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George Edmund Street

George Edmund Street RA (20 June 1824 – 18 December 1881), also known as G. E. Street, was an English architect, born at Woodford in Essex. Stylistically, Street was a leading practitioner of the Victorian Gothic Revival. Though mainly an ecclesiastical architect, he is perhaps best known as the designer of the Royal Courts of Justice on the Strand in London.

George Edmund Street
Born(1824-06-20)20 June 1824
Woodford, Essex
Died18 December 1881(1881-12-18) (aged 57)
London
OccupationArchitect
AwardsRoyal Gold Medal (1874)
BuildingsRoyal Courts of Justice, The Strand, London

Early life Edit

Street was the third son of Thomas Street, a solicitor, by his second wife, Mary Anne Millington. He went to school at Mitcham in about 1830, and later to the Camberwell Collegiate School, which he left in 1839. For a few months he worked in his father's business in Philpot Lane, but on his father's death he went to live with his mother and sister at Exeter. There his thoughts first turned to architecture, and in 1841 his mother obtained a place for him as pupil in the office of Owen Browne Carter at Winchester. Afterwards he worked for five years as an "improver" with George Gilbert Scott in London.[1]

His first commission – undertaken while still working for Scott – was for the design of Biscovey Church, Cornwall. In 1849 he set up in practice in an office of his own.[1] Much of his earliest work, which included many church restorations, was in Cornwall.[2]

Career Edit

 
Former parish church of SS Philip and James in North Oxford, now the Oxford Centre for Mission Studies

In November 1850, having been appointed architect to the diocese of Oxford by Bishop Samuel Wilberforce, he left London, and moved to Wantage, where he had already designed a vicarage, and was working on some schools. In May 1852 he went to live in Beaumont Street, Oxford.[3] He designed the parish church of SS Philip and James in the city, and another at Summertown, as well as restoring many others. Street built or restored 113 churches in the diocese of Oxford.[4] However, his only work for the university was the reordering of Jesus College Chapel. His son Arthur Edmund Street suggested that:

Possibly my father's very decided adherence to the earlier phase of Gothic, and the eagerness with which he argued that Oxford had already enough of debased types, and should revert to the purity of the early forms, may have frightened the authorities.[2]

During this period he developed his use of constructional polychromy, in churches such as All Saints, Boyne Hill. Maidenhead .[5]

Early in his career, he advocated the idea that architects should have a practical involvement with the decoration of their buildings, and painted murals at Boyne Hill church himself. However, with his increasing amount of business, he soon realised the difficulties of such an approach.[6]

He remained in Oxford until late in 1855, when he moved back to London, taking a house in Montagu Place, Bloomsbury.[7] At around this time he entered the competition to design the new cathedral at Lille, winning second prize, behind a design by Henry Clutton and William Burges.[8] He came second to Burges in another competition, to design the Crimea Memorial Church in Constantinople, but eventually received the commission.[9] He also submitted, unsuccessfully, Gothic schemes for the new Foreign Office in Whitehall, and for a projected rebuilding of the National Gallery.[10]

Gothic Revival Edit

 
The church of St. James the Less, Westminster; completed to Street's design in 1861

Street was an active member of the Ecclesiological Society.[11] From an early age he had been interested in the principles of Gothic architecture, and made frequent tours to study and draw Gothic architecture across Europe.[12] He was an exceptional draughtsman, and in 1855 he published a very careful and well illustrated work on The Brick and Marble Architecture of Northern Italy, and in 1865 a book on The Gothic Architecture of Spain.[1] These works inspired the wider use of constructional polychromy by British architects, sometimes mocked as "The Streaky Bacon Style".[13]

At St James the Less, in Thorndike Street, Westminster (1858–61), Street used red brick, with black brick decoration both inside and out, and gave the church a tall, square campanile-like tower, its roof based on a Genoese model.[14] Charles Locke Eastlake, writing in 1872, saw this as a prime example of the "revolt from [English] national style" that was occurring amongst Gothic Revival architects at this time,[15] at least in part inspired by John Ruskin's enthusiasm for the medieval architecture of Northern Italy, and by the publication of Viollet-le-Duc's exhaustive Dictionnaire raisonné de l'Architecture Française du XIe au XVIe Siècle:[16]

