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Watson Fothergill

Watson Fothergill (12 July 1841 – 6 March 1928) was a British architect[1] who designed over 100 unique buildings in Nottingham in the East Midlands of England. His influences were mainly from the Gothic Revival and Old English vernacular architecture styles.

Watson Fothergill
Title above the door of the Watson Fothergill offices at 15 George Street, Nottingham
Born(1841-07-12)12 July 1841
Linden, Chesterfield Road, Mansfield
Died6 March 1928(1928-03-06) (aged 86)
7 Mapperley Road, Nottingham
Other namesFothergill Watson
OccupationArchitect
SpouseAnn Hage
PracticeAssociated architectural firm[s]
BuildingsNottingham and Nottinghamshire Bank, Thurland Street, Nottingham

His work dates from 1864 (when he set himself up in practice) to around 1912. His earliest surviving known building dates from 1866.

Early life edit

Born Fothergill Watson in Mansfield, Nottinghamshire in 1841, he was the son of wealthy Nottingham Lace merchant Robert Watson and Mary Ann Fothergill. He changed his name to Watson Fothergill in 1892 to continue his maternal family name.

Family edit

He married Anne Hage in 1867[2] at St. John's Church, Mansfield.[3] They had the following children:

  • Marian Watson (1868–1955)
  • Annie Forbes Watson (1869–1930)
  • Edith Mary Watson (1871–1936)
  • Eleanor Fothergill Watson (1872–1946)
  • Samuel Fothergill Watson (1875–1915)
  • Harold H Watson (1877-1905)
  • Clarice Watson (1877–1955)

His father-in-law was Samuel Hage,[2] one of the founding partners of Mansfield Brewery.

His half-brother was Robert Mackie Watson, chairman of the Mansfield Improvement Commission and the Brunts' Charity.[citation needed]

Career edit

In 1856, he entered the St Peter's Gate office of Frederick Jackson, an architect and surveyor in Nottingham. In mid-1860 he moved as assistant to Isaac Charles Gilbert who was based in Clinton Street, Nottingham. After spending around 18 months with Gilbert, he moved in early 1862 to join the office of Arthur William Blomfield in London. In 1864 he was working with John Middleton in Cheltenham, but in the same year, left to set up his own office at 6 Clinton Street, Nottingham.[4] He remained at Clinton Street until it was demolished by the works in connection with the arrival of the Great Central Railway in 1894. He moved to a new temporary office at 18 George Street and arranged to rebuild 15 George Street opposite which he completed the next year and moved in on 12 December 1895.

He was in partnership with Lawrence George Summers from 1880 and he retired in 1912.

He is credited as having had a great impact on the architecture of the major British industrial city of Nottingham, and designed over a hundred buildings in the city, from offices, banks and warehouses, to churches and private dwelling houses. His easily recognisable style includes the use of contrasting horizontal bands of red and blue brick, dark timber eaves and balconies, and elaborate turrets and stone carving.

On his death in 1928, he left an estate valued at £73,908 5s 11d[5] (equivalent to £4,740,000 in 2021).[6]

List of major works[4]

All Nottinghamshire unless otherwise stated.

1860s

  • Cemetery Chapels, High Street, Ongar (joint architect with Isaac Charles Gilbert) – 1866[7]

1870s

  • Dwelling House, Mapperley Road, Nottingham (Fothergill's own house) – 1870
  • Two Villas, 5 & 7 Lenton Road, The Park, Nottingham – 1873
  • Temperance Hall (later Albert Hall), North Circus Street, Nottingham – 1873–1876
  • Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Bank, Church Street, Mansfield – 1874–1875
  • Nottingham Daily Express Offices, Printing Works and Shops, Parliament Street, Nottingham – 1875
  • King's Arms, Ratcliffe Gate and Newgate Lane, Mansfield – 1875–1877
  • Cattle Market, Nottingham Road, Mansfield – 1876–1878
  • Congregational Church (later United Reformed), Westgate, Mansfield – 1876–1878[8]
  • Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Bank and Residence, Thurland Street, Nottingham – 1877–1882[9]

