William Henry Leeds Explained

William Henry Leeds (1786–1866) was an English architectural critic and journalist.[1]

Life

Leeds was born in 1786 in Norfolk. He was credited by John George Cochrane and others as one of the anonymous translators of the anthology of German short stories Popular Tales and Romances of the Northern Nations (1823).[2] [3] [4] Leeds was a frequent contributor to the Foreign Quarterly Review in the 1830s,[5] writing for them on Russian literature as well as architecture.[6] In the 1840s he wrote for the Westminster Review.[7] From 1839 to 1854 he edited the Civil Engineer's and Architect's Journal, and from 1855 to 1856 edited Land and Building News.[8]

He translated Georg Moller's Memorials of German Gothic architecture and edited a revised edition of Decorative Part of Civil Architecture by William Chambers.

Works

Notes and References

  1. Macmillan encyclopedia of architecture, Vol. 2, 1982, p.654
  2. Book: Cochrane, John George. John George Cochrane. Catalogue of the Library at Abbotsford. Edinburgh. 1838. 335.
  3. Book: A Cataglogue of Second-Hand Books Ancient and Modern. 20 January 1894. 18. Henry Sotheran & Co.. London.
  4. Book: Catalogue of the Brooklyn Library: Part Second D–M. 1878. New York. 513. Library . Brooklyn Public .
  5. Margaret Belcher, A.W.N. Pugin: an annotated critical bibliography, 1987, p.468
  6. Slavonic and East European review, vol. 40, 1963, p.209
  7. O. Boucher-Rivalain, 'William Henry Leeds (1786-1866), architectural critic, and his contribution to the Westminster Review in the 1840s ', Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens, 55, pp.33-41
  8. [S. A. Allibone]