Here the whole character of the building, whether we regard its plan, its distinctive features, its external or internal decoration is eminently un-English. Even the materials used in its construction and the mode by which it is lighted were novelties. The detached tower with its picturesquely modelled spire, its belfry stage rich in ornamental brick-work and marble bosses, the semicircular apse and quasi-transepts, the plate tracery, the dormers inserted in the clerestory, the quaint treatment of the nave arcade, the bold vigour of the carving, the chromatic decoration of the roof—all bear evidence of a thirst for change which Mr. Street could satisfy without danger, but which betrayed many of his contemporaries into intemperance.[15]

Two features Street was particularly fond of using were the round apse and the louvred belfry windows.[17]

Street was commissioned by Alexander Lindsay, 25th Earl of Crawford in 1867 to design several aspects of the extension work undertaken at Dunecht House, Aberdeenshire. These included the Library and a Chapel.[18]

In 1868 Street was made Diocesan Architect of Ripon, in addition to the similar posts which he already held in the dioceses of York and Oxford, and to which Winchester was subsequently added. He was also appointed Architect to York Minster at around this time, and, later on, to Salisbury and Carlisle Cathedrals.[19]

Works Edit

 
The Royal Courts of Justice in The Strand, London

Street's most recognisable building is probably the Law Courts (now the Royal Courts of Justice) in the Strand in London. The competition for this was prolonged, and much diversity of opinion was expressed. The judges wanted Street to make the exterior arrangements and Charles Barry the interior, while a special committee of lawyers recommended the designs of Alfred Waterhouse. In June 1868, however, Street was appointed sole architect; but the building was not complete at the time of his death in December 1881.[1]

 
Church of St John the Evangelist, Ardamine, County Wexford

Apart from the Law Courts, by far the majority of Street's output was for ecclesiastical uses, the largest being the nave of Bristol Cathedral and the restoration of Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin. Chief amongst his complete works include St Margaret's convent, East Grinstead, and the theological college at Cuddesdon. Other churches of which he was the architect include All Saints' (Church of England), St Paul's Within The Walls (American Episcopal) in Rome, and, also for the American Episcopal Church, the American Cathedral in Paris, completed posthumously by Arthur E Street in 1886. His work was not exclusively in the Gothic revival manner, as is demonstrated by Ralli's dramatic Lycian-Byzantine temple at Norwood Cemetery, the Romanesque reworking of the nearby church of St Luke and the rebuilding of All Saints' at Roydon, in West Norfolk, in a style to match its two Norman doorways. Street also designed the family chapel at Gwrych Castle in Abergele. Denbighshire.

Ireland Edit

Street carried out a number of new works in Ireland, including the small clifftop church of St. John the Evangelist at Ardamine, Co. Wexford, and Piltown Church, Co. Kilkenny. His most significant work was the controversial re-edification of the historic Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin, in the course of which he was responsible for demolishing the choir which he considered to be of "no historic significance". Street designed the adjacent Synod Hall around the existing 12th-century St Michael's Church.[20] He also restored St. Brigid's Cathedral, Kildare Town, which was a roofless ruin when he started work. The Cathedral reopened in 1896. He succeeded in rebuilding the lost walls to match the remnants which remained of the original walls and square tower.

Societies and honours Edit

Street was elected an associate of the Royal Academy in 1866, and a fellow in 1871; at the time of his death he was professor of architecture to the Royal Academy, where he had delivered a course of lectures on the development of medieval architecture. He was also president of the Royal Institute of British Architects. He was a member of the Royal Academy of Vienna, and in 1878, in reward for drawings sent to the Paris Exhibition, he was made a knight of the Legion of Honour.

Pupils Edit

In 1856–7, Philip Webb was Street's senior clerk and the young William Morris one of his apprentices. These two designers worked together on the Red House that became a memorial to William Morris's design principles and includes work by many of his now-famous friends. Another apprentice in the early 1870s was the Canadian architect Frank Darling.