1880s

  • Villa, Crow Hill Drive, Mansfield – 1880
  • Six Dwelling Houses, Shops and Carriage House, Castle Road and Houndsgate, Nottingham – 1882–1883
  • Five Houses and Shops, Derby Road, Nottingham – 1884
  • Institute and Coffee Tavern, High Street, Hucknall – 1884[10]
  • Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Bank, Cattle Market, Loughborough, Leicestershire – 1885
  • Villa, Loscoe Hill (Clawson Lodge), 405 Mansfield Road, Nottingham – 1885
  • Institute and Coffee Tavern (Budworth Hall), High Street, Ongar, Epping Forest, Essex – 1885–1887[11]
  • Villa (Walton House), 39 Newcastle Drive, The Park, Nottingham – 1886
  • St. Nicholas' Church Rectory, Castle Gate, Nottingham – 1886–1887
  • Pair of Villas, Loscoe Hill, 409 and 411 Mansfield Road, Nottingham – 1886–1887
  • Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Bank, Kirk Gate, Newark on Trent 1885–1887
  • Rebuilding Black Boy Hotel (first major rebuild / extension), Long Row, Nottingham – 1886–1888
  • Pair of Villas, 62 and 64 Castle Boulevard, Nottingham – C1888
  • Pair of Villas, 3 and 4 Huntingdon Drive, Nottingham – C1888
  • Samuel Smith & Co's Bank, 24 Market Place, Long Eaton, Derbyshire – 1889
  • Warehouse (Milbie House), 33 Pilcher Gate, Nottingham – 1889

1890s

  • Villa, (Elberton House), Cavendish Hill, 9 Hardwick Road, Nottingham – 1890
  • Eight Ladies' Homes – Norris Almhouses, Berridge Road, Nottingham – 1892–1893
  • Emmanuel Church, Woodborough Road (1883–1893[12]) – demolished 1972
  • Woodborough Road Baptist Church, Woodborough Road and Alfred Street North, Nottingham – 1893–1895
  • Simons and Pickard Paper Warehouse, Lenton (Castle) Boulevard, Nottingham – 1893–1894
  • House, Kingswood, Bulcote – 1893
  • Two Semi-Detached Villas (Cleave House), 1 and 3 Sherwood Rise, Nottingham[13] – 1894–1895
  • Rebuilding of Nos 15 & 17 George Street, Nottingham (Watson Fothergill's offices) – 1894–1895
  • Jessops' Shop and Workrooms, 14–30 King Street, Nottingham – 1894–1897
  • Four Shops and Offices (Queen's Chambers), Long Row and King Street, Nottingham – 1896–1899
  • Shop and Office (Furley and Co) (now Lloyds Bank), Parliament Street and Clinton Street, Nottingham – 1896–1897
  • Ellenborough House, 3 South Road, The Park, Nottingham – extended 1896–1897
  • Cuckson, Hazeldine and Manderfield Warehouses, Stoney Street and Barker Gate, Nottingham – 1897–1898
  • Black Boy Hotel Additions and Two Shops (second major rebuild/extension), Long Row, Nottingham – 1897–1900
  • Rebuilding of the Rose of England Inn, Mansfield Road, Nottingham – 1898–1900
  • Brewery, Mar Hill, Carlton – 1899
  • Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Bank and House, 111 Carrington Street, Nottingham – 1899

1900s

  • Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Branch Bank, St Ann's Well Road, Nottingham – 1900–1901
  • Sixteen Houses, Foxhall Road, Nottingham – 1901–1902
  • Union of London and Smith's Bank, Market Place, Bulwell – 1904
  • Villa, Mapperley Road, Nottingham (Joint Architect with Lawrence George Summers) – 1905
  • Four Houses, Mansfield Road and Bingham Road, Nottingham – 1906–1907

Gallery edit

Further reading edit

  • Brand, Ken (2009) "Watson Fothergill: a provincial goth", in: Ferry, Kathryn, ed. Powerhouses of Provincial Architecture, 1837–1914. London: Victorian Society; pp. 28–43
  • Turner, Darren (2012) "A Catalogue of the Works of Watson Fothergill, Architect."

