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John Nash (architect)

John Nash (18 January 1752 – 13 May 1835) was one of the foremost British architects of the Georgian and Regency eras, during which he was responsible for the design, in the neoclassical and picturesque styles, of many important areas of London. His designs were financed by the Prince Regent and by the era's most successful property developer, James Burton. Nash also collaborated extensively with Burton's son, Decimus Burton.[1]

John Nash
Bust of Nash at All Souls, Langham Place
Born(1752-01-18)18 January 1752
Lambeth, London, England
Died13 May 1835(1835-05-13) (aged 83)
East Cowes Castle, Isle of Wight, England
OccupationArchitect
Buildings

Nash's best-known solo designs are the Royal Pavilion, Brighton; Marble Arch; and Buckingham Palace. His best-known collaboration with James Burton is Regent Street and his best-known collaborations with Decimus Burton are Regent's Park and its terraces and Carlton House Terrace. The majority of his buildings, including those that the Burtons did not contribute to, were built by James Burton's company.

Background and early career edit

Nash was born in 1752, probably in Lambeth, south London.[a] His father was a millwright also called John (1714–1772).[5] From 1766 or 1767, Nash trained with the architect Sir Robert Taylor. The apprenticeship was completed in 1775 or 1776.[6]

 
Cronkhill, Shropshire - one of Nash's earlier buildings and the first "Italianate villa in England"[7]

On 28 April 1775, at the now-demolished church of St Mary Newington, Nash married his first wife Jane Elizabeth Kerr, daughter of a surgeon.[6] Initially, he seems to have pursued a career as a surveyor, builder and carpenter. This gave him an income of around £300 a year (~£49,850 in 2020 money).[8] The couple set up home at Royal Row, Lambeth.[6] He established his own architectural practice in 1777 as well as being in partnership with a timber merchant, Richard Heaviside.[6][9][page needed] The couple had two children, both were baptised at St Mary-at-Lambeth, John on 9 June 1776 and Hugh on 28 April 1778.[6] In June 1778, Nash, "by the ill conduct of his wife found it necessary to send her into Wales in order to work a reformation on her."[10] The cause of this appears to have been the claim that Jane Nash, "had imposed two spurious children on him as his and her own, notwithstanding she had then never had any child", and she had contracted several debts unknown to her husband, including one for milliners' bills of £300.[11] The claim that Jane had faked her pregnancies and then passed babies she had acquired off as her own was brought before the Consistory court of the Bishop of London.[12] His wife was sent to Aberavon to lodge with Nash's cousin, Ann Morgan, but she developed a relationship with a local man, Charles Charles. In an attempt at reconciliation, Jane returned to London in June 1779, but she continued to act extravagantly so he sent her to another cousin, Thomas Edwards of Neath. She gave birth just after Christmas and acknowledged Charles Charles as the father.[13] In 1781, Nash instigated action against Jane for separation on grounds of adultery. The case was tried at Hereford in 1782, Charles who was found guilty was unable to pay the damages of £76 (~£13,200 in 2020 money) and subsequently died in prison.[13] The divorce was finally read 26 January 1787.[12]

His career was initially unsuccessful and short-lived. After inheriting £1000 (~£162,000 in 2020 money)[14] in 1778 from his uncle Thomas, he invested the money in his first independent works, 15–17 Bloomsbury Square and 66–71 Great Russell Street in Bloomsbury. However, the property failed to let and he was declared bankrupt on 30 September 1783.[15] His debts were £5000 (~£760,000 in 2020 money),[12] including £2000 he had been lent by Robert Adam and his brothers.[15] A blue plaque commemorating Nash was placed on 66 Great Russell Street by English Heritage in 2013.[16]

Wales edit

 
Llanerchaeron

Nash left London in 1784 to live in Carmarthen,[10] to where his mother had retired, her family being from the area.[17] In 1785 he and a local man, Samuel Simon Saxon, re-roofed the town's church for 600 guineas.[10] Nash and Saxon seem to have worked as building contractors and suppliers of building materials.[18] Nash's London buildings had been standard Georgian terraced houses, and it was in Wales that he matured as an architect. His first major work in the area was the first of three prisons he would design, Carmarthen 1789–92.[19] This was planned by the penal reformer John Howard and Nash developed this into the finished building.[20] He went on to design the prisons at Cardigan (1791–1796) and Hereford (1792–1796).[21] It was at Hereford that Nash met Richard Payne Knight,[22] whose theories on the picturesque as applied to architecture and landscape would influence Nash. The commission for Hereford Gaol came after the death of William Blackburn, who was to have designed the building. Nash's design was accepted after James Wyatt approved of the design.[23]

In 1789, St Davids Cathedral was suffering from structural problems, the west front was leaning forward by one foot, Nash was called in to survey the structure and develop a plan to save the building.[24] His solution completed in 1791, was to demolish the upper part of the façade and rebuild it with two large but inelegant flying buttresses. In 1790 Nash met Uvedale Price, of Downtown Castle, whose theories of the Picturesque would influence Nash's town planning. Price commissioned Nash to design Castle House Aberystwyth (1795). Its plan took the form of a right-angled triangle, with an octagonal tower at each corner, sited on the very edge of the sea.[25]

One of Nash's most important developments were a series of medium-sized country houses that he designed in Wales, which developed the villa designs of his teacher Sir Robert Taylor.[10] Most of these villas consist of a roughly square plan with a small entrance hall and a staircase offset in the middle to one side, around which are placed the main rooms. There is then a less prominent servants' quarters in a wing attached to one side of the villa. The buildings are usually only two floors in height and the elevations of the main block are usually symmetrical. One of the finest of these villas is Llanerchaeron, but at least a dozen villas were designed throughout south Wales. Others, in Pembrokeshire, include Ffynone, built for the Colby family at Boncath near Manordeifi, and Foley House, built for the lawyer Richard Foley (brother of Admiral Sir Thomas Foley) at Goat Street in Haverfordwest.[26]

 
Gates to Clytha Park, Monmouthshire

From 1796, Nash spent most of his time working in London; this was a prelude to his return to the capital in 1797.[27] At this time, Nash designed the delicate Gothic revival gateway to Clytha Park near Abergavenny in Monmouthshire,[28] and also his alterations in Gothic Revival style in 1794 to Hafod Uchtryd for Thomas Johnes at Devil's Bridge, Cardiganshire.[29] Also in c. 1794–95 he advised on the paving, lighting and water supply in Abergavenny and designed an elegant market building.[30] Other work included Whitson Court near Newport. After his return to London, Nash continued to design houses in Wales including Harpton Court in Radnorshire, which was demolished, apart from the service wing, in 1956.[31] In 1807 he drew up plans for the re-building of Hawarden Castle with Gothic battlements and towers, but the plan appears to have been modified by another architect when it was carried out.[32] About 1808 he designed Monachty near Aberaeron and later drew up plans for work at Nanteos.[31]

He met Humphry Repton at Stoke Edith in 1792[33] and formed a successful partnership with the landscape garden designer. One of their early commissions was at Corsham Court in 1795–96. The pair would collaborate to carefully place the Nash-designed building in grounds designed by Repton. The partnership ended in 1800 under recriminations,[34] Repton accusing Nash of exploiting their partnership to his own advantage. As Nash developed his architectural practice it became necessary to employ draughtsmen; the first in the early 1790s was Augustus Charles Pugin,[18] and later in 1795, John Adey Repton son of Humphry.[18]

Return to London edit

 
Diamond Cottage, Blaise Hamlet

In June 1797, Nash moved into 28 Dover Street, a building of his own design. He built a larger house next door at 29, into which he moved the following year.[35] Nash married 25-year-old Mary Anne Bradley on 17 December 1798 at St George's, Hanover Square.[35] In 1798, he purchased a plot of land of 30 acres (12 ha) at East Cowes on which he erected 1798–1802 East Cowes Castle as his residence.[36] It was the first of a series of picturesque Gothic castles that he would design.

Nash's final home in London was 14 Regent Street which he designed and built 1819–23. Number 16 was built at the same time for the home of Nash's cousin John Edwards,[37] a lawyer who handled all of Nash's legal affairs.[38] Located in lower Regent Street, near Waterloo Place, both houses formed a single design around an open courtyard. Nash's drawing office was on the ground floor and on the first floor was the finest room in the house, the 70-foot-long picture and sculpture gallery; it linked the drawing-room at the front of the building with the dining room at the rear.[39] The house was sold in 1834 and the gallery interior moved to East Cowes Castle.

