Online Encyclopedia

WILLIAM BUTTERFIELD (1814—1900)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 890 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WILLIAM BUTTERFIELD (1814—1900)  ,
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English architect, was born in
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London, and educated for his profession at Worcester, where he laid the
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foundations of his knowledge of
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Gothic architecture . He settled in London and became prominent in connexion with the Cambridge Camden Society, and its
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work in the improvement of church furniture and
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art . His first important
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building was St Augustine's, Canterbury (1845), and his reputation was made by All Saints', Margaret Street, London (1859), followed by St
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Alban's,
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Holborn (1863), the new
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part of Merton College, Oxford (1864), Keble College, Oxford (1875), and many houses and ecclesiastical buildings . He also did much work as a restorer, which has been adversely criticized . He was a keen churchman and intimately associated with the English church revival . He had somewhat
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original views as to colour in architecture, which led to rather garish results, his view being that any combination of the natural colours of the materials was permissible . His private
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life was retiring, and he died unmarried on the 23rd of
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February 1900 .

End of Article: WILLIAM BUTTERFIELD (1814—1900)
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