References edit

  1. ^ Brodie, Antonia (20 December 2001). Directory of British Architects 1834-1914: Vol 1 (A-K). Royal Institute of British Architects. p. 675. ISBN 0826455131.
  2. ^ a b "Marriages". London Evening Standard. England. 12 September 1867. Retrieved 4 March 2016 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  3. ^ "Marriages". Nottinghamshire Guardian. England. 13 September 1867. Retrieved 4 March 2016 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  4. ^ a b Turner, Darren (2012). A Catalogue of the Works of Watson Fothergill, Architect. Nottingham: DT:P / Blurb.
  5. ^ "Notts Architect". Sheffield Independent. England. 22 June 1928. Retrieved 6 March 2016 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  6. ^ UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 11 June 2022.
  7. ^ "Local and District News". Nottinghamshire Guardian. England. 12 January 1866. Retrieved 4 March 2016 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  8. ^ "New Congregational Chapel at Mansfield". Nottinghamshire Guardian. England. 1 June 1877. Retrieved 4 March 2016 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  9. ^ "The Notitngham and Notts Bank". Nottingham Evening Post. England. 21 March 1881. Retrieved 4 March 2016 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  10. ^ "Hucknall Torkard". Nottinghamshire Guardian. England. 8 August 1884. Retrieved 4 March 2016 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  11. ^ "Ongar. The Budworth Memorial Hall". Chelmsford Chronicle. England. 11 February 1887. Retrieved 4 March 2016 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  12. ^ "Emmanuel Church, Nottingham. Consecration of New Chancel". Nottinghamshire Guardian. England. 18 March 1893. Retrieved 4 March 2016 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  13. ^ "Sherwood Rise, Nottingham". Nottinghamshire Guardian. England. 12 November 1898. Retrieved 4 March 2016 – via British Newspaper Archive.

External links edit

  • The Watson Fothergill Home Page
  • A catalogue of Watson Fothergill's work
  • Norris Ladies Almshouses, Berridge Road, Nottingham on Google Street View.
  • Clawson Lodge, Watcombe Road, Nottingham on Google Street View
  • 21 and 23 Newcastle Drive, The Park, Nottingham on Google Street View
  • 39 Newcastle Drive, The Park, Nottingham on Google Street View
  • Edale House, Clumber Road East, The Park, Nottingham on Google Street View
  • No 3, South Road, The Park, Nottingham on Google Street View
  • No. 5 and No. 7 Lenton Road, The Park, Nottingham on Google Street View
  • No. 3 and No. 4 Huntingdon Drive, The Park, Nottingham on Google Street View
  • 93–95 Derby Road, Nottingham on Google Street View
  • The 'Buildings' section of Nottingham21 Web Site has photographs of most of the surviving Fothergill buildings in the city.
  • A collection of photographs of Fothergill buildings on Geograph UK