Personal life Edit

 
Monument to Street in the main hall of the Royal Courts of Justice

Street was twice married, first on 17 June 1852 to Mariquita Proctor, second daughter of Robert Proctor, who died in 1874 aged 44. They met when Street was employed to restore the church at Hadleigh, in Essex, where the rector was Mariquita's uncle.[4] His second wife was Jessie Holland, second daughter of William Holland. They married on 11 January 1876, but she died eight weeks after the wedding, having contracted a fever on their honeymoon in Rome.[21] His son, Arthur Edmund Street, was born in Oxford in 1855. He joined his father's office in 1878 and after his father's death completed the projects which were in the course of construction. He later wrote a biography of his father which was published in 1888.[22]

Street's death, on 18 December 1881 aged 57, was hastened by overwork and professional worries connected with the building of the law courts. He was buried on 29 December in the nave of Westminster Abbey, adjacent to the tombs of Sir George Gilbert Scott and Sir Charles Barry. A monument to Street by Henry Hugh Armstead was sponsored by the Prince of Wales and Sir Frederic Leighton and is sited in the central hall of the Royal Courts; it was unveiled on 24 March 1886 by Lord Herschell, the Lord Chancellor.[23]

Street was an adherent of the high church tradition of the Church of England.[24] For many years he was a churchwarden of All Saints, Margaret Street in London,[19] built in the 1850s as a "model church" under the supervision of the Ecclesiological Society.[25] He was particularly insistent that all seats in churches should be free of charge, rather than subject to pew rent.[24]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d Chisholm 1911.
  2. ^ a b Street (1888), p.11
  3. ^ Street (1888), p.19
  4. ^ a b Peats, Richard. "The Church Interiors of George Edmund Street in the Diocese of Oxford: An Assessment of Significance - Historic England Research Report 59/2018". research.historicengland.org.uk. Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  5. ^ Hitchcock (1977), p .250. Hitchcock describes All Saints as "[Street's] first important church".
  6. ^ Davey (1995)[page needed]
  7. ^ Street (1888), p.22
  8. ^ Street (1888), pp.22–8
  9. ^ Street (1888), p.32
  10. ^ Street (1888), pp.52–58
  11. ^ Street (1888), p.17
  12. ^ Street (1888)[page needed]
  13. ^ Tyack, Geoffrey (21 September 2019). "William Butterfield and the Victorian Gothic Revival" (PDF). p. 3. Retrieved 12 January 2023.
  14. ^ Hitchcock (1977), p. 254.
  15. ^ a b Eastlake (1872), p. 321
  16. ^ Eastlake (1872), pp. 317–318
  17. ^ Eastlake (1872), p. 325
  18. ^ (Historic Environment Scotland & LB3133)
  19. ^ a b Street (1888), p. 196
  20. ^ "1890 – St Michael's Church (Synod Hall), Christchurch Place, Dublin". Archiseek - Irish Architecture. 19 February 2010. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
  21. ^ Street (1888), p. 230
  22. ^ Hill, Robert G. "Street, Arthur Edmund". dictionaryofarchitectsincanada.org. Biographical Dictionary of Architects in Canada: 1800-1950. Retrieved 19 June 2020.
  23. ^ Street (1888), p. 294
  24. ^ a b Street (1888), p.67
  25. ^ Eastlake (1872), p.251–3

Sources Edit

  • Brownlee, David (1984). The Law Courts: The Architecture of George Edmund Street. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Street, George Edmund". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 25 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 1007.
  • Davey, Peter (1995) [1980]. Arts and Crafts Architecture. Oxford: Phaidon Press. ISBN 0714837113.
  • Eastlake, Charles Locke (1872). A History of the Gothic Revival. London: Longman, Green & Co.
  • Historic Environment Scotland. "Dunecht House (Category A Listed Building) (LB3133)". Retrieved 28 March 2019.
  • Hitchcock, Henry-Russell (1977). Architecture: Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. The Pelican History of Art (4th (2nd integrated) ed.). Harmondsworth: Penguin Books. ISBN 0140561153.
  • Savorra, M (May 2005). "George Edmund Street e i disegni di Brick and Marble". Il Disegno di Architettura (in Italian) (30): 39–47.
  • Savorra, M (2006). "Città descritte, città illustrate. L'Italia nei disegni di George Edmund Street". In Iachello, E (ed.). I saperi della città (in Italian). Palermo: L'Epos. pp. 385–394.
  • Street, Arthur Edmund (1888). Memoir of George Edmund Street, R.A., 1824–1881. London: John Murray.
  • Street, George Edmund (1855). . Transactions of the Worcester Diocesan Architectural Society: 348. Archived from the original on 9 July 2015.
  • Lopez-Ulloa, Fabian (2016). Las teorías del gótico y su representación gráfica en España el último tercio del siglo XIX. Un estudio sobre: Some Account of Gothic Architecture in Spain, de George Edmund Street (phd). E.T.S. Arquitectura (UPM). Archivo Digital UPM..