The finest of the dozen country houses that Nash designed as picturesque castles include the relatively small Luscombe Castle Devon (1800–04);[40] Ravensworth Castle (Tyne and Wear), begun in 1807 but only finally completed in 1846, which was one of the largest houses by Nash;[41] Caerhays Castle in Cornwall (1808–10);[42] and Shanbally Castle, County Tipperary (1818–1819), which was the last of these castles to be built.[43] These buildings all represented Nash's continuing development of an asymmetrical and picturesque architectural style that had begun during his years in Wales, at both Castle House Aberystwyth and his alterations to Hafod Uchtryd.[44]

This process would be extended by Nash in planning groups of buildings, the first example being Blaise Hamlet (1810–1811). There a group of nine asymmetrical cottages was laid out around a village green. Nikolaus Pevsner described the hamlet as "the ne plus ultra of the Picturesque movement".[44] The hamlet has also been described as the first fully realized exemplar of the garden suburb.[45] Nash developed the asymmetry of his castles in his Italianate villas. His first such exercise was Cronkhill (1802),[46] and others included Sandridge Park (1805)[47] and Southborough Place, Surbiton(1808).[48]

He advised on work to the buildings of Jesus College, Oxford, in 1815,[49] for which he required no fee but asked that the college commission a portrait of him from Sir Thomas Lawrence to hang in the college hall.[50]

Architect to the Prince Regent edit

 
Park Crescent, Regent's Park

Nash was a dedicated Whig[51] and was a friend of Charles James Fox through whom Nash probably came to the attention of the Prince Regent (later King George IV). In 1806 Nash was appointed architect to the Surveyor General of Woods, Forests, Parks, and Chases.[52] From 1810 Nash would take very few private commissions and for the rest of his career he would largely work for the Prince.[53] His employment by the Prince Regent enabled Nash to embark upon a number of grand architectural projects.[54]

His first major commissions in (1809–1826)[55] from the Prince were Regent Street and the development of an area then known as Marylebone Park. With the Regent's backing, Nash created a master plan for the area, put into effect from 1818 onwards, which stretched from St James's northwards and included Regent Street, Regent's Park (1809–1832)[56] and its neighbouring streets, terraces and crescents of elegant townhouses and villas. Nash did not design all the buildings himself. In some instances, these were left in the hands of other architects such as James Pennethorne and the young Decimus Burton.

Nash went on to re-landscape St. James's Park (1814–1827),[57] reshaping the formal canal into the present lake, and giving the park its present form. A characteristic of Nash's plan for Regent Street was that it followed an irregular path linking Portland Place to the north with Carlton House, London (replaced by Nash's Carlton House Terrace (1827–1833)[58] to the south. At the northern end of Portland Place Nash designed Park Crescent, London (1812 and 1819–1821),[59] this opens into Nash's Park Square, London (1823–24),[60] this only has terraces on the east and west, the north opens into Regent's Park.

The terraces that Nash designed around Regent's Park though conforming to the earlier form of appearing as a single building, as developed by John Wood, the Elder, are unlike earlier examples set in gardens and are not orthogonal in their placing to each other. This was part of Nash's development of planning, this found it is a most extreme example when he set out Park Village East and Park Village West (1823–34) to the north-east of Regent's Park,[61] here a mixture of detached villas, semi-detached houses, both symmetrical and asymmetrical in their design are set out in private gardens railed off from the street, the roads loop and the buildings are both classical and gothic in style. No two buildings were the same, and or even in line with their neighbours. The park villages can be seen as the prototype for the Victorian suburbs. [62]

 
The Royal Pavillion, Brighton

Nash was employed by the Prince from 1815 to develop his Marine Pavilion in Brighton,[63] originally designed by Henry Holland. By 1822 Nash had finished his work on the Marine Pavilion, which was now transformed into the Royal Pavilion. The exterior was based on Mughal architecture, giving the building its exotic form, the Chinoiserie style interiors are largely the work of Frederick Crace.[64]

Nash was also a director of the Regent's Canal Company set up in 1812 to provide a canal link from west London to the River Thames in the east.[65] Nash's master plan provided for the canal to run around the northern edge of Regent's Park; as with other projects, he left its execution to one of his assistants, in this case James Morgan. The first phase of the Regent's Canal was completed in 1816 and finally completed in 1820.[66]

Together with Robert Smirke and Sir John Soane, he became an official architect to the Office of Works in 1813[67] (although the appointment ended in 1832) at a salary of £500 per annum (£57,810 in 2020 money).[68] Following the death in September of that year of James Wyatt, this marked the high point in his professional life. As part of Nash's new position, he was invited to advise the Parliamentary Commissioners on the building of new churches from 1818 onwards.[69] Nash produced ten church designs, each estimated to cost around £10,000 (£1.2 million in 2020 money) with seating for 2000 people;[70] the style of the buildings were both classical and gothic. In the end, Nash only built two churches for the Commission: the classical All Souls Church, Langham Place (1822–24), terminating the northern end of Regent Street, and the gothic St. Mary's Haggerston (1825–27), bombed during The Blitz in 1941.[71]

 
The West front of Buckingham Palace

Nash was involved in the design of two of London's theatres, both in Haymarket. The King's Opera House (now rebuilt as Her Majesty's Theatre) (1816–1818) where he and George Repton remodelled the theatre, with arcades and shops around three sides of the building, the fourth being the still surviving Royal Opera Arcade.[72] The other theatre was the Theatre Royal Haymarket (1821), with its fine hexastyle Corinthian order portico, which still survives, facing down Charles II Street to St. James's Square, Nash's interior no longer survives (the interior now dates from 1904).[73] In 1820 a scandal broke, when a cartoon was published[74] showing a half-dressed King George IV embracing Nash's wife with a speech bubble coming from the King's mouth containing the words "I have great pleasure in visiting this part of my dominions". Whether this was based on just a rumour put about by people who resented Nash's success or if there is substance behind is not known. Further London commissions for Nash followed, including the remodelling of Buckingham House to create Buckingham Palace (1825–1830),[75] and for the Royal Mews (1822–24)[76] and Marble Arch (1828).[77] The arch was originally designed as a triumphal arch to stand at the entrance to Buckingham Palace. It was moved when the east wing of the palace designed by Edward Blore was built, at the request of Queen Victoria whose growing family required additional domestic space. Marble Arch became the entrance to Hyde Park and the Great Exhibition.

Work with James and Decimus Burton edit

 
Lake in St James's Park

The parents of John Nash, and Nash himself during his childhood, lived in Southwark,[78] where James Burton worked as an 'Architect and Builder' and developed a positive reputation for prescient speculative building between 1785 and 1792.[79] Burton built the Blackfriars Rotunda in Great Surrey Street (now Blackfriars Road) to house the Leverian Museum,[80] for land agent and museum proprietor James Parkinson.[81] However, whereas Burton was vigorously industrious, and quickly became 'most gratifyingly rich',[82] Nash's early years in private practice, and his first speculative developments, which failed either to sell or let, were unsuccessful, and his consequent financial shortage was exacerbated by the 'crazily extravagant' wife whom he had married before he had completed his training, until he was declared bankrupt in 1783.[83]

To repair his finances, Nash cultivated the acquaintance of James Burton, who consented to patronize him.[84] James Burton responsible for the social and financial patronage of the majority of Nash's London designs,[85] in addition to for their construction.[86] Architectural scholar Guy Williams has written, "John Nash relied on James Burton for moral and financial support in his great enterprises. Decimus had showed precocious talent as a draughtsman and as an exponent of the classical style... John Nash needed the son's aid, as well as the father's".[87]

Subsequent to the Crown Estate's refusal to finance them, James Burton agreed to personally finance the construction projects of Nash at Regent's Park, which he had already been commissioned to construct.[80][86] Consequently, in 1816, Burton purchased many of the leases of the proposed terraces around, and proposed villas within, Regent's Park and, in 1817, Burton purchased the leases of five of the largest blocks on Regent Street.[80] The first property to be constructed in or around Regent's Park by Burton was his own mansion: The Holme, which was designed by his son, Decimus Burton, and completed in 1818.[80] Burton's extensive financial involvement 'effectively guaranteed the success of the project'.[80] In return, Nash agreed to promote the career of Decimus Burton.[80]

