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See also: English architect, was See also: born at Liverpool on the 19th of See also: July 1830, and passed his professional pupilage under See also: Richard Lane in Manchester
.
His earliest commissions were of a domestic nature, but his position as a designer of public buildings was assured as early as 1859 by success in the open competition for the Manchester See also: assize courts
.
This See also: work marked him not only as an adept in the planning of a complicated See also: building on a large See also: scale, but also as a champion ofthe See also: Gothic cause
.
Nine years later, in 1868, another competition secured for Waterhouse the execution of the Manchester See also: town-See also: hall, where he was able to show a firmer and perhaps more
See also: original handling of the Gothic manner
.
The same See also: year brought him the rebuilding of See also: part of Caius See also: College, Cambridge, not his first university work, for Balliol, See also: Oxford, had been put into his hands in 1867
.
At Caius, out of deference to the See also: Renaissance treatment of the older parts of the college, the Gothic See also: element was intentionally mingled with classic detail, while Balliol and Pembroke, Cambridge, which followed in 1871, may be looked upon as typical specimens of the See also: style of his See also: mid career—Gothic tradition (See also: European rather than See also: British) tempered by individual taste and by adaptation to See also: modern needs
.
Girton College, Cambridge, a building of simpler type, See also: dates originally from the same See also: period (1.870), but has been periodically enlarged by further buildings
.
Two important domestic See also: works were undertaken in 1870 and 1871 respectively—Eaton Hall for the duke, then See also: marquis, of See also: Westminster, and Heythrop Hall, See also: Oxfordshire, the latter, a restoration, being of a fairly strict classic type
.
Iwerne Minster for See also: Lord See also: Wolverton was begun in 1877
.
In 1865 See also: Water-See also: house had removed his practice from Manchester to See also: London, and he was one of the architects selected to compete for the Royal Courts of See also: Justice
.
He received from the See also: government, without competition, the commission to build the Natural See also: History Museum, See also: South See also: Kensington, a design which marks an epoch in the modern use of terra-cotta
.
The new University Club—a Gothic design—was undertaken in 1866, to be followed nearly twenty years later by the See also: National Liberal See also: Club, a study in Renaissance composition
.
Waterhouse's series of works forSee also: Victoria University, of which he was made LL.D. in 1895, date from 1870, when he was first engaged on See also: Owens College, Manchester
.
See also: Yorkshire College, See also: Leeds, was begun in 1878; and Liverpool University College in 1885
.
St See also: Paul's School, See also: Hammer-See also: smith, was begun in 1881, and in the same year the Central Technical College in
See also: Exhibition Road, London
.
Waterhouse's chief remaining works in London are the new Prudential Assurance See also: Company's offices in See also: Holborn; the new University College Hospital; the National Provincial See also: Bank, Piccadilly, 1892; the Surveyors' Institution, See also: Great See also: George Street, 1896; and the Jenner Institute of Preventive See also: Medicine, See also: Chelsea, 1895
.
For the Prudential Company he designed many provincial branch offices, while for the National Provincial Bank he also designed premises at Manchester
.
The Liverpool Infirmary is Water-house's largest hospital; and St
.
Mary's Hospital, Manchester, the Alexandra Hospital, See also: Rhyl, and extensive additions at the general hospital, Nottingham, also engaged him
.
Among works not already mentioned are the See also: Salford See also: gaol; St See also: Margaret's School, Bushey; the Metropole Hotel, See also: Brighton; See also: Hove town-hall; See also: Alloa town-hall; St See also: Elizabeth's
See also: church, Reddish; the Weigh House
See also: chapel, Mayfair; and Hutton Hall, Yorks
.
He died on the 22nd of See also: August, 1905
.
Waterhouse became a See also: fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects in 1861, and president from 1888 to 1891
.
He obtained a See also: grand prix for architecture at the See also: Paris Exposition of 1867, and a " Rappel " in 1878
.
In the same year he received the Royal gold medal of the Royal Institute of British Architects, and was made an associate of the Royal See also: Academy, of which See also: body he became a full member in 1885 and treasurer in 1898
.
I-Ie became a member of the See also: academies of Vienna (1869), Brussels (1886), See also: Antwerp (1887), Milan (1888) and Berlin (1889), and a corresponding member of the Institut de See also: France (1893)
.
After 1886 he was constantly called upon to See also: act as assessor in architectural competitions, and was a member of the See also: international See also: jury appointed to adjudicate on the designs for the west front of Milan See also: Cathedral in 1887
.
In 1890 he served as architectural member of the Royal Commission on the proposed enlargement of Westminster Abbey as a place of See also: burial
.
From 1891 to 1902, when he retired, his work was conducted in partnership with his son, Paul Waterhouse
.
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