Joshua Arthur Rodrigues Brandon

Joshua Arthur Rodrigues Brandon (9 February 1822, London – 11 December 1847, 11 Beaufort Buildings, Strand) was an English architect and author. Prior to an early death aged twenty-five, his architectural practice (particularly in church architecture) was promising and growing.

Buildings

With his brother Raphael he built the new corn exchange at Colchester, Essex (1845); Portswood Chapel (1847) and Christ Church, Southampton (1847); and All Saints' Church, Sculthorpe, Norfolk (1847), Holy Trinity Church Leverstock Green, Hertfordshire, for which he accepted the commission in 1846, dying before its completion in 1849.[1]

Publications

With his brother he researched three seminal works on Early English architecture:

serves the one useful and necessary purpose of showing practically and constructively what the builders of the middle ages really did with the materials they had at hand, and how all those materials, whatever they were, were made to harmonise."[2]

Notes

  1. Chapman, Barbara (1999). "A Church for Leverstock Green". The Leverstock Green Chronicle. Retrieved 12 April 2012.
  2. The Builder, 35, 1877, 1051

Sources

External links


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