 
Carlton House Terrace

Nash was a vehement advocate of the neoclassical revival endorsed by John Soane, although he had lost interest in the plain stone edifices typical of the Georgian style, and instead advocated the use of stucco.[88] Decimus Burton entered the office of Nash in 1815,[89] where he worked alongside Augustus Charles Pugin, who detested the neoclassical style.[90] Burton established his own architectural practice in 1821.[91] In 1821, Nash invited Decimus Burton to design Cornwall Terrace in Regent's Park, and he was also invited by George Bellas Greenough, a close friend of the Prince Regent, Humphry Davy, and Nash, to design Grove House in Regent's Park.[92]

Greenough's invitation to Decimus Burton was 'virtually a family affair', for Greenough had dined frequently with Decimus' parents and brothers, including the physician Henry Burton. Greenough and Decimus finalized their designs during numerous meetings at the opera.[93] The design, when the villa had been completed, was described in The Proceedings of the Royal Society as, "one of the most elegant and successful adaptations of the Grecian style to purposes of modern domestic architecture to be found in this or any country."[94]

Subsequently, Nash invited Decimus to design Clarence Terrace, Regent's Park.[94] Such were Decimus Burton's contributions to the Regent's Park project that the Commissioners of Woods described Burton, not Nash, as 'the architect of Regent's Park'.[95] Contrary to popular belief, the dominant architectural influence in many of the Regent's Park projects - including Cornwall Terrace, York Terrace, Chester Terrace, Clarence Terrace, and the villas of the Inner Circle, including The Holme and the London Colosseum attraction (the latter to Thomas Hornor's specifications)[86][96] all of which were constructed by James Burton's company[80] - was Decimus Burton, not John Nash, who was appointed architectural 'overseer' for Burton Jr.'s projects.[95]

Decimus Burton, to Nash's chagrin, developed the Terraces according to his own style to the extent that Nash sought, unsuccessfully, to demolish and completely rebuild Chester Terrace.[80][86][97] Decimus subsequently eclipsed his master and emerged as the dominant force in the design of Carlton House Terrace,[86] where he exclusively designed No. 3 and No. 4.[98] He also designed some of the villas of the Inner Circle: his villa for the Marquess of Hertford has been described as, 'decorated simplicity, such as the hand of taste, aided by the purse of wealth can alone execute'.[99]

Retirement and death edit

Nash's career effectively ended with the death of George IV in 1830. The King's notorious extravagance had generated much resentment, and Nash was now without a protector.[100] The Treasury started to look closely at the cost of Buckingham Palace. Nash's original estimate of the building's cost had been £252,690, but this had risen to £496,169 in 1829;[101] the actual cost was £613,269 (~£69.5 million in 2020 money), and the building was still unfinished. This controversy ensured that Nash would not receive any more official commissions, nor would he be awarded the knighthood that other contemporary architects such as Jeffry Wyattville, John Soane and Robert Smirke received. Nash retired to the Isle of Wight to his home, East Cowes Castle.[102]

 
Nash's tomb at St James's Church, East Cowes

On 28 March 1835 Nash was described as "very poorly and faint".[103] This was the beginning of the end. On 1 May Nash's solicitor John Wittet Lyon was summonsed to East Cowes Castle[103] to finalise his will. By 6 May he was described as 'very ill indeed all day',[104] he died at his home on 13 May 1835. His funeral took place at St. James's Church, East Cowes on 20 May, where he was buried in the churchyard with a monument in the form of a stone sarcophagus.[105] His widow acted to clear Nash's debts (some £15,000; £1.97 million in 2020 money),[105] she held a sale of the Castle's contents, including three paintings by J. M. W. Turner painted on the Isle of Wight, four by Benjamin West and several copies of old master paintings by Richard Evans. These artworks were sold at Christie's on 11 July 1835 for £1,061 (~£139,500 in 2020 money).[105] His books, medals, drawings and engravings were bought by a bookseller named Evans for £1,423 on 15 July (~£187,078 in 2020 money). The Castle itself was sold for a reported figure of £20,000 (~£2.63 million in 2020 money) to Henry Boyle, 3rd Earl of Shannon, within the year.[105] Nash's widow retired to a property Nash had bequeathed to her in Hampstead where she lived until her death in 1851; she was buried with her husband on the Isle of Wight.[106]

Assistants and pupils edit

Nash had many pupils and assistants, including Decimus Burton; Humphry Repton's sons, John Adey Repton and George Stanley Repton; Anthony Salvin; John Foulon (1772–1842); Augustus Charles Pugin; F.H. Greenway; James Morgan; James Pennethorne; and the brothers Henry, James, and George Pain.[107]

Works edit

Works in London edit

 
Haymarket Theatre

Works in London include:[b]

 
Marble Arch
 
Hanover Terrace
 
Clarence House

With Decimus Burton edit

The changes made by John Nash to the streetscape of London are documented in the film John Nash and London, featuring Edmund N. Bacon and based on sections of his 1967 book Design of Cities.

Work in England outside London edit

 
Banqueting Room, The Royal Pavilion Brighton
 
Grovelands Park
 
Longner Hall

Work in Wales edit

 
St. Non's Church Llanerchaeron

Work in Wales include:[112]

 
Ffynone House, wings added later not by Nash

Work in Ireland edit

 
Swiss Cottage, Cahir
  • House for Countess Shannon, County Cork. (1796) Unbuilt
  • Ballindoon House (c.1800) Kingsborough, Derry, County Sligo for Stafford-King-Harmon family. House and stable block
  • Killymoon Castle, near Cookstown, County Tyrone, (1801–07) Castle originally built in 1671. Rebuilt in Norman style by Nash for Col. William Stewart at an alleged cost of £80,000. Now well maintained as home of the Coulter family. The parkland is now used as a golf course
  • Lissan Rectory, County Tyrone (1807) Italianate Villa
  • Kilwaughter Castle, in Kilwaughter, near Larne, County Antrim.[113] (1807) New castillated mansion built for E.J. Agnew incorporating an earlier house (ruined 1951)
  • Caledon House, County Tyrone, (1808–10) for the Du Pre Alexander, 2nd Earl of Caledon. Enlargement and embellishment of an earlier house (1779) by Thomas Cooley with two single storey domed wings connected by a colonnade of coupled Ionic columns; Nash redecorated the oval drawing room
  • Vice-Regal Lodge, Phoenix Park, Dublin (present-day Áras an Uachtaráin, public residence of the President of Ireland), (1808) (entrance lodges only)
  • St. John's Church of Ireland church Valentia Island (1815)
  • St John's Church Caledon, Count Tyrone (1808) Alterations including timber spire. Spire replaced in stone to same design 1830
 
Gatehouse at Castle Leslie
 
Shanbally Castle

Work in Scotland edit

Nash's only known work in Scotland is:

  • St. Mary's Isle, Kirkcudbright, an enclosure around family graves (1796)

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Most historians agree on London as Nash's place of birth, although Howard Colvin caveats it as "probabl[e]" and some sources suggest Cardigan.[2] Both of Nash's parents had strong Welsh connections[3] and John B. Hilling suggests that Nash considered himself to be Welsh.[4]
  2. ^ The lists of works are based on: John Nash: A complete catalogue by, Michael Mansbridge

