List of non-ecclesiastical works by Paley and Austin
Paley and Austin were the surnames of two architects working from a practice in Lancaster, Lancashire, England, between 1868 and 1886. The practice had been founded in 1836 by Edmund Sharpe. The architects during the period covered by this list are E. G. Paley and Hubert Austin. E. G. Paley had joined Edmund Sharpe in partnership in 1845. This partnership continued until 1851, when Sharpe retired, and Paley ran the business as a single principal until he was joined by Hubert Austin in 1868. The partnership of Paley and Austin continued until they were joined as a partner by Paley's son, Henry Paley, in 1886.[1]
This list covers the non-ecclesiastical works executed by the practice during the partnership of Paley and Austin; the period from 1868 to 1886. These include new houses and alterations to houses (which varied in size from large country mansions to tenement blocks), railway stations, schools and alterations to schools, banks, industrial buildings, hospitals, and a bridge. Because of the location of the practice, most of their non-ecclesiastical work was in the areas that are now Cumbria, Lancashire, and Greater Manchester, but examples can also be found in Cheshire, Yorkshire, Merseyside, County Durham, Buckinghamshire, and Wales.[2]
Key
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Grade | Criteria[3] | ||||||||||||
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Grade I | Buildings of exceptional interest, sometimes considered to be internationally important. | ||||||||||||
Grade II* | Particularly important buildings of more than special interest. | ||||||||||||
Grade II | Buildings of national importance and special interest. | ||||||||||||
"—" denotes a work that is not graded. |
Works
Name | Location | Photograph | Date | Notes | Grade |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kents Bank railway station | Kents Bank, Cumbria 54°10′22″N 2°55′31″W / 54.1729°N 2.9254°W / 54.1729; -2.9254 (Kents Bank railway station) | 1865 | Built for the Furness Railway.[4] | — | |
Giggleswick School | Giggleswick, North Yorkshire 54°04′22″N 2°17′38″W / 54.0728°N 2.2939°W / 54.0728; -2.2939 (Giggleswick School boarding house) | — | 1867–69 | Boarding house.[5][6] | II |
Town Hall | St John's Chapel, County Durham 54°44′13″N 2°10′52″W / 54.737°N 2.181°W / 54.737; -2.181 (St John's Chapel, Co Durham) | — | 1868 | [7] | — |
Sedgwick House | Sedgwick, Cumbria 54°16′35″N 2°45′14″W / 54.2765°N 2.7538°W / 54.2765; -2.7538 (Sedgwick House) | 1868–69 | New house in Perpendicular style. Later used as a school, and agter that converted into apartments.[8][9][10] | II | |
Bank, 68 Church Street | Lancaster, Lancashire 54°03′00″N 2°48′06″W / 54.0500°N 2.8018°W / 54.0500; -2.8018 (Bank, Lancaster) | 1870 | New bank for the Lancaster Banking Company; now National Westminster Bank.[11][12][13] | II* | |
Walton Hall | Walton, Warrington, Cheshire 53°21′36″N 2°36′08″W / 53.3599°N 2.6023°W / 53.3599; -2.6023 (Walton Hall) | 1870 | Additions and alterations.[14][15][16] | II | |
School and school house | Winmarleigh, Lancashire | — | 1870 | [17] | — |
Leighton Hall | Yealand Conyers, Lancashire 54°09′47″N 2°46′33″W / 54.1630°N 2.7758°W / 54.1630; -2.7758 (Leighton Hall) | 1870 | Added west wing and built a higher tower.[17][18][19] | II* | |
Flax and jute mill | Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria | 1870–72 | A large mill and warehouses to provide work for women, it was constructed in red brick, with bands of terracotta and Yorkshire stone. It closed in the early 20th century, the tower was demolished in 1930, followed by the offices in 1948.[20][21] | — | |
