John Gibbs (architect)

For other people named John Gibbs, see John Gibbs (disambiguation).
John Gibbs

Banbury Cross in Banbury, north Oxfordshire, designed by Gibbs and built in 1859.
Nationality British
Occupation Architect
Buildings Wycliffe Hall (54 Banbury Road, Oxford); Banbury Cross, Banbury; Norham Manor Estate, Oxford; monument to Prince Albert, Abingdon; parsonage and village school, South Leigh
Monument to Prince Albert in Albert Park, Abingdon, designed by Gibbs and erected in 1865.[1]

John Gibbs was a British Gothic Revival architect based in Wigan, Manchester, and Oxford, England.

Life

John Gibbs was initially in Oxford but he moved to Wigan in the 1850s and then Manchester in the north of England.[2]

In 1858, he proposed a memorial fountain to commemorate Alfred the Great (purported to be the founder of Oxford University for many years) to be located in the centre of the wide Broad Street, southeast of St Giles', but it was never completed.[3]

The current Banbury Cross was erected in 1859 to a design of Gibbs[4][5] at the centre of Banbury, Oxfordshire, in commemoration of the marriage of Queen Victoria's eldest daughter to Prince Frederick of Prussia. It is a stone, spire-shaped monument decorated in Gothic form. The cross is 52 feet 6 inches high and is topped with a gilt cross. Statues surrounding the cross were added later in 1911.

Gibbs returned to Oxford in the 1860s and worked in St Giles', central Oxford. In 1865, he designed a monument to Prince Albert in Albert Park, Abingdon, then in Berkshire.[1] This consisted of a statue on a tall pedestal, a total of 48 feet high.

In North Oxford, Gibbs designed three large and prominent houses on the west side of Banbury Road (numbers 54, 56, and 58).[6][7][8] No. 54 (1866) now forms part of Wycliffe Hall. No. 56 (1867) was built for Henry Hatch, a draper, and was later the long-time residence of Sir Edward Bagnall Poulton, FRS, Hope Professor of Zoology at Oxford University.[9] The building is now used by the Careers Service of Oxford University.[10] No. 58 (also 1867) was built for the chemist, William Walsh. It includes a statue of William of Wykeham by the sculptor W. Forsyth of Worcester in a niche on the external wall of the house. The building is now the Department of Biological Anthropology and Human Sciences at Oxford University.[11]

John Gibbs designed the parsonage and the village school (1871) at South Leigh in Oxfordshire west of Oxford.[12]

Gibbs wrote books promoting the Victorian Gothic architectural style including Designs for Gothic Ornaments (1853) and English Gothic Architecture (1855).[13] He was also the author of a novel, The Old Parish Church: with the Ghost of Merton Hall, published in 1861.[9]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Pevsner, Nikolaus (1966). The Buildings of England: Berkshire. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books. p. 60.
  2. Hinchcliffe, p. 103.
  3. "What to put in the centre of Broad Street". Broad Street, Oxford. Headington, UK. Retrieved April 4, 2011. External link in |publisher=, |work= (help)
  4. Tyack, Geoffrey (1998). Oxford: An Architectural Guide. Oxford & New York: Oxford University Press. p. 235. ISBN 0-19-817423-3.
  5. Sherwood & Pevsner, p. 437.
  6. Hinchcliffe, p. 217.
  7. Sherwood & Pevsner, p. 319.
  8. Dodgson, E. O. (1967). "Notes on Nos. 56, 58, 60, 62 and 64 Banbury Road" (PDF). Oxoniensia: 53–59.
  9. 1 2 Hinchcliffe, p. 105.
  10. "The Careers Service". University of Oxford, UK. Retrieved April 4, 2011.
  11. "Biological Anthropology and Human Sciences". Access Guide. University of Oxford, UK. Retrieved April 4, 2011.
  12. Sherwood & Pevsner, pp. 403–404, 771.
  13. Hinchcliffe, p. 248.

Sources

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