References edit

  1. ^ Great Buildings Online.
  2. ^ Rees 1959.
  3. ^ Magill 2013, p. 1012.
  4. ^ Hilling 2018, p. 138.
  5. ^ Tyack 2013, p. 2.
  6. ^ a b c d e Tyack 2013, p. 3.
  7. ^ Historic England, "Cronkhill (1176915)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 12 March 2017
  8. ^ Suggett 1995, p. 10.
  9. ^ Major & Murden 2017, p. ?.
  10. ^ a b c d Suggett 1995, p. 13.
  11. ^ Suggett 1995, p. 11.
  12. ^ a b c Tyack 2013, p. 4.
  13. ^ a b Suggett 1995, p. 12.
  14. ^ Davis 1966, p. 16.
  15. ^ a b Tyack 2013, p. 6.
  16. ^ English Heritage.
  17. ^ Colvin 1995, p. 852.
  18. ^ a b c Suggett 1995, p. 14.
  19. ^ Summerson 1980, p. 14.
  20. ^ Suggett 1995, p. 27.
  21. ^ Suggett 1995, p. 25.
  22. ^ Tyack 2013, p. 19.
  23. ^ Tyack 2013, p. 20.
  24. ^ Suggett 1995, p. 22.
  25. ^ Colvin 1995, pp. 687–689.
  26. ^ Mansbridge 1991, pp. 44–45.
  27. ^ Summerson 1980, p. 27.
  28. ^ Mansbridge 1991, pp. 41–42.
  29. ^ Mansbridge 1991, pp. 48–49.
  30. ^ Mansbridge 1991, p. 49.
  31. ^ a b Mansbridge 1991, p. 122.
  32. ^ Mansbridge 1991, pp. 135–136.
  33. ^ Suggett 1995, p. 82.
  34. ^ Stroud 1962, p. 119.
  35. ^ a b Summerson 1980, p. 30.
  36. ^ Sherfield 1994, p. 20.
  37. ^ Summerson 1980, p. 132.
  38. ^ Summerson 1980, pp. 26–27.
  39. ^ Mansbridge 1991, p. 227.
  40. ^ Mansbridge 1991, p. 97.
  41. ^ Mansbridge 1991, p. 142.
  42. ^ Mansbridge 1991, p. 149.
  43. ^ Mansbridge 1991, p. 218.
  44. ^ a b Mansbridge 1991, p. 133.
  45. ^ Stern, Fishman & Tilove 2013, p. 23.
  46. ^ Mansbridge 1991, p. 101.
  47. ^ Mansbridge 1991, p. 118.
  48. ^ Mansbridge 1991, p. 150.
  49. ^ Mansbridge 1991, p. 199.
  50. ^ Baker 1954, p. 275.
  51. ^ Davis 1966, pp. 20–21.
  52. ^ Summerson 1980, p. 56.
  53. ^ Summerson 1980, p. 73.
  54. ^ Caves 2004, p. 480.
  55. ^ Mansbridge 1991, p. 130.
  56. ^ Mansbridge 1991, pp. 158–161.
  57. ^ Mansbridge 1991, p. 197.
  58. ^ Mansbridge 1991, p. 296.
  59. ^ Mansbridge 1991, pp. 183–184.
  60. ^ Mansbridge 1991, pp. 251–252.
  61. ^ Mansbridge 1991, pp. 256–262.
  62. ^ Cherry & Pevsner 2002, p. 382.
  63. ^ Mansbridge 1991, p. 201.
  64. ^ Mansbridge 1991, p. 202.
  65. ^ Summerson 1980, p. 72.
  66. ^ Mansbridge 1991, p. 177.
  67. ^ Summerson 1980, p. 96.
  68. ^ Stroud 1984, p. 98.
  69. ^ Port 2006, p. 59.
  70. ^ Port 2006, p. 65.
  71. ^ Port 2006, p. 81.
  72. ^ Mansbridge 1991, pp. 206–207.
  73. ^ Mansbridge 1991, pp. 230–231.
  74. ^ Summerson 1980, p. 151.
  75. ^ Mansbridge 1991, p. 274.
  76. ^ Mansbridge 1991, p. 244.
  77. ^ Mansbridge 1991, p. 300.
  78. ^ Williams 1990, p. 13.
  79. ^ Williams 1990, p. 135.
  80. ^ a b c d e f g h ODNB 2004.
  81. ^ Torrens.
  82. ^ Williams 1990, p. 19.
  83. ^ Williams 1990, p. 14.
  84. ^ Williams 1990, p. 16.
  85. ^ Williams 1990, pp. 11–12.
  86. ^ a b c d e f g ODNB a.
  87. ^ Williams 1990, p. 11.
  88. ^ Williams 1990, p. 28.
  89. ^ Williams 1990, p. 30.
  90. ^ Williams 1990, p. 21.
  91. ^ Williams 1990, p. 136.
  92. ^ Williams 1990, p. 38.
  93. ^ Williams 1990, pp. 38–39.
  94. ^ a b Williams 1990, p. 40.
  95. ^ a b Arnold 2005, p. 58.
  96. ^ Dictionary of Scottish Architects.
  97. ^ Curl 1999, p. 133.
  98. ^ a b c d e f Williams 1990, pp. 135–157.
  99. ^ Jones 2017, p. 209.
  100. ^ Summerson 1980, p. 177.
  101. ^ Harris, de Bellaigue & Miller 1969, p. 30.
  102. ^ Summerson 1980, p. 185.
  103. ^ a b Summerson 1980, p. 187.
  104. ^ Summerson 1980, p. 180.
  105. ^ a b c d Summerson 1980, p. 188.
  106. ^ Summerson 1980, p. 189.
  107. ^ Colvin 1978, pp. 580–581.
  108. ^ a b Historic England & 1066044.
  109. ^ Griffith 2019.
  110. ^ Historic England & 1182390.
  111. ^ Pevsner & Radcliffe 1970, p. 192.
  112. ^ Suggett 1995, pp. 107–128.
  113. ^ Dictionary of Ulster Biography.