Further reading Edit

  • Anonymous (1873). Cartoon portraits and biographical sketches of men of the day. Illustrated by Waddy, Frederick. London: Tinsley Brothers. pp. 18–19. Retrieved 28 December 2010.

External links Edit

george, edmund, street, june, 1824, december, 1881, also, known, street, english, architect, born, woodford, essex, stylistically, street, leading, practitioner, victorian, gothic, revival, though, mainly, ecclesiastical, architect, perhaps, best, known, desig. George Edmund Street RA 20 June 1824 18 December 1881 also known as G E Street was an English architect born at Woodford in Essex Stylistically Street was a leading practitioner of the Victorian Gothic Revival Though mainly an ecclesiastical architect he is perhaps best known as the designer of the Royal Courts of Justice on the Strand in London George Edmund StreetBorn 1824 06 20 20 June 1824Woodford EssexDied18 December 1881 1881 12 18 aged 57 LondonOccupationArchitectAwardsRoyal Gold Medal 1874 BuildingsRoyal Courts of Justice The Strand London Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Gothic Revival 3 Works 3 1 Ireland 4 Societies and honours 5 Pupils 6 Personal life 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life EditStreet was the third son of Thomas Street a solicitor by his second wife Mary Anne Millington He went to school at Mitcham in about 1830 and later to the Camberwell Collegiate School which he left in 1839 For a few months he worked in his father s business in Philpot Lane but on his father s death he went to live with his mother and sister at Exeter There his thoughts first turned to architecture and in 1841 his mother obtained a place for him as pupil in the office of Owen Browne Carter at Winchester Afterwards he worked for five years as an improver with George Gilbert Scott in London 1 His first commission undertaken while still working for Scott was for the design of Biscovey Church Cornwall In 1849 he set up in practice in an office of his own 1 Much of his earliest work which included many church restorations was in Cornwall 2 Career Edit nbsp Former parish church of SS Philip and James in North Oxford now the Oxford Centre for Mission StudiesIn November 1850 having been appointed architect to the diocese of Oxford by Bishop Samuel Wilberforce he left London and moved to Wantage where he had already designed a vicarage and was working on some schools In May 1852 he went to live in Beaumont Street Oxford 3 He designed the parish church of SS Philip and James in the city and another at Summertown as well as restoring many others Street built or restored 113 churches in the diocese of Oxford 4 However his only work for the university was the reordering of Jesus College Chapel His son Arthur Edmund Street suggested that Possibly my father s very decided adherence to the earlier phase of Gothic and the eagerness with which he argued that Oxford had already enough of debased types and should revert to the purity of the early forms may have frightened the authorities 2 During this period he developed his use of constructional polychromy in churches such as All Saints Boyne Hill Maidenhead 5 Early in his career he advocated the idea that architects should have a practical involvement with the decoration of their buildings and painted murals at Boyne Hill church himself However with his increasing amount of business he soon realised the difficulties of such an approach 6 He remained in Oxford until late in 1855 when he moved back to London taking a house in Montagu Place Bloomsbury 7 At around this time he entered the competition to design the new cathedral at Lille winning second prize behind a design by Henry Clutton and William Burges 8 He came second to Burges in another competition to design the Crimea Memorial Church in Constantinople but eventually received the commission 9 He also submitted unsuccessfully Gothic schemes for the new Foreign Office in Whitehall and for a projected rebuilding of the National Gallery 10 Gothic Revival Edit nbsp The church of St James the Less Westminster completed to Street s design in 1861Street was an active member of the Ecclesiological Society 11 From an early age he had been interested in the principles of Gothic architecture and made frequent tours to study and draw Gothic architecture across Europe 12 He was an exceptional draughtsman and in 1855 he published a very careful and well illustrated work on The Brick and Marble Architecture of Northern Italy and in 1865 a book on The Gothic Architecture of Spain 1 These works inspired the wider use of constructional polychromy by British architects sometimes mocked as The Streaky Bacon Style 13 At St James the Less in Thorndike Street Westminster 1858 61 Street used red brick with black brick decoration both inside and out and gave the church a tall square campanile like tower its roof based on a Genoese model 14 Charles Locke Eastlake writing in 1872 saw this as a prime example of the revolt from English national style that was occurring amongst Gothic Revival