Edward Welby Pugin (11 March 1834 – 5 June 1875) was an English architect, the eldest son of architect Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin and Louisa Barton and part of the Pugin & Pugin family of church architects. His father was an architect and designer of Neo-Gothic architecture, and after his death in 1852 Edward took up his practice. At the time of his own early death in 1875, Pugin had designed and completed more than one hundred Catholic churches.
Edward Welby Pugin | |
---|---|
Born | 11 March 1834 England |
Died | 5 June 1875 | (aged 41)
Occupation | Architect |
Employer | Pugin & Pugin |
Known for | Designer of Neo-Gothic architecture |
Father | Augustus Pugin |
Relatives | Augustus Charles Pugin (grandfather); Cuthbert Welby Pugin (brother), Peter Paul Pugin (half-brother) |
He was influenced by the neo-Gothic of Viollet-le-Duc, in which expansive spatial planning was combined with great detail. He designed churches and cathedrals primarily in the British Isles. However, commissions for his work were also received from countries throughout Western Europe, Scandinavia, and North America.
Works in Ireland
edit- SS Peter and Paul's, Carey's Lane, Cork (1859)
- Edermine, Enniscorthy, County Wexford (c. 1858)
- Cobh Cathedral (1867)
- Killarney Cathedral
- Fermoy Roman Catholic Church, County Cork (1867)
- Drogheda Christian Brothers Residence (currently Scholars Townhouse Hotel (1867)
- Crosshaven Roman Catholic Church, County Cork (1869)
- Monkstown Roman Catholic Church, County Dublin (1866)
- Monkstown Roman Catholic Church, County Cork (1866)
- Convent of Mercy, Skibbereen, County Cork (1867)
- Convent of Mercy, Birr, County Offaly
- John's Lane Church, Dublin
- Attributed to:
- AIB bank, Midleton
- Midleton Arms
- Church and Convent, Ramsgrange, County Wexford
- Bellevue Roman Catholic Church, County Wexford
- Mercy Convent, Pearce St, Nenagh County Tipperary
Works in England
edit- St. Patrick's Wolverhampton (demolished)
- 1853: Our Lady Immaculate and St Cuthbert, Crook, County Durham
- 1856: Shrewsbury Cathedral, the Cathedral Church of Our Lady Help of Christians and Saint Peter of Alcantara, Town Walls, Shrewsbury (built as a cathedral)
- 1856: Our Lady Immaculate, St. Domingo Road, Everton, Liverpool. Demolished. Lady Chapel of scheme for Liverpool Cathedral
- 1856: St. Vincent de Paul, St. James Street, Liverpool
- 1857: Holy Cross, Croston, Lancashire; small estate church
- 1857: Sacred Heart Church, Blackpool
- 1857–1858: Our Lady of the Annunciation Church, Liverpool
- 1857–1859: Our Lady and St. Hubert, Great Harwood, Lancashire
- 1858: St Peter's School, Woolwich
- 1859: Belmont Abbey, Hereford, Herefordshire (the Abbey Church was built as the pro-Cathedral for Wales)
- 1860: Octagonal Chapter House, Mount Saint Bernard Abbey, Leicestershire
- 1859–1860: Our Lady of la Salette, Liverpool
- 1860: St. Mary Immaculate, Warwick
- 1860–1861: St. Anne, Westby, Kirkham, Lancashire
- 1861: St. Edward, Thurloe Street, Rusholme, Manchester
- 1861–1865: St. Michael, West Derby Road, Everton, Liverpool
- 1862: St. Anne, Chester Road, Stretford, near Manchester
- 1862: St Austin, Wolverhampton Road, Stafford
- 1863: St. Peter, Greengate, Salford, Lancashire
- 1863: SS Henry and Elizabeth, Sheerness, Kent
- 1863: Convent of Our Lady of Charity and Refuge, Bartestree, Herefordshire (converted to flats)
- 1863: St Joseph, Bolton Road, Anderton, Chorley, Lancashire
- 1863–1864: Monument to Everard Aloysius Lisle Phillipps, VC, Cademan Wood, Whitwick, Leicestershire
- 1864: Our Lady and All Saints, New Road, Stourbridge, Worcestershire
- 1864: St. Marie, Lugsdale Road, Widnes, Cheshire (redundant)
- 1864: St Mary's Church, Croydon
- 1864: St. Hubert, Dunsop Bridge, Yorkshire
- 1864–1866: Augustinian Priory, school and Church of St Monica, Hoxton Square, London N1[1]
- 1865: St. Mary, Euxton, Lancashire
- 1865: St. Catherine, Kingsdown, Kent
- 1865–1866: Mayfield Boys' Orphanage (later Mayfield College, from 2007 converted to residential apartments as Mayfield Grange), Mayfield, Sussex
- 1865–1867: St. Joseph, York Road, Birkdale, Southport, Lancashire
- 1866: Euxton Hall Chapel, Euxton, near Chorley, Lancashire
- 1866: St Francis Monastery, Gorton, Manchester
- 1866: Our Blessed Lady and St. Joseph, Leadgate, Durham
- 1866: Chancel and transepts to Mount St Mary's Church, Leeds
- 1866–1868: Meanwood Towers, Meanwood, Leeds
- 1866–1867: St Mary's Church, Barrow-in-Furness, Lancashire
- 1866–1867: St Michael and All Angels, Mortuary Chapel and Knill Memorial, Brockley Cemetery, London, destroyed by bombing in 1944
- 1866–1867: Church of St Thomas of Canterbury and the English Martyrs, Preston, Lancashire (extended 1887–88)
- 1866–1867: The Chapel of the Immaculate Conception, Ratcliffe College, Ratcliffe on the Wreake, Leicestershire; converted for school use in 1962 on the completion of a new, larger chapel
- 1867: St Paul's Church, Dover, Kent
- 1867–1868: St Mary, Fleetwood, Lancashire
