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  1. All Saints Church, 7 Margaret Street, London. Architect: William Butterfield. Primary patrons: Alexander Beresford Hope and Henry Tritton. Designed 1849. Cornerstone laid by Edward Bouverie Pusey, 1850. Consecrated 1859. Speakers: Dr. Ayla Lepine and Dr. Steven Zucker. William Butterfield had little more than 100 square feet of real estate, but ...

    • 8 min
    • Beth Harris,Steven Zucker
  2. 10 de jul. de 2023 · William Butterfield: Forms and Transformations. This text was first published in DM Journal No.1: The Geological Imagination (2023). Print copies of the Journal, and subscriptions for the first three issues, are now available through our online bookshop. We are currently accepting abstracts for the third issue of DMJournal.

  3. 1 de ene. de 1972 · William Butterfield has taken a central place in every history of nineteenth-century architecture; and rightly, for he was the pioneer of the original High Victorian phase of the Gothic Revival, and the first Victorian architect to experiment with constructional color. This is the first biography of Butterfield and thus meets a major need.

    • Paul Thompson
  4. William Butterfield was a Gothic Revival architect and associated with the Oxford Movement.

  5. 11 de jun. de 2018 · Butterfield, William (1814–1900). Architect. Undoubtedly the most original of Victorian Gothic Revival architects, though not to the taste of those who like their buildings restrained. He was greatly influenced by Pugin, and his early churches were at least as stylistically correct as the latter's. He then discovered north Italian Gothic ...

  6. 6 de dic. de 2023 · William Butterfield, All Saints Church, 7 Margaret Street, London, designed 1849, consecrated 1859, primary patrons: Alexander Beresford Hope and Henry Tritton, cornerstone laid by Edward Bouverie Pusey, 1850. William Butterfield had little more than 100 square feet of real estate to work with, but designed perhaps the greatest example of High ...

  7. William Butterfield. The son of a chemist, William Butterfield was born in London in 1814, one of nine children. His parents were strict non-conformists who ran a chemist's shop in the Strand. He was educated at a local school before being apprenticed to Thomas Arber, a builder in Pimlico, who later became bankrupt.