Whittington Hall | Whittington, Lancashire 54°10′51″N 2°37′12″W / 54.1807°N 2.6201°W / 54.1807; -2.6201 (Whittington Hall) | 1870–90 | Addition and alterations, including a billiards room and a clock tower.[14][22][23][24] | II* | |
Winmarleigh Hall | Winmarleigh, Lancashire 53°55′15″N 2°48′31″W / 53.9208°N 2.8086°W / 53.9208; -2.8086 (Winmarleigh Hall) | 1871 | For the 1st Baron Winmarleigh in Jacobean style.[25][26][27] | — | |
Shipworks | Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria | — | 1871–72 | For Ashburner.[4] | — |
Militia Barracks | South Road, Lancaster, Lancashire 54°02′40″N 2°47′53″W / 54.0444°N 2.7981°W / 54.0444; -2.7981 (Militia Barracks, Lancaster) | 1871–72 | Extension. Now used as offices.[28][29][30] | II | |
Villas | Cavendish Park, Barrow Island, Cumbria 54°06′19″N 3°13′39″W / 54.1053°N 3.2276°W / 54.1053; -3.2276 (Villas, Cavendish Park, Barrow-in-Furness) | — | 1872 | [20] | — |
Grange-over-Sands railway station | Grange-over-Sands, Cumbria 54°11′45″N 2°54′10″W / 54.1957°N 2.9028°W / 54.1957; -2.9028 (Grange-over-Sands railway station) | 1872 | Station rebuilt.[5][31][32] | II | |
Tenement block including mission and public house | Michaelson Street, Barrow Island, Cumbria 54°06′17″N 3°13′51″W / 54.1046°N 3.2309°W / 54.1046; -3.2309 (Michaelson Street Tenement Block, Barrow-in-Furness) | 1872–74 | [20][33][34] | II* | |
Ermysted's Grammar School | Skipton, North Yorkshire 53°57′48″N 2°01′22″W / 53.9634°N 2.0227°W / 53.9634; -2.0227 (Ermysted's Grammar School, Skipton) | 1872–74 | Grammar school built on new site.[7][35] | II | |
Ulverston railway station | Ulverston, Cumbria 54°11′30″N 3°05′51″W / 54.1917°N 3.0976°W / 54.1917; -3.0976 (Ulverston railway station) | — | 1872–74 | For the Furness Railway.[36] | — |
Bank | Ramsden Square, Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria 54°06′49″N 3°13′53″W / 54.1137°N 3.2313°W / 54.1137; -3.2313 (Offices facing Ramsden Square, Barrow-in-Furness) | 1873 | For the Cumberland Banking Company. Now offices.[37][38] | II | |
Bootle railway station | Bootle, Cumbria 54°17′29″N 3°23′38″W / 54.2913°N 3.3938°W / 54.2913; -3.3938 (Bootle railway station) | 1873 | The "simple but attractive weatherboarded, timber-framed waiting room" dates from 1873 and was listed in 2022.[39][40] | II | |
Holker Hall | Holker, Cumbria 54°11′18″N 2°59′01″W / 54.1884°N 2.9837°W / 54.1884; -2.9837 (Holker Hall) | 1873 | New west wing in Elizabethan style.[5][41][42][43] | II* | |
Vicarage | Rose Lane, Mossley Hill, Liverpool, Merseyside 53°22′36″N 2°55′12″W / 53.3767°N 2.9200°W / 53.3767; -2.9200 (Vicarage for the Church of St Matthew and St James, Liverpool) | — | 1873 | Vicarage for the Church of St Matthew and St James.[44][45][46] | II |
Morecambe railway station | Morecambe, Lancashire | — | 1873 | Built in Northumberland Street; some of its features removed and incorporated in Morecambe Promenade railway station when it was built in 1909 in Marine Road Central.[8][47] | — |
Bank | Ramsden Square, Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria 54°06′52″N 3°13′52″W / 54.1144°N 3.2311°W / 54.1144; -3.2311 (National Westminster Bank, Barrow) | 1873–74 | For the Lancaster Banking Company. Now the National Westminster Bank.[4][48] | II | |
Underley Hall | Kirkby Lonsdale, Cumbria 54°12′57″N 2°35′31″W / 54.2157°N 2.5919°W / 54.2157; -2.5919 (Underley Hall) | 1874 | Additions, including a new wing and tower; now a school.[14][49] | II* | |
