his father's office from 1860. He assumed complete control of the business after his brother's suicide in 1897, and followed closely in his fathers 'Gothic' footsteps, becoming noted for his many churches throughout England.

  2. Scott, John Oldrid (1841–1913). English architect. The second son of ‘Great’ Scott , he carried out various works with his brother, ‘Middle’ Scott , including the spectacular Church of St John the Baptist (now the RC Cathedral), Norwich (1884–1910).

  3. gilbertscott.org › buildings › holy-trinity-frogmoreHoly Trinity, Frogmore

    9 de ago. de 2018 · Holy Trinity, Frogmore. This church was built between 1841-2 for Marcus Richard Southwell, the vicar, helped by a grant from the Incorporated Church Building Society and was to seat 460. It is in a Norman style in flint with red brick dressings and stone details with patterned brickwork at the west end. It is symmetrical with no chancel, just ...

  4. John Oldrid Scott (1841-1913) Three architectural designs for the interior of St. Sophia's Cathedral, Bayswater, London the first inscribed 'Greek Church Bayswater/Sketch to 3/8" scale showing proposed scheme for/mantle lining to walls' amended plan' (upper left) and signed and inscribed 'J.O. Scott Architect/31 Spring Gardens London' (lower right) and dated 'Dec. 6th 1879' (upper right)

  5. gilbertscott.org › buildings › glasgow-universityGlasgow University

    2 de ago. de 2018 · Glasgow is the fourth oldest university in Britain, after Oxford, Cambridge and St Andrew’s, having been founded in 1451. Its building, known as the College, was built in 1630 and located in the High Street of the medieval city just to the south of the cathedral. In the nineteenth century, the massive industrial growth of Glasgow made it the ...

  6. Sir George Gilbert Scott is buried in Westminster Abbey in a grave, which he would have been pleased to learn, unearthed some of the earliest Roman remains discovered in the Abbey. The iconic red telephone box was designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott who took inspiration from Sir John Soane’s wife mausoleum.

  7. Two of his sons George Gilbert Scott, Jr. (founder of Watts & Company in 1874) and John Oldrid Scott, and his grandson Giles Gilbert Scott, were also prominent architects. His third son, photographer, Albert Henry Scott (1844–65) died at the age of twenty-one; George Gilbert designed his funerary monument in St Peter's Church, Petersham , whilst he was living at The Manor House at Ham in ...