Rowland Plumbe Explained

Rowland Plumbe
Native Name:Roland Plumbe
Birth Date:2 February 1838
Birth Place:Whitechapel
Death Place:Willesden
Resting Place:Highgate Cemetery
Citizenship:England
Occupation:Architect

Rowland Plumbe, also known as Roland Plumbe (2 February 1838, Whitechapel – 2 April 1919, Willesden), was an English architect, famous for being the author of many residential schemes across London, many being considered the first examples of the Victorian Garden City.

Biography

Plumbe was born on 2 February 1838 in Whitechapel.[1] After leaving university college he was articled to Nockalls Johnson Cottingham and Frederick Peek, then spent 2 years in America with Frederick Clarke Withers, returning to London in 1860 to start his own practice. Over a long career he designed a wide variety of buildings including churches, hospitals and housing, from the modest to the grand.

His churches include the red-brick Perpendicular Gothic Revival St John the Baptist's Church at Loxwood, West Sussex and red brick Grade II listed St Margaret, Streatham Hill.[2] [3] [4]

Hospitals designed by Plumbe include thirty years of work on the London Hospital,[5] new wings at Poplar Hospital between 1891 and 1902[6] and Napsbury Hospital, London Colney completed in 1905.[7] He also designed the entertainment hall (completed 1879) at the Normansfield home for people with a learning disability in Teddington, built at the instigation of John Langdon Down.[8]

The Artizans, Labourers & General Dwellings Company (Artizans Company) was established to build low rise, high-quality houses for the working classes in open countryside, alongside existing railway lines, to allow workers to live in rural surroundings and commute into the city.[9] In 1881 they appointed Plumbe to design their Noel Park estate with 2,200 houses in five classes. At the other end of the residential scale, Plumbe redesigned Woodlands Park House, now Woodlands Park Hotel, in Cobham for industrialist William Bryant. In contrast, Fieldgate Mansions in Whitechapel, completed in 1907 were tenement blocks in a very urban setting.[10]

Other examples of his London work include warehousing in Ray Street and offices in Old Street.[11] He also designed the entertainment hall (completed 1879) at the Normansfield home for people with a learning disability in Teddington, built at the instigation of John Langdon Down.[8]

His students include Charles Worley, who was articled to him in 1870.[12] He died on 2 April 1919 and is buried in a family grave on the eastern side of Highgate Cemetery.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: England and Wales Birth Registration Index, 1837-2008 . www.familysearch.org . 2 April 2021.
  2. Book: Elleray, D. Robert. Sussex Places of Worship. 2004. Optimus Books. Worthing. 0-9533132-7-1. 40.
  3. Web site: Streatham Hill: St Margaret - The Diocese of Southwark. 2020-09-27. southwark.anglican.org.
  4. Book: Buildings of England: London South. 0300096518. 391. Cherry. Bridget. Pevsner. Nikolaus. January 2002.
  5. The Expansion and Remodelling of the London Hospital by Rowland Plumbe, 1884–1919 . The London Journal . 2020. 10.1080/03058034.2019.1583455. 2 April 2021. Smith. Amy. 45. 2. 270–298. 159996380.
  6. Web site: East India Dock Road, North side: Poplar Hospital, Nos 305-479 (dem.) and All Hallows' Church . www.british-history.ac.uk . 2 April 2021.
  7. Web site: Napsbury Park, formerly Middlesex County Asylum . www.historic-Hospitals.com . 20 September 2016 . 2 April 2021.
  8. Earl, John (1997). Borough of Twickenham Local History Society Occasional Paper No.6: Dr Langdon Down's Normansfield Theatre. London: Borough of Twickenham Local History Society, p. 17.
  9. Welch, p. 7
  10. Web site: Fieldgate Mansions . www.surveyoflondon.org . 2 April 2021.
  11. Web site: Rowland Plumbe . www.archiseek.com . 2 April 2021.
  12. Web site: Pretty in Pink. Marylebone Journal. 23 April 2014.