architects at this time 15 at least in part inspired by John Ruskin s enthusiasm for the medieval architecture of Northern Italy and by the publication of Viollet le Duc s exhaustive Dictionnaire raisonne de l Architecture Francaise du XIe au XVIe Siecle 16 Here the whole character of the building whether we regard its plan its distinctive features its external or internal decoration is eminently un English Even the materials used in its construction and the mode by which it is lighted were novelties The detached tower with its picturesquely modelled spire its belfry stage rich in ornamental brick work and marble bosses the semicircular apse and quasi transepts the plate tracery the dormers inserted in the clerestory the quaint treatment of the nave arcade the bold vigour of the carving the chromatic decoration of the roof all bear evidence of a thirst for change which Mr Street could satisfy without danger but which betrayed many of his contemporaries into intemperance 15 Two features Street was particularly fond of using were the round apse and the louvred belfry windows 17 Street was commissioned by Alexander Lindsay 25th Earl of Crawford in 1867 to design several aspects of the extension work undertaken at Dunecht House Aberdeenshire These included the Library and a Chapel 18 In 1868 Street was made Diocesan Architect of Ripon in addition to the similar posts which he already held in the dioceses of York and Oxford and to which Winchester was subsequently added He was also appointed Architect to York Minster at around this time and later on to Salisbury and Carlisle Cathedrals 19 Works Edit nbsp The Royal Courts of Justice in The Strand LondonStreet s most recognisable building is probably the Law Courts now the Royal Courts of Justice in the Strand in London The competition for this was prolonged and much diversity of opinion was expressed The judges wanted Street to make the exterior arrangements and Charles Barry the interior while a special committee of lawyers recommended the designs of Alfred Waterhouse In June 1868 however Street was appointed sole architect but the building was not complete at the time of his death in December 1881 1 nbsp Church of St John the Evangelist Ardamine County WexfordApart from the Law Courts by far the majority of Street s output was for ecclesiastical uses the largest being the nave of Bristol Cathedral and the restoration of Christ Church Cathedral Dublin Chief amongst his complete works include St Margaret s convent East Grinstead and the theological college at Cuddesdon Other churches of which he was the architect include All Saints Church of England St Paul s Within The Walls American Episcopal in Rome and also for the American Episcopal Church the American Cathedral in Paris completed posthumously by Arthur E Street in 1886 His work was not exclusively in the Gothic revival manner as is demonstrated by Ralli s dramatic Lycian Byzantine temple at Norwood Cemetery the Romanesque reworking of the nearby church of St Luke and the rebuilding of All Saints at Roydon in West Norfolk in a style to match its two Norman doorways Street also designed the family chapel at Gwrych Castle in Abergele Denbighshire Ireland Edit Street carried out a number of new works in Ireland including the small clifftop church of St John the Evangelist at Ardamine Co Wexford and Piltown Church Co Kilkenny His most significant work was the controversial re edification of the historic Christ Church Cathedral Dublin in the course of which he was responsible for demolishing the choir which he considered to be of no historic significance Street designed the adjacent Synod Hall around the existing 12th century St Michael s Church 20 He also restored St Brigid s Cathedral Kildare Town which was a roofless ruin when he started work The Cathedral reopened in 1896 He succeeded in rebuilding the lost walls to match the remnants which remained of the original walls and square tower Societies and honours EditStreet was elected an associate of the Royal Academy in 1866 and a fellow in 1871 at the time of his death he was professor of architecture to the Royal Academy where he had delivered a course of lectures on the development of medieval architecture He was also president of the Royal Institute of British Architects He was a member of the Royal Academy of Vienna and in 1878 in reward for drawings sent to the Paris Exhibition he was made a knight of the Legion of Honour Pupils EditIn 1856 7 Philip Webb was Street s senior clerk and the young William Morris one of his apprentices These two designers worked together on the Red House that became a memorial to William Morris s design principles and includes work by many of his now famous friends Another apprentice in the early 1870s was the Canadian architect Frank Darling Personal life Edit nbsp Monument to Street in the main hall of the Royal Courts of JusticeStreet was twice married first on 17 June 1852 to Mariquita Proctor second daughter of Robert Proctor who died in 1874 aged 44 They met when Street was employed