William Butterfield Explained

William Butterfield
Nationality:British
Birth Date:1814 9, df=yes
Birth Place:London
Significant Buildings:St Ninian's Cathedral, Perth in Scotland, St Paul's Cathedral, Melbourne in Australia
Significant Projects:Keble College, Oxford
Awards:Royal Gold Medal (1884)

William Butterfield (7 September 1814 – 23 February 1900) was a British Gothic Revival architect and associated with the Oxford Movement (or Tractarian Movement). He is noted for his use of polychromy.

Biography

William Butterfield was born in London in 1814. His parents were strict non-conformists who ran a chemist's shop in the Strand. He was one of nine children and was educated at a local school. At the age of 16, he was apprenticed to Thomas Arber, a builder in Pimlico, who later became bankrupt. He studied architecture under E. L. Blackburne (1833–1836). From 1838 to 1839, he was an assistant to Harvey Eginton, an architect in Worcester, where he became articled. He established his own architectural practice at Lincoln's Inn Fields in 1840.

From 1842 Butterfield was involved with the Cambridge Camden Society, later The Ecclesiological Society. He contributed designs to the Society's journal, The Ecclesiologist. His involvement influenced his architectural style. He also drew religious inspiration from the Oxford Movement and as such, he was very high church despite his non-conformist upbringing. He was a Gothic revival architect, and as such he reinterpreted the original Gothic style in Victorian terms. Many of his buildings were for religious use, although he also designed for colleges and schools.

Butterfield's church of All Saints, Margaret Street, London, was, in the view of Henry-Russell Hitchcock, the building that initiated the High Victorian Gothic era. It was designed in 1850, completed externally by 1853 and consecrated in 1859. Flanked by a clergy house and school, it was intended as a "model" church by its sponsors, the Ecclesiological Society. The church was built of red-brick, a material long out of use in London, patterned with bands of black brick, the first use of polychrome brick in the city, with bands of stone on the spire. The interior was even more richly decorated, with marble and tile marquetry.

In 1849, just before Butterfield designed the church, John Ruskin had published his Seven Lamps of Architecture, in which he had urged the study of Italian Gothic and the use of polychromy. Many contemporaries perceived All Saints' as Italian in character, though in fact it combines fourteenth century English details, with a German-style spire.

Also in 1850 he designed, without polychromy, St Matthias' in Stoke Newington, with a bold gable-roofed tower. At St Bartholomew's, Yealmpton in the same year, Butterfield used a considerable amount of marquetry work for the interior, and built striped piers, using two colours of marble.[1]

At Oxford, Butterfield designed Keble College, in a style radically divergent from the university's existing traditions of Gothic architecture, its walls boldly striped with various colours of brick. Intended for clerical students, it was largely built in 1868–70, on a fairly domestic scale, with a more monumental chapel of 1873–6. In his buildings of 1868–72 at Rugby School, the polychromy is even more brash.[2]

Butterfield received the RIBA Gold Medal in 1884. He died in London in 1900, and was buried in a simple Gothic tomb (designed by himself) in Tottenham Cemetery, Haringey, North London. The grave can be easily seen from the public path through the cemetery, close to the gate from Tottenham Churchyard. There is a blue plaque on his house in Bedford Square, London.

Works

Butterfield's buildings include:

Publications

References

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Hitchcock 1977, pages 247–8
  2. Hitchock 1977, page 264
  3. Web site: Pleasance, St John's Episcopal Church with Lych Gate and Boundary Wall, Jedburgh, Scottish Borders. britishlistedbuildings.co.uk. 2019-12-14.
  4. Web site: Beginnings. St Saviour's Church. Coalpit Heath. August 2008. 2016-12-20. 15 October 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20161015072458/http://coalpitheath.org.uk/beginnings. dead.
  5. Homan 1984, page 106
  6. Pevsner & Cherry, 1973, page 252
  7. Sherwood & Pevsner, 1974, page 579–583
  8. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 365
  9. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 366
  10. News: . Ottery St Mary . Exeter and Plymouth Gazette . Exeter . 30 March 1850 . 14 September 2015 .
  11. Pevsner, 1966, page 253
  12. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 90
  13. Book: Rhea, Nicholas. Portrait of the North Yorkshire Moors. 1985.
  14. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 458
  15. Pevsner, 1966, page 177
  16. Book: O’Brien . Charles. Bailey . Bruce. Pevsner . Nikolaus . Lloyd . David W. . 2018 . The Buildings of England Hampshire: South . Yale University Press . 176. 9780300225037.
  17. Sherwood & Pevsner, 1974, page705
  18. Sherwood & Pevsner, 1974, page 101
  19. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 162
  20. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 291
  21. Web site: St John the Evangelist Churchyard . London Gardens Online . 1 November 2011 . 25 January 2015 . 4 March 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160304045455/http://www.londongardensonline.org.uk/gardens-online-record.asp?ID=HAF050 . dead .
  22. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 293
  23. Web site: History & architecture. All Saints Margaret Street website. 26 May 2012.
  24. Pevsner, 1966, page 182
  25. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 531
  26. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 82
  27. Pevsner, 1966, page 166
  28. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 160
  29. Web site: Houghton-le-Spring: Hillside Cemetery Lych Gate Restoration. Paul . Lanagan. houghtonlespring.org.uk.
  30. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 140
  31. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 319
  32. The Buildings of England: Lancashire – Manchester and the South East, 2004
  33. Sherwood & Pevsner, 1974, page 693
  34. Web site: William Butterfield (1814–1900). Saint Mary Magdalene. Enfield. Joy. Heywood. 2016-12-20.
  35. Pevsner, 1966, page 154
  36. Sherwood & Pevsner, 1974, page 164
  37. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 118
  38. Web site: Parishes: Lyndhurst | British History Online . British History Online . 1908-06-10 . 2019-11-05.
  39. Pevsner & Cherry, 1973, page 470
  40. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 266
  41. Web site: Home. Holy Saviour Church Hitchin.
  42. Pevsner, 1960, page 112
  43. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 268
  44. Sherwood & Pevsner, 1974, page 656
  45. Pevsner, 1966, page 84
  46. Sherwood & Pevsner, 1974, page 685
  47. Marsden, Susan, Paul Stark and Patricia Sumerling, Heritage of the City of Adelaide, Adelaide 1990, pp. 347-349
  48. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 571
  49. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 144
  50. Book: Birtchnell, Percy. Percy Birtchnell. A Short History of Berkhamsted. 1960. The Bookstack. 978-1-871372-00-7. 30.
  51. Book: Sheppard, F.H.W. . 1970. St. Paul's Church. Survey of London: volume 36: Covent Garden . 98–128. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=46105.
  52. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 374
  53. Verey, 1970, pages 370–371
  54. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 182
  55. Pevsner & Cherry, 1973, page 120
  56. Web site: St Denis' East Hatley. Hatley. en-GB. 2020-02-08.
  57. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 563
  58. Pevsner, 1966, page 254
  59. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 283
  60. Pevsner, 1966, page 357
  61. Sherwood & Pevsner, 1974, pages 225–229
  62. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 95
  63. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 354
  64. Pevsner, 1966, page 68
  65. Web site: St. Andrew's parish church, Rugby.
  66. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 591
  67. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 251
  68. Web site: A Community of Faith. stjohnsclevedon.org.uk.
  69. Pevsner, 1966, page 213
  70. Pevsner & Cherry, 1973, page 188
  71. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 105
  72. Pevsner & Cherry, 1975, page 427
  73. Web site: Church of St Peter, Ceulanamaesmawr, Ceredigion. britishlistedbuildings.co.uk.