Gateway | Borough Cemetery, Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria 54°07′34″N 3°13′33″W / 54.1262°N 3.2257°W / 54.1262; -3.2257 (Cemetery Gateway, Barrow) | — | 1874 | Built in limestone with red sandstone dressings, it consists of a central three-bay section in two storeys, containing three archways, and two lateral wings.[50][51] | II |
School and school house | Bolton-by-Bowland, Lancashire | — | 1874 | [39][52] | II |
Millom railway station | Millom, Cumbria 54°12′40″N 3°16′14″W / 54.2110°N 3.2706°W / 54.2110; -3.2706 (Millom railway station) | 1874 | [44] | — | |
Oak Lea | Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria | — | 1874 | New house for Mr Schneider; demolished 1913 (other than the Gate Lodge and the Coach House).[8] | — |
Witherslack Hall | Witherslack, Cumbria 54°16′04″N 2°52′02″W / 54.2679°N 2.8671°W / 54.2679; -2.8671 (Witherslack Hall, Cumbria) | — | 1874 | New house.[17][53] | II |
North lodge | Borough Cemetery, Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria 54°07′44″N 3°13′28″W / 54.1288°N 3.2245°W / 54.1288; -3.2245 (Cemetery Gateway, Barrow) | c. 1874 | Now a private house, it is built in limestone with red sandstone dressings. It has two storeys and an L-shaped plan.[54] | II | |
Pilot cottages | Piel Island, Cumbria 54°03′55″N 3°10′29″W / 54.0652°N 3.1747°W / 54.0652; -3.1747 (Pilot Cottages, Piel Island, Cumbria) | — | 1875 | [20] | — |
Cark railway station | Cark, Cumbria | — | 1875 | [55] | — |
Schools | Cambridge Street, Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria | — | 1875 | With additions in about 1880.[20] | — |
Kirkby-in-Furness railway station | Kirkby-in-Furness, Cumbria 54°13′57″N 3°11′15″W / 54.2325°N 3.1875°W / 54.2325; -3.1875 (Kirkby-in-Furness railway station) | — | 1875 | Station for the Furness Railway, now demolished.[56] | — |
Tenement block | Michaelson Street, Barrow Island, Cumbria 54°06′12″N 3°13′54″W / 54.1034°N 3.2318°W / 54.1034; -3.2318 (Michaelson Street Tenement Block, Barrow-in-Furness) | c. 1875 | [20][33][57] | II* | |
Capernwray Hall | Over Kellet, Lancaster, Lancashire 54°08′37″N 2°41′45″W / 54.1436°N 2.6959°W / 54.1436; -2.6959 (Capernwray Hall) | 1875–76 | Southeast block, including a billiard room, added to the hall.[58][59][60] | II* | |
Sandside railway station | Sandside, Lancashire 54°13′19″N 2°47′48″W / 54.2219°N 2.7968°W / 54.2219; -2.7968 (Sandside railway station) | — | 1876 | Station on the Furness Railway, now demolished.[61] | — |
Colliery schools | Whitehaven, Cumbria | — | 1876 | [14] | — |
Piel Castle | Piel Island, Cumbria 54°03′44″N 3°10′24″W / 54.0622°N 3.1734°W / 54.0622; -3.1734 (Piel Castle, Cumbria) | 1876–78 | Restoration of the turret and a staircase for the Duke of Buccleuch.[20][62][63] | I | |
Hoghton Tower | Hoghton, Lancashire 53°43′58″N 2°34′25″W / 53.7329°N 2.5737°W / 53.7329; -2.5737 (Hoghton Tower) | 1876–80 | Restoration.[5][64][65][66] | I | |
Askham railway station | Askham, Cumbria | — | 1877 | [4] | — |
Hydraulic Engine House | Ramsden Dock, Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria | — | 1877 | [20] | — |
Seascale railway station | Seascale, Cumbria 54°23′46″N 3°29′06″W / 54.3961°N 3.4849°W / 54.3961; -3.4849 (Seascale railway station) | — | 1874 | [7] | — |
Lancaster Royal Grammar School | East Road, Lancaster, Lancashire 54°02′50″N 2°47′24″W / 54.0471°N 2.7901°W / 54.0471; -2.7901 (Lancaster Royal Grammar School) | 1877 | Extensions in 1877 and 1881.[11][67][68] | II | |
Baths | Abbey Road, Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria | 1878 | Alterations.[20][69] | II | |
