- Thomas Baldwin (architect)
Thomas Baldwin (c.1750 –
7 March 1820 ) was an English surveyor andarchitect in Bath.He did not originally hail from Bath but was first recorded in the city in 1774, where he was initially a clerk (later builder and assistant) to plumber, glazier, and politician
Thomas Warr Attwood . By 1775, he was appointed as theBath City Architect after Attwood's death. Sometime during the construction of the Guildhall during 1775, he was officially appointed the position ofBath City Surveyor . he became theBath City Surveyor . He was surveyor to the Pulteney Estate and planned the development ofBathwick as well as being responsible for much of the building. Around the same time he was appointed to the Office of Architect and Surveyor for the Improvement Commissioners (formed by the of 1789) on9 April 1790 (at a salary of 200 pounds per annum), which he held until 1793.Baldwin married
Elizabeth Chapman inSt James' Church, Bath on15 September 1779 , which is ironic because it was designed byJohn Palmer of Bath between 1768-1769, the man who would investigate and destroy Baldwin's reputation, and then steal his commissions and positions. The Chapmans were a local political family, and a month after his marriage he was appointedDeputy Chamberlain to the Corporation of Bath . He was again appointed to this post on7 January 1782 , and again on6 October 1783 . His salary for this post, as recorded in October 1790 was 210 pounds per annum. He began to quarrel with the Corporation and was dismissed from this post in October of 1791.Rival architect John Palmer began investigating Baldwin and at the same time stole commissions from him, including the enlargement scheme (adding an attic story) of the General Hospital. After Baldwin submitted his records to the Improvement Commissioners, Palmer was then appointed to investigate the work carried out on the Pump Room on
14 December 1792 . Palmer naturally found issues and ordered work there stopped. By17 May 1793 , a committee was formed by the Improvement Commissioners to investigate Baldwin and he was dismissed (on28 June 1793 ). This was followed by being dismissed from his other positions in 1793 for financial irregularities, although he was able to maintain the Pulteney office. A creditor named Edmunds sued commenced bankruptcy procedures against him on15 August 1793 and he was finally declared so on26 August 1802 , which allowed him to re-launch his career after that.His estate was sold on
16 January 1793 but he continued to practice as an architect until his death in 1820. Indeed, former assistants such asJohn Eveleigh continued to advertise that they had worked under him, indicating that although his downfall had been quite public, his name still carried some respect. He is generally have thought of to have been too caught up in the frenzy of building decadent Georgian Bath in its final years (the great building projects ceased after 1793 and Brighton then became the new Bath) and to have been overworked to the point of allowing clerical errors. Baldwin historian Jane Root, however, assessed that "he had a history not merely of imprudence, but of deliberate dishonesty."He died at age 70 in his
Great Pulteney Street terrace house home he designed. He was buried atSt. Michael's, Bath on14 March 1820 .He was one of the leading architects of Georgian Bath, designing some of its principal buildings, mainly in a
Palladian style, with Adamesque detailing.List of works
* The
Guildhall, Bath (1775-1779)
* "So-called" Kitchen of King's Bath Repair, Bath (1777, demolished four years later for his re-imagined scheme)
*Northumberland Buildings, Bath (1778-1780)
* New King's Bath Pavilion, Bath (1781, demolished in the 19th Century)
* The original (now only east facade of the)Cross Bath, Bath 1784
* TheOld Pump Room, Bath (1783-1784)
* Colonnade, Old Pump Room, Bath (1786)
* Hafod House, Cardiganshire (1786-1788)
* TheNew Private Baths, Bath (1788-1789)
*Argyle Buildings, Bath (1789)
*Laura Place, Bathwick (1789)
*Great Pulteney Street , Bathwick (1789)
* Sydney Place and Bathwick Street, Bathwick (1788-1792)
* Northampton Street, Bath (1791-1805), continued by John Pinch the elder andGeorge Phillips Manners
*Sydney Hotel, Bathwick (1796-1797), built to a modified design byCharles Harcourt Masters
* Union Street, Bath (1790)
* Cheap Street refronted, Bath (1790)
* Stall Street refronted, Bath (1790)
*Bath Street, Bath (1791, originally named Cross Bath Street)
*Union Street, Bath (Begun3 June 1791 on 'the ground in the Bear Yard' but not completed in 1793)
*Nash Street, Bath (from Bath Street to Westgate Street)
*Hot Bath Street, Bath
*Bow Street, Bath
* The Great Pump Room's Colonnade (12 March 1790 to Summer 1791)
* TheGreat Pump Room, Bath (1790-1791), finished to John Palmer's designs by the latter (1794-1794)
* Bathford Church,Somerset extensions (1803, 1817)
* Town Hall,Devizes ,Wiltshire (1806-1808)
* Hafod House, Cardiganshire, rebuilt after fire (1807)
* Rainscombe House,Oare, Wiltshire , remodelled (1816)References
* H.M. Colvin, "A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects, 1600-1840" (1997) ISBN 0-300-07207-4
* Michael Forsyth, "Bath", Pevsner Architectural Guides (2003) ISBN 0-300-10177-5
* Jane Root, "Thomas Baldwin: His Public Career in Bath, 1775-1793" (in, ed. Trevor Fawcett. "Bath History", Volume V Bath: Millstream Books Publishing Limited, 1994), 80-103.
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