Sources edit

External links edit

john, nash, architect, this, article, about, architect, other, similarly, named, people, john, nash, disambiguation, john, nash, january, 1752, 1835, foremost, british, architects, georgian, regency, eras, during, which, responsible, design, neoclassical, pict. This article is about the architect For other similarly named people see John Nash disambiguation John Nash 18 January 1752 13 May 1835 was one of the foremost British architects of the Georgian and Regency eras during which he was responsible for the design in the neoclassical and picturesque styles of many important areas of London His designs were financed by the Prince Regent and by the era s most successful property developer James Burton Nash also collaborated extensively with Burton s son Decimus Burton 1 John NashBust of Nash at All Souls Langham PlaceBorn 1752 01 18 18 January 1752Lambeth London EnglandDied13 May 1835 1835 05 13 aged 83 East Cowes Castle Isle of Wight EnglandOccupationArchitectBuildingsMarble Arch Buckingham Palace Royal Pavilion Brighton Regent Street with James Burton Carlton House Terrace with Decimus Burton Nash s best known solo designs are the Royal Pavilion Brighton Marble Arch and Buckingham Palace His best known collaboration with James Burton is Regent Street and his best known collaborations with Decimus Burton are Regent s Park and its terraces and Carlton House Terrace The majority of his buildings including those that the Burtons did not contribute to were built by James Burton s company Contents 1 Background and early career 2 Wales 3 Return to London 4 Architect to the Prince Regent 5 Work with James and Decimus Burton 6 Retirement and death 7 Assistants and pupils 8 Works 8 1 Works in London 8 1 1 With Decimus Burton 8 2 Work in England outside London 8 3 Work in Wales 8 4 Work in Ireland 8 5 Work in Scotland 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Sources 13 External linksBackground and early career editNash was born in 1752 probably in Lambeth south London a His father was a millwright also called John 1714 1772 5 From 1766 or 1767 Nash trained with the architect Sir Robert Taylor The apprenticeship was completed in 1775 or 1776 6 nbsp Cronkhill Shropshire one of Nash s earlier buildings and the first Italianate villa in England 7 On 28 April 1775 at the now demolished church of St Mary Newington Nash married his first wife Jane Elizabeth Kerr daughter of a surgeon 6 Initially he seems to have pursued a career as a surveyor builder and carpenter This gave him an income of around 300 a year 49 850 in 2020 money 8 The couple set up home at Royal Row Lambeth 6 He established his own architectural practice in 1777 as well as being in partnership with a timber merchant Richard Heaviside 6 9 page needed The couple had two children both were baptised at St Mary at Lambeth John on 9 June 1776 and Hugh on 28 April 1778 6 In June 1778 Nash by the ill conduct of his wife found it necessary to send her into Wales in order to work a reformation on her 10 The cause of this appears to have been the claim that Jane Nash had imposed two spurious children on him as his and her own notwithstanding she had then never had any child and she had contracted several debts unknown to her husband including one for milliners bills of 300 11 The claim that Jane had faked her pregnancies and then passed babies she had acquired off as her own was brought before the Consistory court of the Bishop of London 12 His wife was sent to Aberavon to lodge with Nash s cousin Ann Morgan but she developed a relationship with a local man Charles Charles In an attempt at reconciliation Jane returned to London in June 1779 but she continued to act extravagantly so he sent her to another cousin Thomas Edwards of Neath She gave birth just after Christmas and acknowledged Charles Charles as the father 13 In 1781 Nash instigated action against Jane for separation on grounds of adultery The case was tried at Hereford in 1782 Charles who was found guilty was unable to pay the damages of 76 13 200 in 2020 money and subsequently died in prison 13 The divorce was finally read 26 January 1787 12 His career was initially unsuccessful and short lived After inheriting 1000 162 000 in 2020 money 14 in 1778 from his uncle Thomas he invested the money in his first independent works 15 17 Bloomsbury Square and 66 71 Great Russell Street in Bloomsbury However the property failed to let and he was declared bankrupt on 30 September 1783 15 His debts were 5000 760 000 in 2020 money 12 including 2000 he had been lent by Robert Adam and his brothers 15 A blue plaque commemorating Nash was placed on 66 Great Russell Street by English Heritage in 2013 16 Wales edit nbsp LlanerchaeronNash left London in 1784 to live in Carmarthen 10 to where his mother had retired her family being from the area 17 In 1785 he and a local man Samuel Simon Saxon re roofed the town s church for 600 guineas 10 Nash and Saxon seem to have worked as building contractors and suppliers of building materials 18 Nash s London buildings had been standard Georgian terraced houses and it was in Wales that he matured as an architect His first major work in the area was the first of three prisons he would design Carmarthen 1789 92 19 This was planned by the penal reformer John Howard and Nash developed this into the finished building 20 He went on to design the prisons at Cardigan 1791 1796 and Hereford 1792 1796 21 It was at Hereford that Nash met Richard Payne Knight 22 whose theories on the picturesque as applied to architecture and landscape would influence Nash The commission for Hereford Gaol came after the death of William Blackburn who was to have designed the building Nash s design was accepted after James Wyatt approved of the design 23 In 1789 St Davids Cathedral was suffering from structural problems the west front was leaning forward by one foot Nash was called in to survey the structure and develop a plan to save the building 24 His solution completed in 1791 was to demolish the upper part of the facade and rebuild it with two large but inelegant flying buttresses In 1790 Nash met Uvedale Price of Downtown Castle whose theories of the Picturesque would influence Nash s town planning Price commissioned Nash to design Castle House Aberystwyth 1795 Its plan took the form of a right angled triangle with an octagonal tower at each corner sited on the very edge of the sea 25 One of Nash s most important developments were a series of medium sized country houses that he designed in Wales which developed the villa designs of his teacher Sir Robert Taylor 10 Most of these villas consist of a roughly square plan with a small entrance hall and a staircase offset in the middle to one side around which are placed the main rooms There is then a less prominent servants quarters in a wing attached to one side of the villa The buildings are usually only two floors in height and the elevations of the main block are usually symmetrical One of the finest of these villas is Llanerchaeron but at least a dozen villas were designed throughout south Wales Others in Pembrokeshire include Ffynone built for the Colby family at Boncath near Manordeifi and Foley House built for the lawyer Richard Foley brother of Admiral Sir Thomas Foley at Goat Street in Haverfordwest 26 nbsp Gates to Clytha Park MonmouthshireFrom 1796 Nash spent most of his time working in London this was a prelude to his return to the capital in 1797 27 At this time Nash designed the delicate Gothic revival gateway to Clytha Park near Abergavenny in Monmouthshire 28 and also his alterations in Gothic Revival style in 1794 to Hafod Uchtryd for Thomas Johnes at Devil s Bridge Cardiganshire 29 Also in c 1794 95 he advised on the paving lighting and water supply in Abergavenny and designed an elegant market building 30 Other work included Whitson Court near Newport After his return to London Nash continued to design houses in Wales including Harpton Court in Radnorshire which was demolished apart from the service wing in 1956 31 In 1807 he drew up plans for the re building of Hawarden Castle with Gothic battlements and towers but the plan appears to have been modified by another architect when it was carried out 32 About 1808 he designed Monachty near Aberaeron and later drew up plans for work at Nanteos 31 He met Humphry Repton at Stoke Edith in 1792 33 and formed a successful partnership with the landscape garden designer One of their early commissions was at Corsham Court in 1795 96 The pair would collaborate to carefully place the Nash designed building in grounds designed by Repton The partnership ended in 1800 under recriminations 34 Repton accusing Nash of exploiting their partnership to his own advantage As Nash developed his architectural practice it became necessary to employ draughtsmen the first in the early 1790s was Augustus Charles Pugin 18 and later in 1795 John Adey Repton son of Humphry 18 Return to London edit nbsp Diamond Cottage Blaise HamletIn June 1797 Nash moved into 28 Dover Street a building of his own design He built a larger house next door at 29 into which he moved the following year 35 Nash married 25 year old Mary Anne Bradley on 17 December 1798 at St George s Hanover Square 35 In 1798 he purchased a plot of land of 30 acres 12 ha at East Cowes on which he erected 1798 1802 East Cowes Castle as his residence 36 It was the first of a series of picturesque Gothic castles that he would design Nash s final home in London was 14 Regent Street which he designed and built 1819 23 Number 16 was built at the same time for the home of Nash s cousin John Edwards 37 a lawyer who handled all of Nash s legal affairs 38 Located in lower Regent Street near Waterloo Place both houses formed a single design around an open courtyard Nash s drawing office was on the ground floor and on the first floor was the finest room in the house the 70 foot long picture and sculpture gallery it linked the drawing room at the front of the building with