Water tower | Seascale railway station, Cumbria 54°23′45″N 3°29′02″W / 54.39594°N 3.48381°W / 54.39594; -3.48381 (Water tower, Seascale) | 1878 | Built for the Furness Railway; it has three stages and a conical slate roof with a finial.[70][71][72] | II | |
Sedbergh School | Sedbergh, Cumbria 54°19′15″N 2°31′43″W / 54.3207°N 2.5286°W / 54.3207; -2.5286 (Sedbergh School) | — | 1878 | Built School House in 1878 and Sedgwick House the following year.[7][73][74] | II |
St Peter's vicarage and school | Scorton, Lancashire 53°55′54″N 2°45′33″W / 53.9318°N 2.7593°W / 53.9318; -2.7593 (St Peter's vicarage and school, Scorton) | — | 1878–79 | In association with St Peter's Church.[7][75] | — |
Foxfield railway station | Foxfield, Cumbria 54°15′31″N 3°12′58″W / 54.2587°N 3.2160°W / 54.2587; -3.2160 (Foxfield railway station) | — | 1879 | Enlarged station for the Furness Railway.[55][76] | — |
The Knoll | Westbourne Road, Lancaster, Lancashire | — | 1879 | A house designed by Austin for himself. Now a resource centre.[11][77][78] | II |
St Mary's School | Lancaster, Lancashire | — | 1879–80 | [11] | — |
Hornby Castle | Hornby, Lancashire 54°06′41″N 2°37′56″W / 54.1114°N 2.6323°W / 54.1114; -2.6323 (Hornby Castle) | 1879–82 | Additions to the west side.[5][79][80] | I | |
Thurland Castle | Tunstall, Lancashire 54°09′07″N 2°35′52″W / 54.1520°N 2.5978°W / 54.1520; -2.5978 (Thurland Castle) | 1879–88 | A castellated house which had been almost completely destroyed by a fire; virtually a new building, partly in Elizabethan style, partly Gothic. Now divided into apartments.[81][82][83] | II* | |
Newton Hall | Newton, Whittington, Lancashire 54°10′02″N 2°37′09″W / 54.1671°N 2.6192°W / 54.1671; -2.6192 (Newton Hall) | — | 1880 | New house, rebuilt on the site of a previous house.[8][84][85] | II |
All Souls School | Astley Bridge, Bolton, Greater Manchester 53°35′38″N 2°26′00″W / 53.5938°N 2.4333°W / 53.5938; -2.4333 (All Souls School, Astley Bridge) | — | 1880–81 | New school, now a community centre.[39][86] | II |
Hampsfield House | Lindale, Cumbria 54°13′00″N 2°54′36″W / 54.2167°N 2.9100°W / 54.2167; -2.9100 (Hampsfield House) | — | 1880–82 | A new country house for Sir John Tomlinson Hibbert, M.P.[87] | — |
Royal Albert Hospital | Lancaster, Lancashire 54°03′12″N 2°46′31″W / 54.0534°N 2.7752°W / 54.0534; -2.7752 (Royal Albert Hospital, Lancaster) | 1880–83 | Additions to mental hospital.[11][88] | II* | |
Vicarage | Arnside, Cumbria | — | 1881 | [4] | — |
Bridge | Caton, Lancashire 54°04′33″N 2°43′54″W / 54.0759°N 2.7316°W / 54.0759; -2.7316 (Road bridge, Caton) | 1881–83 | Road bridge over the River Lune.[55][89][90] | II | |
Tenements | Steamer Street, Barrow Island, Cumbria54°06′13″N 3°13′48″W / 54.1036°N 3.2299°W / 54.1036; -3.2299 (Steamer Street Tenements, Barrow-in-Furness) | 1881–84 | [20][91] | II* | |
Tenements | Sloop Street, Barrow Island, Cumbria 54°06′09″N 3°13′51″W / 54.1025°N 3.2308°W / 54.1025; -3.2308 (Sloop Street Tenements, Barrow-in-Furness) | — | 1881–84 | [20][92] | II* |
Tenements | Brig Street, Barrow Island, Cumbria 54°06′11″N 3°13′48″W / 54.1030°N 3.2300°W / 54.1030; -3.2300 (Brig Street Tenements, Barrow-in-Furness) | — | 1881–84 | [20][93] | II |
Tenements | Schooner Street, Barrow Island, Cumbria 54°06′10″N 3°13′46″W / 54.1028°N 3.2295°W / 54.1028; -3.2295 (Schooner Street Tenements, Barrow-in-Furness) | — | 1881–84 | [20][94] | II |
Tenements | Ship Street, Barrow Island, Cumbria 54°06′12″N 3°13′53″W / 54.1033°N 3.2313°W / 54.1033; -3.2313 (Ship Street Tenements, Barrow-in-Furness) | — | 1881–84 | [20][95] | II |
Station and warehouse | Ramsden Dock, Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria | — | 1882 | [20] | — |