watson, fothergill, july, 1841, march, 1928, british, architect, designed, over, unique, buildings, nottingham, east, midlands, england, influences, were, mainly, from, gothic, revival, english, vernacular, architecture, styles, title, above, door, offices, ge. Watson Fothergill 12 July 1841 6 March 1928 was a British architect 1 who designed over 100 unique buildings in Nottingham in the East Midlands of England His influences were mainly from the Gothic Revival and Old English vernacular architecture styles Watson FothergillTitle above the door of the Watson Fothergill offices at 15 George Street NottinghamBorn 1841 07 12 12 July 1841Linden Chesterfield Road MansfieldDied6 March 1928 1928 03 06 aged 86 7 Mapperley Road NottinghamOther namesFothergill WatsonOccupationArchitectSpouseAnn HagePracticeAssociated architectural firm s BuildingsNottingham and Nottinghamshire Bank Thurland Street Nottingham His work dates from 1864 when he set himself up in practice to around 1912 His earliest surviving known building dates from 1866 Contents 1 Early life 2 Family 3 Career 4 Gallery 5 Further reading 6 References 7 External linksEarly life editBorn Fothergill Watson in Mansfield Nottinghamshire in 1841 he was the son of wealthy Nottingham Lace merchant Robert Watson and Mary Ann Fothergill He changed his name to Watson Fothergill in 1892 to continue his maternal family name Family editHe married Anne Hage in 1867 2 at St John s Church Mansfield 3 They had the following children Marian Watson 1868 1955 Annie Forbes Watson 1869 1930 Edith Mary Watson 1871 1936 Eleanor Fothergill Watson 1872 1946 Samuel Fothergill Watson 1875 1915 Harold H Watson 1877 1905 Clarice Watson 1877 1955 His father in law was Samuel Hage 2 one of the founding partners of Mansfield Brewery His half brother was Robert Mackie Watson chairman of the Mansfield Improvement Commission and the Brunts Charity citation needed Career editIn 1856 he entered the St Peter s Gate office of Frederick Jackson an architect and surveyor in Nottingham In mid 1860 he moved as assistant to Isaac Charles Gilbert who was based in Clinton Street Nottingham After spending around 18 months with Gilbert he moved in early 1862 to join the office of Arthur William Blomfield in London In 1864 he was working with John Middleton in Cheltenham but in the same year left to set up his own office at 6 Clinton Street Nottingham 4 He remained at Clinton Street until it was demolished by the works in connection with the arrival of the Great Central Railway in 1894 He moved to a new temporary office at 18 George Street and arranged to rebuild 15 George Street opposite which he completed the next year and moved in on 12 December 1895 He was in partnership with Lawrence George Summers from 1880 and he retired in 1912 He is credited as having had a great impact on the architecture of the major British industrial city of Nottingham and designed over a hundred buildings in the city from offices banks and warehouses to churches and private dwelling houses His easily recognisable style includes the use of contrasting horizontal bands of red and blue brick dark timber eaves and balconies and elaborate turrets and stone carving On his death in 1928 he left an estate valued at 73 908 5s 11d 5 equivalent to 4 740 000 in 2021 6 List of major works 4 All Nottinghamshire unless otherwise stated 1860s Cemetery Chapels High Street Ongar joint architect with Isaac Charles Gilbert 1866 7 1870s Dwelling House Mapperley Road Nottingham Fothergill s own house 1870 Two Villas 5 amp 7 Lenton Road The Park Nottingham 1873 Temperance Hall later Albert Hall North Circus Street Nottingham 1873 1876 Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Bank Church Street Mansfield 1874 1875 Nottingham Daily Express Offices Printing Works and Shops Parliament Street Nottingham 1875 King s Arms Ratcliffe Gate and Newgate Lane Mansfield 1875 1877 Cattle Market Nottingham Road Mansfield 1876 1878 Congregational Church later United Reformed Westgate Mansfield 1876 1878 8 Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Bank and Residence Thurland Street Nottingham 1877 1882 9 1880s Villa Crow Hill Drive Mansfield 1880 Six Dwelling Houses Shops and Carriage House Castle Road and Houndsgate Nottingham 1882 1883 Five Houses and Shops Derby Road Nottingham 1884 Institute and Coffee Tavern High Street Hucknall 1884 10 Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Bank Cattle Market Loughborough Leicestershire 1885 Villa Loscoe Hill Clawson Lodge 405 Mansfield Road Nottingham 1885 Institute and Coffee Tavern Budworth Hall High Street Ongar Epping Forest Essex 1885 1887 11 Villa Walton House 39 Newcastle Drive The Park Nottingham 1886 St Nicholas Church Rectory Castle Gate Nottingham 1886 1887 Pair of Villas Loscoe Hill 409 and 411 Mansfield Road Nottingham 1886 1887 Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Bank Kirk Gate Newark on Trent 1885 1887 Rebuilding Black Boy Hotel first major rebuild extension Long Row Nottingham 1886 1888 Pair of Villas 62 and 64 Castle Boulevard Nottingham C1888 Pair of Villas 3 and 4 Huntingdon Drive Nottingham C1888 Samuel Smith amp Co s Bank 24 Market Place Long Eaton Derbyshire 1889 Warehouse Milbie House 33 Pilcher Gate