- William Atkinson (architect)
William Atkinson (1774/5–1839) was an English architect best known for his designs for country houses in the Gothic style. He undertook almost fifty commissions, broadly distributed in the north of England and the
Scottish lowlands ,London and the surrounding counties, with occasional excursions toHerefordshire ,Staffordshire , and Ireland. His Gothic oeuvre fitted between playful eighteenth-century eclecticism and the more rigorous archaeological approach of the later Gothic revival.Early life
Atkinson was born at
Bishop Auckland , County Durham. He was probably the son of a William Atkinson who worked during the 1760s as a builder at nearbyAuckland Castle , the palace of the bishops of Durham. The younger Atkinson began work as a carpenter and in the mid-1790s came to the attention of the prominent architectJames Wyatt , then making alterations to the castle, who took him as a pupil. In July 1796 Atkinson, aged twenty-two, entered theRoyal Academy Schools where in 1797 he won a gold medal.Architectural career
Atkinson's career as an independent architect began about 1800. Between 1804 and 1834 some twelve country houses were built or remodelled to his designs in the Gothic or castle style. These included
Chequers , Buckinghamshire (1823), andLismore Castle , Co. Waterford, Ireland. Of four houses in Scotland, as well as his Gothic reconstruction (1803–12) ofScone Palace , Abbotsford (1816–23) for SirWalter Scott remains notable, despite contributions to his designs from the architectEdward Blore and others (including Scott himself). Atkinson seems never to have executed entire classical buildings, but carried out several additions or alterations to country houses before 1825 in this style. These include Bretton Hall (1807) and Broughton Hall (1809–11), both inWest Yorkshire ,Gorhambury , Hertfordshire (1816–17), andHylands , Essex (1819–25). Atkinson also worked on seven churches countrywide, includingDurham Cathedral , and All Saints',Newton Heath (1814–16), which was the only one wholly rebuilt to his designs. The handful of public buildings to which Atkinson made minor modifications were all in the London, and included the Ordnance office inPall Mall (demolished), theTower of London , andWoolwich Arsenal . Also in London, his work on town houses included the addition of the Flemish picture gallery (1819–20) to Thomas Hope's house in Duchess Street, Portland Place, to the designs of Hope, for whom Atkinson had recently remodelled his country seat, Deepdene, in Surrey.Besides architecture, Atkinson's great interests were chemistry, geology, and particularly botany. He combined the first two when, about 1810, he successfully introduced to the London market a Roman cement, known as Atkinson's cement, which could be used either externally or internally as stucco or rendering. Its significant ingredient, calcareous clay, he extracted from land in north Yorkshire belonging to the 1st Earl of Mulgrave, for whom he had recently remodelled
Mulgrave Castle , near Whitby; he then shipped the clay toWestminster , where he owned a wharf. Lord Mulgrave, at that time master-general of the ordnance, was instrumental in Atkinson's succeeding James Wyatt, on1 October 1813 , as architect to theBoard of Ordnance , a post he retained until his department was abolished on1 January 1829 .Atkinson indulged his passion for horticulture by often planting rare species, for example in the gardens of the villa which he built for himself about 1818 at Grove End in Paddington and, later, in the 170 acre estate he purchased about 1830 at Silvermere, near Cobham, Surrey, where he also built himself a house. It was here that he died on
22 May 1839 , aged sixty-six. He was buried at nearbyWalton-on-Thames . During his career he had attracted numerous pupils, including Thomas Allason,Robert Richardson Banks , Peter Hubert Desvignes, Matthew Habershorn, John Burgess Watson, and his nephewThomas Tredgold . The younger of his two sons, Henry George Atkinson, also became an architect.Sources
*J. Archer, "The literature of British domestic architecture", 1715–1842 (1985)
*W. Papworth (ed.), "The dictionary of architecture", 11 vols. (1853–92)
*Richard Riddell, ‘Atkinson, William (1774/5–1839)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept 2004
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