Coffee Hotel | Barrow Island, Cumbria | — | 1882 | [20] | — |
Central railway station | Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria 54°07′08″N 3°13′34″W / 54.1190°N 3.2260°W / 54.1190; -3.2260 (Central railway station, Barrow-in-Furness) | — | 1882 | For the Furness Railway. Destroyed in the Second World War.[20] | — |
Rylands House | Owen Road, Lancaster, Lancashire | — | 1883 | Extensions.[44][96] | II |
North Lonsdale Hospital | Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria | — | 1883–87 | [20] | — |
Masonic Hall | Abbey Road, Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria | — | 1884 | [20] | — |
Fawley Court | Fawley, Buckinghamshire 51°33′06″N 0°53′52″W / 51.5516°N 0.8979°W / 51.5516; -0.8979 (Fawley Court) | — | 1884 | Addition of a new wing and terraces. Now a school.[97][98] | I |
All Saints School | Higher Walton, Lancashire | — | 1884 | New school.[14] | — |
School House, St. Bees School | St Bees, Cumbria 54°29′40″N 3°35′33″W / 54.4944°N 3.5925°W / 54.4944; -3.5925 (St. Bees School) | 1885 | [7][99] | — | |
Home Farm and dairy | Whittington, Lancashire | — | 1885 | Dairy and tea room added to farmhouse.[14][100][101] | II |
St Barnabas' Vicarage | West Street, Crewe, Cheshire 53°06′08″N 2°27′44″W / 53.1021°N 2.4622°W / 53.1021; -2.4622 (St Barnabas' Vicarage, Crewe) | — | c. 1885 | Vicarage for St Barbabas' Church.[55][102][103] | II |
Additional buildings, Ripley School | Lancaster, Lancashire 54°02′21″N 2°48′06″W / 54.0393°N 2.8018°W / 54.0393; -2.8018 (Ripley School, Lancaster) | — | 1885–86 | [11][104][105] | II |
St Barnabas' School | West Street, Crewe, Cheshire 53°06′07″N 2°27′48″W / 53.1020°N 2.4633°W / 53.1020; -2.4633 (St Barnabas' School, Crewe) | — | 1887 | [55][102] | — |
Stables, Whittington Hall | Whittington, Lancashire 54°10′51″N 2°37′12″W / 54.1808°N 2.6200°W / 54.1808; -2.6200 (Stables, Whittington Hall) | — | 1887 | Alterations to stables designed in the 1830s by George Webster, and later used for domestic accommodation.[100][106] | II |
Lodge, Whittington Hall | Whittington, Lancashire 54°10′53″N 2°37′13″W / 54.1814°N 2.6203°W / 54.1814; -2.6203 (Whittington Hall) | — | 1890 | Built as the north lodge to Whittington Hall.[14][100][100][107] | II |
St Bees signal box | St Bees, Cumbria 54°29′34″N 3°35′29″W / 54.4928°N 3.5913°W / 54.4928; -3.5913 (St Bees signal box) | 1891 | Signal box built for the Furness Railway.[108] | II | |
Dale Garth | Hawcoat, Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria | — | Undated | New house, now demolished.[97] | — |
Drigg railway station | Drigg, Cumbria | — | Undated | [97] | — |
Llandovery College | Llandovery, Carmarthenshire, Wales 51°59′43″N 3°48′02″W / 51.9954°N 3.8005°W / 51.9954; -3.8005 (Llandovery College) | — | Undated | Additional buildings.[44] | — |
Ravenglass railway station | Ravenglass, Cumbria 54°21′21″N 3°24′32″W / 54.3557°N 3.4089°W / 54.3557; -3.4089 (Ravenglass railway station) | — | Undated | [8] | — |
Chapel Ridding House | Windermere, Cumbria | — | Undated | [17] | — |
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- v
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- Ecclesiastical works by E. G. Paley
- Non-ecclesiastical works by E. G. Paley
- Ecclesiastical works by Paley and Austin
- Non-ecclesiastical works by Paley and Austin
- Works by Paley, Austin and Paley
- Ecclesiastical works by Austin and Paley (1895–1914)
- Non-ecclesiastical works by Austin and Paley (1895–1914)
- Works by Austin, Paley and Austin
- Ecclesiastical works by Austin and Paley (1916–1944)
- Non-ecclesiastical works by Austin and Paley (1916–1944)