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William Butterfield. Gran Bretaña | 1814-1900. 1857 | 43 años Balliol College, Oxford Chapel Oxford | Gran Bretaña: 1858 | 44 años Milton Ernest Hall
Title: William Butterfield architectural and design drawings. Creator: Butterfield, William, 1814-1900. Identifier/Call Number: 850998. Physical Description: 290 items. Date (inclusive): 1838-1896. Abstract: British architect. Butterfield's drawings and estimates partially document 25 architectural projects (churches, schools, and hospitals ...
14 de feb. de 2011 · The School House, as its name implies, was built to accommodate the Master of the adjoining school. It is situated in Church Lane, and, together with the school, is in close proximity to the village church which stands on the opposite side of the road. The house was constructed in 1857 under the supervision of its designer, William Butterfield ...
William Butterfield nacque a Londra nel 1814 in una famiglia di farmacisti, composta da ben nove figli. Il suo percorso di studi iniziato a Worcester ricevette una svolta importante quando Butterfield si recò presso il costruttore Thomas Arber, per sottoporsi ad un periodo di apprendistato. Successivamente studiò architettura, dapprima sotto ...
All Saints, Margaret Street. / 51.5172500°N 0.1390667°W / 51.5172500; -0.1390667. All Saints, Margaret Street, is a Grade I listed Anglo-Catholic church in London. The church was designed by the architect William Butterfield and built between 1850 and 1859. It has been hailed as Butterfield's masterpiece [1] and a pioneering building ...
Right: The courtyard with the main entrance to the church. According to British Listed Buildings, William Butterfield designed this grade II church in 1859 (built 1861-62); the chapel was added in 1891 by C.H.M. Mileham. After St. Albans was “burnt out 1941,” as a result of enemy bombing, it was restored 1959-61 by Adrian Gilbert Scott.
11 de abr. de 2016 · 10 ‘The Life and Work of William Butterfield’, Architect, 83 (1910), pp. 129-30 and 145-47 (pp. 145-46). Swinfen Harris refers (p. 145) to Butterfield’s ‘forceful methods as an admirable and voluminous correspondent; he not only wrote long and very scholarly letters, but every word of them had its due place, weight and measure most exactly apportioned’.