to restore the church at Hadleigh in Essex where the rector was Mariquita s uncle 4 His second wife was Jessie Holland second daughter of William Holland They married on 11 January 1876 but she died eight weeks after the wedding having contracted a fever on their honeymoon in Rome 21 His son Arthur Edmund Street was born in Oxford in 1855 He joined his father s office in 1878 and after his father s death completed the projects which were in the course of construction He later wrote a biography of his father which was published in 1888 22 Street s death on 18 December 1881 aged 57 was hastened by overwork and professional worries connected with the building of the law courts He was buried on 29 December in the nave of Westminster Abbey adjacent to the tombs of Sir George Gilbert Scott and Sir Charles Barry A monument to Street by Henry Hugh Armstead was sponsored by the Prince of Wales and Sir Frederic Leighton and is sited in the central hall of the Royal Courts it was unveiled on 24 March 1886 by Lord Herschell the Lord Chancellor 23 Street was an adherent of the high church tradition of the Church of England 24 For many years he was a churchwarden of All Saints Margaret Street in London 19 built in the 1850s as a model church under the supervision of the Ecclesiological Society 25 He was particularly insistent that all seats in churches should be free of charge rather than subject to pew rent 24 See also EditList of new churches by G E Street List of church restorations and alterations by G E Street List of domestic buildings by G E Street List of miscellaneous works by G E StreetReferences Edit a b c d Chisholm 1911 a b Street 1888 p 11 Street 1888 p 19 a b Peats Richard The Church Interiors of George Edmund Street in the Diocese of Oxford An Assessment of Significance Historic England Research Report 59 2018 research historicengland org uk Retrieved 29 April 2020 Hitchcock 1977 p 250 Hitchcock describes All Saints as Street s first important church Davey 1995 page needed Street 1888 p 22 Street 1888 pp 22 8 Street 1888 p 32 Street 1888 pp 52 58 Street 1888 p 17 Street 1888 page needed Tyack Geoffrey 21 September 2019 William Butterfield and the Victorian Gothic Revival PDF p 3 Retrieved 12 January 2023 Hitchcock 1977 p 254 a b Eastlake 1872 p 321 Eastlake 1872 pp 317 318 Eastlake 1872 p 325 Historic Environment Scotland amp LB3133 a b Street 1888 p 196 1890 St Michael s Church Synod Hall Christchurch Place Dublin Archiseek Irish Architecture 19 February 2010 Retrieved 4 August 2021 Street 1888 p 230 Hill Robert G Street Arthur Edmund dictionaryofarchitectsincanada org Biographical Dictionary of Architects in Canada 1800 1950 Retrieved 19 June 2020 Street 1888 p 294 a b Street 1888 p 67 Eastlake 1872 p 251 3Sources EditBrownlee David 1984 The Law Courts The Architecture of George Edmund Street Cambridge MA MIT Press nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Street George Edmund Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 25 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 1007 Davey Peter 1995 1980 Arts and Crafts Architecture Oxford Phaidon Press ISBN 0714837113 Eastlake Charles Locke 1872 A History of the Gothic Revival London Longman Green amp Co Historic Environment Scotland Dunecht House Category A Listed Building LB3133 Retrieved 28 March 2019 Hitchcock Henry Russell 1977 Architecture Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries The Pelican History of Art 4th 2nd integrated ed Harmondsworth Penguin Books ISBN 0140561153 Savorra M May 2005 George Edmund Street e i disegni di Brick and Marble Il Disegno di Architettura in Italian 30 39 47 Savorra M 2006 Citta descritte citta illustrate L Italia nei disegni di George Edmund Street In Iachello E ed I saperi della citta in Italian Palermo L Epos pp 385 394 Street Arthur Edmund 1888 Memoir of George Edmund Street R A 1824 1881 London John Murray Street George Edmund 1855 St John s Church Transactions of the Worcester Diocesan Architectural Society 348 Archived from the original on 9 July 2015 Lopez Ulloa Fabian 2016 Las teorias del gotico y su representacion grafica en Espana el ultimo tercio del siglo XIX Un estudio sobre Some Account of Gothic Architecture in Spain de George Edmund Street phd E T S Arquitectura UPM Archivo Digital UPM Further reading EditAnonymous 1873 Cartoon portraits and biographical sketches of men of the day Illustrated by Waddy Frederick London Tinsley Brothers pp 18 19 Retrieved 28 December 2010 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to George Edmund Street Paul Joyce Archive material on George Edmund Street including original drawings Works by George Edmund Street at Project Gutenberg Works by or about George Edmund Street at Internet Archive Profile on Royal Academy of Arts Collections Street George Edmund New International Encyclopedia 1905 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Edmund Street amp oldid 1178161548, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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