the dining room at the rear 39 The house was sold in 1834 and the gallery interior moved to East Cowes Castle The finest of the dozen country houses that Nash designed as picturesque castles include the relatively small Luscombe Castle Devon 1800 04 40 Ravensworth Castle Tyne and Wear begun in 1807 but only finally completed in 1846 which was one of the largest houses by Nash 41 Caerhays Castle in Cornwall 1808 10 42 and Shanbally Castle County Tipperary 1818 1819 which was the last of these castles to be built 43 These buildings all represented Nash s continuing development of an asymmetrical and picturesque architectural style that had begun during his years in Wales at both Castle House Aberystwyth and his alterations to Hafod Uchtryd 44 This process would be extended by Nash in planning groups of buildings the first example being Blaise Hamlet 1810 1811 There a group of nine asymmetrical cottages was laid out around a village green Nikolaus Pevsner described the hamlet as the ne plus ultra of the Picturesque movement 44 The hamlet has also been described as the first fully realized exemplar of the garden suburb 45 Nash developed the asymmetry of his castles in his Italianate villas His first such exercise was Cronkhill 1802 46 and others included Sandridge Park 1805 47 and Southborough Place Surbiton 1808 48 He advised on work to the buildings of Jesus College Oxford in 1815 49 for which he required no fee but asked that the college commission a portrait of him from Sir Thomas Lawrence to hang in the college hall 50 Architect to the Prince Regent edit nbsp Park Crescent Regent s ParkNash was a dedicated Whig 51 and was a friend of Charles James Fox through whom Nash probably came to the attention of the Prince Regent later King George IV In 1806 Nash was appointed architect to the Surveyor General of Woods Forests Parks and Chases 52 From 1810 Nash would take very few private commissions and for the rest of his career he would largely work for the Prince 53 His employment by the Prince Regent enabled Nash to embark upon a number of grand architectural projects 54 His first major commissions in 1809 1826 55 from the Prince were Regent Street and the development of an area then known as Marylebone Park With the Regent s backing Nash created a master plan for the area put into effect from 1818 onwards which stretched from St James s northwards and included Regent Street Regent s Park 1809 1832 56 and its neighbouring streets terraces and crescents of elegant townhouses and villas Nash did not design all the buildings himself In some instances these were left in the hands of other architects such as James Pennethorne and the young Decimus Burton Nash went on to re landscape St James s Park 1814 1827 57 reshaping the formal canal into the present lake and giving the park its present form A characteristic of Nash s plan for Regent Street was that it followed an irregular path linking Portland Place to the north with Carlton House London replaced by Nash s Carlton House Terrace 1827 1833 58 to the south At the northern end of Portland Place Nash designed Park Crescent London 1812 and 1819 1821 59 this opens into Nash s Park Square London 1823 24 60 this only has terraces on the east and west the north opens into Regent s Park The terraces that Nash designed around Regent s Park though conforming to the earlier form of appearing as a single building as developed by John Wood the Elder are unlike earlier examples set in gardens and are not orthogonal in their placing to each other This was part of Nash s development of planning this found it is a most extreme example when he set out Park Village East and Park Village West 1823 34 to the north east of Regent s Park 61 here a mixture of detached villas semi detached houses both symmetrical and asymmetrical in their design are set out in private gardens railed off from the street the roads loop and the buildings are both classical and gothic in style No two buildings were the same and or even in line with their neighbours The park villages can be seen as the prototype for the Victorian suburbs 62 nbsp The Royal Pavillion BrightonNash was employed by the Prince from 1815 to develop his Marine Pavilion in Brighton 63 originally designed by Henry Holland By 1822 Nash had finished his work on the Marine Pavilion which was now transformed into the Royal Pavilion The exterior was based on Mughal architecture giving the building its exotic form the Chinoiserie style interiors are largely the work of Frederick Crace 64 Nash was also a director of the Regent s Canal Company set up in 1812 to provide a canal link from west London to the River Thames in the east 65 Nash s master plan provided for the canal to run around the northern edge of Regent s Park as with other projects he left its execution to one of his assistants in this case James Morgan The first phase of the Regent s Canal was completed in 1816 and finally completed in 1820 66 Together with Robert Smirke and Sir John Soane he became an official architect to the Office of Works in 1813 67 although the appointment ended in 1832 at a salary of 500 per annum 57 810 in 2020 money 68 Following the death in September of that year of James Wyatt this marked the high point in his professional life As part of Nash s new position he was invited to advise the Parliamentary Commissioners on the building of new churches from 1818 onwards 69 Nash produced ten church designs each estimated to cost around 10 000 1 2 million in 2020 money with seating for 2000 people 70 the style of the buildings were both classical and gothic In the end Nash only built two churches for the Commission the classical All Souls Church Langham Place 1822 24 terminating the northern end of Regent Street and the gothic St Mary s Haggerston 1825 27 bombed during The Blitz in 1941 71 nbsp The West front of Buckingham PalaceNash was involved in the design of two of London s theatres both in Haymarket The King s Opera House now rebuilt as Her Majesty s Theatre 1816 1818 where he and George Repton remodelled the theatre with arcades and shops around three sides of the building the fourth being the still surviving Royal Opera Arcade 72 The other theatre was the Theatre Royal Haymarket 1821 with its fine hexastyle Corinthian order portico which still survives facing down Charles II Street to St James s Square Nash s interior no longer survives the interior now dates from 1904 73 In 1820 a scandal broke when a cartoon was published 74 showing a half dressed King George IV embracing Nash s wife with a speech bubble coming from the King s mouth containing the words I have great pleasure in visiting this part of my dominions Whether this was based on just a rumour put about by people who resented Nash s success or if there is substance behind is not known Further London commissions for Nash followed including the remodelling of Buckingham House to create Buckingham Palace 1825 1830 75 and for the Royal Mews 1822 24 76 and Marble Arch 1828 77 The arch was originally designed as a triumphal arch to stand at the entrance to Buckingham Palace It was moved when the east wing of the palace designed by Edward Blore was built at the request of Queen Victoria whose growing family required additional domestic space Marble Arch became the entrance to Hyde Park and the Great Exhibition Work with James and Decimus Burton edit nbsp Lake in St James s ParkThe parents of John Nash and Nash himself during his childhood lived in Southwark 78 where James Burton worked as an Architect and Builder and developed a positive reputation for prescient speculative building between 1785 and 1792 79 Burton built the Blackfriars Rotunda in Great Surrey Street now Blackfriars Road to house the Leverian Museum 80 for land agent and museum proprietor James Parkinson 81 However whereas Burton was vigorously industrious and quickly became most gratifyingly rich 82 Nash s early years in private practice and his first speculative developments which failed either to sell or let were unsuccessful and his consequent financial shortage was exacerbated by the crazily extravagant wife whom he had married before he had completed his training until he was declared bankrupt in 1783 83 To repair his finances Nash cultivated the acquaintance of James Burton who consented to patronize him 84 James Burton responsible for the social and financial patronage of the majority of Nash s London designs 85 in addition to for their construction 86 Architectural scholar Guy Williams has written John Nash relied on James Burton for moral and financial support in his great enterprises Decimus had showed precocious talent as a draughtsman and as an exponent of the classical style John Nash needed the son s aid as well as the father s 87 Subsequent to the Crown Estate s refusal to finance them James Burton agreed to personally finance the construction projects of Nash at Regent s Park which he had already been commissioned to construct 80 86 Consequently in 1816 Burton purchased many of the leases of the proposed terraces around and proposed villas within Regent s Park and in 1817 Burton purchased the leases of five of the largest blocks on Regent Street 80 The first property to be constructed in or around Regent s Park by Burton was his own mansion The Holme which was designed by his son Decimus Burton and completed in 1818 80 Burton s extensive financial involvement effectively guaranteed the success of the project 80 In return Nash agreed to promote the career of Decimus Burton 80 nbsp Carlton House TerraceNash was a vehement advocate of the neoclassical revival endorsed by John Soane although he had lost interest in the plain stone edifices typical of the Georgian style and instead advocated the use of stucco 88 Decimus Burton entered the office of Nash in 1815 89 where he worked alongside Augustus Charles Pugin who detested the neoclassical style 90 Burton established his own architectural practice in 1821 91 In 1821 Nash invited Decimus Burton to design