Nottingham 1889 1890s Villa Elberton House Cavendish Hill 9 Hardwick Road Nottingham 1890 Eight Ladies Homes Norris Almhouses Berridge Road Nottingham 1892 1893 Emmanuel Church Woodborough Road 1883 1893 12 demolished 1972 Woodborough Road Baptist Church Woodborough Road and Alfred Street North Nottingham 1893 1895 Simons and Pickard Paper Warehouse Lenton Castle Boulevard Nottingham 1893 1894 House Kingswood Bulcote 1893 Two Semi Detached Villas Cleave House 1 and 3 Sherwood Rise Nottingham 13 1894 1895 Rebuilding of Nos 15 amp 17 George Street Nottingham Watson Fothergill s offices 1894 1895 Jessops Shop and Workrooms 14 30 King Street Nottingham 1894 1897 Four Shops and Offices Queen s Chambers Long Row and King Street Nottingham 1896 1899 Shop and Office Furley and Co now Lloyds Bank Parliament Street and Clinton Street Nottingham 1896 1897 Ellenborough House 3 South Road The Park Nottingham extended 1896 1897 Cuckson Hazeldine and Manderfield Warehouses Stoney Street and Barker Gate Nottingham 1897 1898 Black Boy Hotel Additions and Two Shops second major rebuild extension Long Row Nottingham 1897 1900 Rebuilding of the Rose of England Inn Mansfield Road Nottingham 1898 1900 Brewery Mar Hill Carlton 1899 Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Bank and House 111 Carrington Street Nottingham 1899 1900s Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Branch Bank St Ann s Well Road Nottingham 1900 1901 Sixteen Houses Foxhall Road Nottingham 1901 1902 Union of London and Smith s Bank Market Place Bulwell 1904 Villa Mapperley Road Nottingham Joint Architect with Lawrence George Summers 1905 Four Houses Mansfield Road and Bingham Road Nottingham 1906 1907Gallery edit nbsp Watson Fothergill s office at 15 17 George Street Nottingham nbsp Statue by Nathaniel Hitch on the frontage of Watson Fothergill s office nbsp Villa at Bridgegate in Retford nbsp Houses and Shops at Castle Road in Nottingham nbsp Banking House at Kirkgate in Newark nbsp Eight Ladies Homes at Sherwood Rise in Nottingham nbsp Woodborough Road Baptist Chapel nbsp Queen s Chambers at Long Row and King Street in Nottingham nbsp Carlton Laundry nbsp Castle Court Castle Boulevard nbsp Rose of England public house Mansfield Road Nottingham nbsp Black Boy Hotel Long Row NottinghamFurther reading editBrand Ken 2009 Watson Fothergill a provincial goth in Ferry Kathryn ed Powerhouses of Provincial Architecture 1837 1914 London Victorian Society pp 28 43 Turner Darren 2012 A Catalogue of the Works of Watson Fothergill Architect References edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Watson Fothergill Brodie Antonia 20 December 2001 Directory of British Architects 1834 1914 Vol 1 A K Royal Institute of British Architects p 675 ISBN 0826455131 a b Marriages London Evening Standard England 12 September 1867 Retrieved 4 March 2016 via British Newspaper Archive Marriages Nottinghamshire Guardian England 13 September 1867 Retrieved 4 March 2016 via British Newspaper Archive a b Turner Darren 2012 A Catalogue of the Works of Watson Fothergill Architect Nottingham DT P Blurb Notts Architect Sheffield Independent England 22 June 1928 Retrieved 6 March 2016 via British Newspaper Archive UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 11 June 2022 Local and District News Nottinghamshire Guardian England 12 January 1866 Retrieved 4 March 2016 via British Newspaper Archive New Congregational Chapel at Mansfield Nottinghamshire Guardian England 1 June 1877 Retrieved 4 March 2016 via British Newspaper Archive The Notitngham and Notts Bank Nottingham Evening Post England 21 March 1881 Retrieved 4 March 2016 via British Newspaper Archive Hucknall Torkard Nottinghamshire Guardian England 8 August 1884 Retrieved 4 March 2016 via British Newspaper Archive Ongar The Budworth Memorial Hall Chelmsford Chronicle England 11 February 1887 Retrieved 4 March 2016 via British Newspaper Archive Emmanuel Church Nottingham Consecration of New Chancel Nottinghamshire Guardian England 18 March 1893 Retrieved 4 March 2016 via British Newspaper Archive Sherwood Rise Nottingham Nottinghamshire Guardian England 12 November 1898 Retrieved 4 March 2016 via British Newspaper Archive External links editThe Watson Fothergill Home Page A catalogue of Watson Fothergill s work Norris Ladies Almshouses Berridge Road Nottingham on Google Street View Clawson Lodge Watcombe Road Nottingham on Google Street View 21 and 23 Newcastle Drive The Park Nottingham on Google Street View 39 Newcastle Drive The Park Nottingham on Google Street View Edale House Clumber Road East The Park Nottingham on Google Street View No 3 South Road The Park Nottingham on Google Street View No 5 and No 7 Lenton Road The Park Nottingham on Google Street View No 3 and No 4 Huntingdon Drive The Park Nottingham on Google Street View 93 95 Derby Road Nottingham on Google Street View The Buildings section of Nottingham21 Web Site has photographs of most of the surviving Fothergill buildings in the city A collection of photographs of Fothergill buildings on Geograph UK Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Watson Fothergill amp oldid 1192189726, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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