Charles Francis Hansom

Charles Francis Hansom
Born (1817-07-27)27 July 1817[1]
York
Died 30 November 1888(1888-11-30) (aged 71)[1]
Nationality English
Occupation Architect
Projects Clifton College,
Malvern College

Charles Francis Hansom (27 July 1817 – 30 November 1888) was a prominent Roman Catholic Victorian architect who primarily designed in the Gothic Revival style.

Career

He was born of a Roman Catholic family in York. He was the brother of Joseph Aloysius Hansom, architect and creator of the Hansom cab, and father of the architect Edward Joseph Hansom. He practised in partnership with his brother, Joseph, in London from 1854. This partnership was dissolved in 1859 when Charles established an independent practice in Bath with his son Edward (born 22 October 1842) as an articled clerk. He took his son into partnership in 1867, by which time the practice had moved to Bristol, with a large West Country practice of church and collegiate architecture. In Bristol he took on Benjamin Bucknall as an assistant.

He was commonly known as Francis the Hansom, as he was rather handsome.

Clifton College

Clifton College's School House and Big School soon after they were built in the 1860s

The original Clifton College buildings were all designed by Hansom.

His first design at Clifton was for Big School (then a meeting hall and now the school canteen) and a proposed dining hall. Only the former was actually built and a small extra short wing was added in 1866. This is what now contains the Marshal's office and the new staircase into Big School.

Hansom was called back to the College in the 1870s and asked to design what is now the Percival Library and the open-cloister classrooms. This project was undertaken in two stages and largely completed by 1875, although the Wilson Tower was not built until 1890.

Works (new built)

Remodellings

References

  1. 1 2 The Victorial Society: Avon Group, 1979, page not cited
  2. 1 2 Pevsner, 1968, page 175
  3. Newman & Pevsner, 1972, page 397
  4. Catholic Church of St Mary and St John, Wolverhampton from British Listed Buildings, retrieved 2 February 2016
  5. Verey, 1970 vol. 2, page 128
  6. Pevsner, 1968, page 215
  7. Pevsner, 1963, page 93
  8. Pevsner, 1968, pages 167–68

Sources

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