Cornwall Terrace in Regent s Park and he was also invited by George Bellas Greenough a close friend of the Prince Regent Humphry Davy and Nash to design Grove House in Regent s Park 92 Greenough s invitation to Decimus Burton was virtually a family affair for Greenough had dined frequently with Decimus parents and brothers including the physician Henry Burton Greenough and Decimus finalized their designs during numerous meetings at the opera 93 The design when the villa had been completed was described in The Proceedings of the Royal Society as one of the most elegant and successful adaptations of the Grecian style to purposes of modern domestic architecture to be found in this or any country 94 Subsequently Nash invited Decimus to design Clarence Terrace Regent s Park 94 Such were Decimus Burton s contributions to the Regent s Park project that the Commissioners of Woods described Burton not Nash as the architect of Regent s Park 95 Contrary to popular belief the dominant architectural influence in many of the Regent s Park projects including Cornwall Terrace York Terrace Chester Terrace Clarence Terrace and the villas of the Inner Circle including The Holme and the London Colosseum attraction the latter to Thomas Hornor s specifications 86 96 all of which were constructed by James Burton s company 80 was Decimus Burton not John Nash who was appointed architectural overseer for Burton Jr s projects 95 Decimus Burton to Nash s chagrin developed the Terraces according to his own style to the extent that Nash sought unsuccessfully to demolish and completely rebuild Chester Terrace 80 86 97 Decimus subsequently eclipsed his master and emerged as the dominant force in the design of Carlton House Terrace 86 where he exclusively designed No 3 and No 4 98 He also designed some of the villas of the Inner Circle his villa for the Marquess of Hertford has been described as decorated simplicity such as the hand of taste aided by the purse of wealth can alone execute 99 Retirement and death editNash s career effectively ended with the death of George IV in 1830 The King s notorious extravagance had generated much resentment and Nash was now without a protector 100 The Treasury started to look closely at the cost of Buckingham Palace Nash s original estimate of the building s cost had been 252 690 but this had risen to 496 169 in 1829 101 the actual cost was 613 269 69 5 million in 2020 money and the building was still unfinished This controversy ensured that Nash would not receive any more official commissions nor would he be awarded the knighthood that other contemporary architects such as Jeffry Wyattville John Soane and Robert Smirke received Nash retired to the Isle of Wight to his home East Cowes Castle 102 nbsp Nash s tomb at St James s Church East CowesOn 28 March 1835 Nash was described as very poorly and faint 103 This was the beginning of the end On 1 May Nash s solicitor John Wittet Lyon was summonsed to East Cowes Castle 103 to finalise his will By 6 May he was described as very ill indeed all day 104 he died at his home on 13 May 1835 His funeral took place at St James s Church East Cowes on 20 May where he was buried in the churchyard with a monument in the form of a stone sarcophagus 105 His widow acted to clear Nash s debts some 15 000 1 97 million in 2020 money 105 she held a sale of the Castle s contents including three paintings by J M W Turner painted on the Isle of Wight four by Benjamin West and several copies of old master paintings by Richard Evans These artworks were sold at Christie s on 11 July 1835 for 1 061 139 500 in 2020 money 105 His books medals drawings and engravings were bought by a bookseller named Evans for 1 423 on 15 July 187 078 in 2020 money The Castle itself was sold for a reported figure of 20 000 2 63 million in 2020 money to Henry Boyle 3rd Earl of Shannon within the year 105 Nash s widow retired to a property Nash had bequeathed to her in Hampstead where she lived until her death in 1851 she was buried with her husband on the Isle of Wight 106 Assistants and pupils editNash had many pupils and assistants including Decimus Burton Humphry Repton s sons John Adey Repton and George Stanley Repton Anthony Salvin John Foulon 1772 1842 Augustus Charles Pugin F H Greenway James Morgan James Pennethorne and the brothers Henry James and George Pain 107 Works editWorks in London edit nbsp Haymarket TheatreWorks in London include b Park Crescent London 1806 1819 21 Carlton House alterations demolished Southborough House 14 Ashcombe Avenue Southborough Surbiton 1808 Southborough Lodge 16 Ashcombe Avenue Southborough Surbiton 1808 18 Ashcombe Avenue Southborough Surbiton 1808 Southborough House s summer house Regent Street 1809 26 rebuilt Regent s Canal 1811 20 Royal Lodge 1811 20 subsequently remodelled by Sir Jeffry Wyattville Carlton House London remodelled several interiors 1812 14 demolished 1825 to make way for Nash s Carlton House Terraces Trafalgar Square 1813 30 completely redesigned by Sir Charles Barry The Rotunda Woolwich 1814 re erected 1820 nbsp Marble ArchThe King s Opera House Haymarket on the site of Her Majesty s Theatre The Royal Opera Arcade is the only part presently standing 1816 18 Waterloo Place 1816 rebuilt The County Fire Office 1819 rebuilt Piccadilly Circus 1820 rebuilt Suffolk Place Haymarket 1820 Haymarket Theatre 1820 21 14 16 Regent Street Nash s own house 1820 21 York Gate 1821 108 The Church of All Souls Langham Place 1822 25 Hanover Terrace 1822 Royal Mews 1822 24 nbsp Hanover TerraceSussex Place 1822 23 Albany Terrace London 1823 Park Square London 1823 24 Park Village East and West 1823 34 Cambridge Terrace 1824 Landscaping of King s Road 1824 Ulster Terrace 1824 Buckingham Palace The state rooms and western front 1825 30 since much extended by James Pennethorne Edward Blore and Aston Webb Clarence House 1825 27 Cumberland Terrace 1826 Former United Services Club Pall Mall now Institute of Directors 1826 28 nbsp Clarence HouseGloucester Terrace 1827 Marble Arch 1828 430 449 Strand 1830 With Decimus Burton edit Regent s Park 1809 32 98 York Terrace 1822 86 108 Chester Terrace 1825 86 Cornwall Terrace 98 Clarence Terrace 98 Carlton House Terrace 1827 33 98 St James s Park 1814 27 98 The changes made by John Nash to the streetscape of London are documented in the film John Nash and London featuring Edmund N Bacon and based on sections of his 1967 book Design of Cities Work in England outside London edit nbsp Banqueting Room The Royal Pavilion BrightonBlaise Castle additions including the conservatory and various buildings in the grounds dairy gatehouses etc 1795 c 1806 Kentchurch Court Pontrilas c 1795 Hereford Gaol 1796 Hereford Lunatic Asylum c 1796 109 no longer standing Corsham Court remodelling work 1796 1813 Only his east front survives of the main house but many of his garden buildings including the bathhouse originally designed by Capability Brown and remodelled by Nash are extant 110 Grovelands Park Enfield Middlesex 1797 Atcham several houses in the village 1797 Attingham Park new picture gallery and staircase with further interiors and entrance lodges c 1797 1808 nbsp Grovelands ParkEast Cowes Castle on the Isle of Wight 1798 1802 his home until his death in 1835 demolished 1960 Sundridge Park Sundridge London 1799 Chalfont Park Chalfont St Peter remodelled 1799 1800 Helmingham Hall modernisation work 1800 03 Luscombe Castle 1800 04 Cronkhill near Shrewsbury Shropshire The first Italianate villa in Britain 1802 Longner Hall Atcham remodelling and extension 1803 Nunwell House Nunwell Isle of Wight 1805 07 nbsp Longner HallSandridge Park 1805 Witley Court 1805 06 Market House Chichester 1807 Ravensworth Castle 1808 Caerhays Castle Cornwall 1808 111 Ingestre Hall 1808 13 rebuilt later in the 19th century Knepp Castle Sussex c 1809 Blaise Hamlet Bristol 1810 11 Newport Guildhall Isle of Wight 1814 Rebuilding of the Royal Pavilion at Brighton 1815 22 Work in Wales edit nbsp St Non s Church LlanerchaeronWork in Wales include 112 The stable block at Plas Llanstephan 1788 Golden Grove Llanfihangel Aberbythych 1788 Priory House Carmarthen 1788 89 Carmarthen Gaol 1789 92 St Davids Cathedral new west front 1789 91 completely remodelled by Sir George Gilbert Scott 1862 Glanusk Villa Cadoxton juxta Neath 1790 Llanfechan house Llanwenog Cardiganshire c 1790 attributed on stylistic grounds Meidrim Poor House 1791 Newport Bridge 1791 92 abandoned before completion Cardigan Gaol 1791 97 Ffynone Boncath 1792 96 Sion House Tenby 1792 South Sion Lodge Tenby 1792 Emlyn Cottage Newcastle Emlyn 1792 94 demolished 1881 Dolaucothi House Cynwyl Gaeo 1792 96 demolished c 1954 nbsp Ffynone House wings added later not by NashTregaron Bridge 1793 Abergavenny Market Place 1794 46 Foley House Haverfordwest Pembrokeshire 1794 Hafod Uchtryd remodelling including octagonal library 1794 demolished 1958 Herman Hill House Haverfordwest c 1794 Llanerchaeron Ciliau Aeron Ceredigion c 1794 Llysnewydd Henllan Ceredigion 1795 Whitson Court near Newport 1795 Glanwysc Villa Llangattock Crickhowell c 1795 Llysnwydd house Llangeler c 1795 attributed on stylistic grounds demolished 1971 Temple Druid House Maenclochog 1795 Castle House later replaced by Old College Aberystwyth University 1795 The Priory Cardigan Ceredigion 1795 Clytha Park gates 1797 Llanerchaeron St Non s Church 1798 attributed on stylistic grounds Harpton Court Old Radnor remodelled 1805 demolished 1956 apart from the service range Hawarden Castle enlargement 1807 Nanteos Mansion planned replanning and new dairy and lodges 1814 not executed Rheola House Resolven 1814 18 Picton Memorial Carmarthen 1827 28 demolished 1846Work in Ireland edit nbsp Swiss Cottage CahirHouse for Countess Shannon County Cork 1796 Unbuilt Ballindoon House c 1800 Kingsborough Derry County Sligo for Stafford King Harmon family House and stable block Killymoon Castle near Cookstown County Tyrone 1801 07 Castle originally built in 1671 Rebuilt in Norman style by Nash for Col William Stewart