- 1867–1868: All Saints' Church in Urmston, Greater Manchester[2]
- 1867–1871: Our Lady and St Paulinus, Dewsbury, West Yorkshire
- 1868: St Begh, Coach Road, Whitehaven, Cumberland
- 1869–1872: Our Lady of the Sacred Heart, Cleator, Cumberland
- 1869: St. Michael's Orphanage for Girls, aka St Joseph's College, Mark Cross, East Sussex
- 1869: Granville Hotel, Ramsgate, Kent
- 1871: Stanbrook Abbey, Powick, Worcestershire
- 1872: Grosvenor Turkish Baths (with house and shop), 119 Buckingham Palace Road, London
- 1873: St Mary's Church, Brierley Hill
- 1873–1875: Carlton Towers, Yorkshire, for Lord Beaumont
- 1875 (Edward Welby Pugin dies)
- 1875: St. Anne Rommer, Highfield Road, Rockferry, Birkenhead, Wirral, Cheshire
- 1873–1876: English Martyrs Church, 30 Prescot Street, London E1[3]
- 1876: Our Lady Star of the Sea, Workington
- 1877: Sacred Heart Church, Kilburn, London
- 1877: St Mary's Church, Warrington, Cheshire
Works in Scotland
edit- 1854 St Mary's Star of the Sea Church, Leith, Edinburgh
- 1856 St Stephen, Blairgowrie
- 1862: Church of St. Mary, Haddington, East Lothian
- 1874: Church of St Mary and St Finnan, Glenfinnan
Works in Wales
edit- 1857 Wrexham Cathedral: Cathedral of our Lady of Sorrows
Works on the Isle of Man
edit- 1865 St Patrick, Peel
Works in Belgium (province of West Flanders)
edit- 1856 Basilica of Our Lady in Dadizele, finished by Jean-Baptiste Bethune
- 1856 Castle of Loppem, in collaboration with James Murray and George Ashlin, finished by Jean-Baptiste Bethune
- 1861 country estate near Bruges for bishop Joannes Baptista Malou, demolished
Works with James Murray (1856–c. 1859)
editRugby Town Hall and Markets
editThe old Town Hall stood on the High Street. It was built in 1857, with an extension in 1919. The upper floor became a cinema (Vint's Palace) around 1913. A fire destroyed most of the building in 1921 and it was rebuilt as Woolworths, which opened in 1923 and closed in 2009.[4]
Works in association with George Ashlin
edit- Saints Peter and Paul's Church, Cork, (1859)
- Convent of Mercy, Clonakilty, County Cork (1867)
- Convent and Orphanage, William Street North, Dublin (1867)
- SS Augustine and John, Thomas Street, Dublin (1860)
Regarded as Dublin's finest Victorian church, SS Augustine and John (John's Lane Church) in the Liberties area was designed by E. W. Pugin and executed by his partner George Ashlin for the Augustinian Fathers. It was built between 1862 and 1895. It has the tallest spire in Dublin (231 ft), and occupies a prominent position on high ground overlooking the Liffey Valley. It has a striking polychromatic appearance, being built in granite with red sandstone dressings.
The eminent Gothic revivalist Ruskin is said to have praised it, describing it as a "poem in stone".
Statues of the apostles in the niches of the spire are by James Pearse, father of Padraig and Willie, who were executed after the 1916 Easter Rising.
There is stained glass from the Harry Clarke studios.
- Presentation Convent, Fethard, County Tipperary (1862)
- Harrington Street Catholic Church, Dublin (1867); online
- Donnybrook Catholic Church, Dublin (1863)
- Monkstown Catholic Church, County Dublin (1865)
- Arles Catholic Church, Stradbally, County Laois (1965)
- Ferrybank Catholic Church, Waterford (1867)
- Kilanerin Catholic Church, Wexford (1865)
- Lady's Island Catholic Church, County Wexford (1863)
Sources
edit- Dictionary of Scottish Architects
- Jean van Cleven, 'The Eternal Château': bouwgeschiedenis en kunsthistorische analyse van het neogotische kasteel van Loppem, in V. van Caloen, J. van Cleven, J. Braet Het Kasteel van Loppem, Stichting Kunstboek, 2001
References
edit- ^ 'Hoxton – St Monica's Priory Archived 5 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine' in Taking Stock: Catholic Churches of England and Wales, online resource, accessed 28 December 2016.
- ^ Historic England. "All Saints' Church (1067879)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 22 December 2007.
- ^ "About the Parish – Tower Hill Mission". Retrieved 28 April 2024.
- ^ Illustrated London News, 15 August 1857.
Further reading
edit- Michael Fisher, Pugin-Land: A W N Pugin, Lord Shrewsbury and the Gothic Revival in Staffordshire, Stafford Fisher, 2002.
- Rachel Hasted, Scarisbrick Hall – A Guide, Social History at Lancashire County Museum Service, 1984.
- Frederick O'Dwyer, Ecclesiastical Architecture from 1829 in W.J. McCormack (ed) Modern Irish Culture, Oxford: Blackwell, 2001.
- Frederick O'Dwyer, A Victorian Partnership – The Architecture of Pugin & Ashlin in John Graby (ed.) 150 Years of Architecture in Ireland, Dublin, Eblana Editions, 1989.
- Jeanne Sheehy, The Rediscovery of Ireland's Past, The Celtic Revival 1830–1930. London, England, 1980.
External links
edit- Media related to Edward Welby Pugin at Wikimedia Commons
- The Pugin Society
- The Churches of EW and PP Pugin – on earlier version of the Pugin Society website, archived in 2006
- E.W. Pugin buildings on Archiseek.com, archived in 2013