at an alleged cost of 80 000 Now well maintained as home of the Coulter family The parkland is now used as a golf course Lissan Rectory County Tyrone 1807 Italianate Villa Kilwaughter Castle in Kilwaughter near Larne County Antrim 113 1807 New castillated mansion built for E J Agnew incorporating an earlier house ruined 1951 Caledon House County Tyrone 1808 10 for the Du Pre Alexander 2nd Earl of Caledon Enlargement and embellishment of an earlier house 1779 by Thomas Cooley with two single storey domed wings connected by a colonnade of coupled Ionic columns Nash redecorated the oval drawing room Vice Regal Lodge Phoenix Park Dublin present day Aras an Uachtarain public residence of the President of Ireland 1808 entrance lodges only St John s Church of Ireland church Valentia Island 1815 St John s Church Caledon Count Tyrone 1808 Alterations including timber spire Spire replaced in stone to same design 1830 nbsp Gatehouse at Castle LeslieSt Paul s Church of Ireland church in Cahir County Tipperary 1816 18 Cruciform plan Rockingham House Boyle County Roscommon 1810 Originally two storey with curved central bow fronted by a semi circular Ionic colonnade and surmounted by a dome Built for the King Harmon family Extra floor added by others Burnt in fire 1957 subsequently demolished Parkland now a public park and amenity Rockingham lakeside gazebo Rockingham Gothic Chapel Roofless Rockingham Castle Nash may have contributed to picturesque island castle ruin Swiss cottage Cahir County Tipperary 1810 14 Cottage ornee City Gaol Limerick County Limerick 1811 14 Lough Cutra Castle Gort County Galway 1811 17 Built for Charles Vereker subsequently Viscount Gort Shane s Castle in Randalstown County Antrim 1812 16 Alterations to 17th century castle for Charles O Neill 1st Earl O Neill consisting of lakeside terrace and battlemented conservatory with round headed windows watch tower and look out Burnt down in 1816 before Nash s plans were completed Burne Lodge Crawfordsburn Park County Down 1812 2 storey gate lodge with octagonal room at first floor level nbsp Shanbally CastleShanbally Castle near Clogheen County Tipperary 1818 19 Built for Cornelius O Callaghan 1st Viscount Lismore largest of Nash s Irish Castles demolished and dynamited 1960 Gracefield Lodge County Laois for a Mrs Kavanagh 1817 Erasmus Smith School Cahir County Tipperary 1818 Tynan Abbey Tynan County Armagh 1820 Remodelled in Tudor Gothic style for Sir James Stronge gutted by fire 1980 Drawings destroyed after being photographed St Luran s Church of Ireland Derryloran parish Cookstown 1822 Cost 2 769 4s 71 2d Early English style Rebuilt 1859 61 apart from tower Woodpark Lodge Co Armagh Alterations 1830s St Beaidh church Ardcarn County Roscommon Alterations including tower which was an eyecatcher to Rockingham House Somerset House Coleraine for a Mr Richardson Date unknown Unexecuted Mountain Lodge County Tipperary for Viscount Lismore Date unknown Now in a state of disrepair Castle Leslie County Monaghan Date unknown Gateways and gate lodge 80 82 Chapel Street Cookstown County Tyrone Dower house to Killymoon Date unknown Finaghy House Belfast Date unknownWork in Scotland edit Nash s only known work in Scotland is St Mary s Isle Kirkcudbright an enclosure around family graves 1796 See also editBuildings and architecture of Brighton and HoveNotes edit Most historians agree on London as Nash s place of birth although Howard Colvin caveats it as probabl e and some sources suggest Cardigan 2 Both of Nash s parents had strong Welsh connections 3 and John B Hilling suggests that Nash considered himself to be Welsh 4 The lists of works are based on John Nash A complete catalogue by Michael MansbridgeReferences edit Great Buildings Online Rees 1959 Magill 2013 p 1012 Hilling 2018 p 138 Tyack 2013 p 2 a b c d e Tyack 2013 p 3 Historic England Cronkhill 1176915 National Heritage List for England retrieved 12 March 2017 Suggett 1995 p 10 Major amp Murden 2017 p a b c d Suggett 1995 p 13 Suggett 1995 p 11 a b c Tyack 2013 p 4 a b Suggett 1995 p 12 Davis 1966 p 16 a b Tyack 2013 p 6 English Heritage Colvin 1995 p 852 a b c Suggett 1995 p 14 Summerson 1980 p 14 Suggett 1995 p 27 Suggett 1995 p 25 Tyack 2013 p 19 Tyack 2013 p 20 Suggett 1995 p 22 Colvin 1995 pp 687 689 Mansbridge 1991 pp 44 45 Summerson 1980 p 27 Mansbridge 1991 pp 41 42 Mansbridge 1991 pp 48 49 Mansbridge 1991 p 49 a b Mansbridge 1991 p 122 Mansbridge 1991 pp 135 136 Suggett 1995 p 82 Stroud 1962 p 119 a b Summerson 1980 p 30 Sherfield 1994 p 20 Summerson 1980 p 132 Summerson 1980 pp 26 27 Mansbridge 1991 p 227 Mansbridge 1991 p 97 Mansbridge 1991 p 142 Mansbridge 1991 p 149 Mansbridge 1991 p 218 a b Mansbridge 1991 p 133 Stern Fishman amp Tilove 2013 p 23 Mansbridge 1991 p 101 Mansbridge 1991 p 118 Mansbridge 1991 p 150 Mansbridge 1991 p 199 Baker 1954 p 275 Davis 1966 pp 20 21 Summerson 1980 p 56 Summerson 1980 p 73 Caves 2004 p 480 Mansbridge 1991 p 130 Mansbridge 1991 pp 158 161 Mansbridge 1991 p 197 Mansbridge 1991 p 296 Mansbridge 1991 pp 183 184 Mansbridge 1991 pp 251 252 Mansbridge 1991 pp 256 262 Cherry amp Pevsner 2002 p 382 Mansbridge 1991 p 201 Mansbridge 1991 p 202 Summerson 1980 p 72 Mansbridge 1991 p 177 Summerson 1980 p 96 Stroud 1984 p 98 Port 2006 p 59 Port 2006 p 65 Port 2006 p 81 Mansbridge 1991 pp 206 207 Mansbridge 1991 pp 230 231 Summerson 1980 p 151 Mansbridge 1991 p 274 Mansbridge 1991 p 244 Mansbridge 1991 p 300 Williams 1990 p 13 Williams 1990 p 135 a b c d e f g h ODNB 2004 Torrens Williams 1990 p 19 Williams 1990 p 14 Williams 1990 p 16 Williams 1990 pp 11 12 a b c d e f g ODNB a Williams 1990 p 11 Williams 1990 p 28 Williams 1990 p 30 Williams 1990 p 21 Williams 1990 p 136 Williams 1990 p 38 Williams 1990 pp 38 39 a b Williams 1990 p 40 a b Arnold 2005 p 58 Dictionary of Scottish Architects Curl 1999 p 133 a b c d e f Williams 1990 pp 135 157 Jones 2017 p 209 Summerson 1980 p 177 Harris de Bellaigue amp Miller 1969 p 30 Summerson 1980 p 185 a b Summerson 1980 p 187 Summerson 1980 p 180 a b c d Summerson 1980 p 188 Summerson 1980 p 189 Colvin 1978 pp 580 581 a b Historic England amp 1066044 Griffith 2019 Historic England amp 1182390 Pevsner amp Radcliffe 1970 p 192 Suggett 1995 pp 107 128 Dictionary of Ulster Biography Sources editArnold Dana Burton Decimus Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 4125 Subscription or UK public library membership required Arnold Dana 2005 Rural Urbanism London Landscapes in the Early 19th Century Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 719 06820 1 Baker J N L 1954 Jesus College In Salter H E Lobel Mary D eds A History of the County of Oxford Volume III The University of Oxford Victoria County History Research University of London ISBN 978 0 7129 1064 4 Caves R W 2004 Encyclopedia of the City Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 25225 6 Cherry Bridget Pevsner Nikolaus 2002 London 4 North The Buildings of England New Haven US and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 09653 8 Colvin Howard 1978 A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects 1600 1840 2nd ed New 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amp Sons OCLC 62972469 Hilling John B 2018 The Architecture of Wales From the First to the Twenty First Century Cardiff University of Wales Press ISBN 978 1 78683 285 6 Historic England The Bath House Grade I 1182390 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 28 May 2020 Historic England 6 York Gate 1 18 York Terrace Regent s Park NW1 Grade I 1066044 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 12 October 2022 Jones Christopher 2017 Picturesque Urban Planning Tunbridge Wells and the Suburban Ideal The Development of the Calverley Estate 1825 1855 University of Oxford Department of Continuing Education Magill Frank N 2013 The 17th and 18th Centuries Dictionary of World Biography Vol 4 London Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 92414 0 Major Joanne Murden Sarah 2017 A Georgian Heroine The Intriguing Life of Rachel Charlotte Williams Biggs Pen and Sword ISBN 9781473863460 Mansbridge Michael 1991 John Nash A Complete Catalogue New York Rizzoli ISBN 0 8478 1308 8 James Burton Haliburton Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press 2004 doi 10 1093 ref odnb 50182 Subscription or UK public library membership required Pevsner Nikolaus Radcliffe Edith 1970 1951 Cornwall Buildings of England London Penguin Books ISBN 0 300 09589 9 Port M H 2006 Six Hundred New Churches The Church Building Commission 1818 1856 2 ed Yale University Press ISBN 978 1 904965 08 4 Rees T M 1959 John Nash 1752 1835 Dictionary of Welsh Biography Retrieved 12 October 2022 Sherfield Ian 1994 East Cowes Castle The Seat of John Nash Esq A Pictorial History Canon Press Stern Robert A M Fishman David Tilove Jacob 2013 Paradise Planned The Garden Suburb and the Modern City The Monacelli Press ISBN 978 1580933261 Stroud Dorothy 1962 Humphry Repton London Country Life Stroud Dorothy 1984 Sir John Soane architect London Faber amp Faber ISBN 978 0 571 13050 4 Suggett Richard 1995 John Nash Architect in Wales Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales ISBN 1 871184 16 9 Summerson John 1980 The Life and Work of John Nash Architect Cambridge Mass The MIT Press ISBN 0 262 19190 3 Torrens H S Parkinson James bap 1730 d 1813 land agent and museum proprietor Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 21370 Subscription or UK public library membership required Tyack Geoffrey 2013 John Nash Architect of the Picturesque English Heritage ISBN 978 1 84802 102 0 Williams Guy 1990 Augustus Pugin Versus Decimus Burton A Victorian Architectural Duel London Cassell Publishers Ltd ISBN 978 0 304 31561 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Nash Nash John New International Encyclopedia 1905 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Nash architect amp oldid 1195019880, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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