William Wilkinson

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William Wilkinson

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Witney, Oxfordshire, England, United Kingdom
Death: January 24, 1901 (81)
Randolph Hotel, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England UK
Place of Burial: St Mary, Witney, Oxfordshire, England
Immediate Family:

Son of William Anthony Wilkinson and Mary Wilkinson
Brother of George Wilkinson; Ellen Rolfe; Mary Wilkinson; Mary Moore and Elizabeth Wilkinson

Occupation: 1881 - 61, Architect; British Gothic Revival architect
Managed by: Terry Jackson (Switzer)
Last Updated:

About William Wilkinson

William Wilkinson

References


  • William Wilkinson
  • Born 1819
  • Died 1901
  • Nationality British
  • Occupation Architect
  • Practice Wilkinson and Moore (from 1881)
  • Buildings Randolph Hotel, Oxford; Shelswell Park, Shelswell, Oxfordshire
  • Projects St Edward's School, Oxford; Norham Manor Estate, Oxford

William Wilkinson (1819–1901) was a British Gothic Revival architect who practised in Oxford, England.

Family

Wilkinson's father was a builder in Witney in Oxfordshire. William's elder brother George Wilkinson (1814–1890) was also an architect, as were William's nephews C.C. Rolfe (died 1907) and H.W. Moore (1850–1915).

Career

Most of Wilkinson's buildings are in Oxfordshire. His major works include the Randolph Hotel in Oxford, completed in 1864. He was in partnership with his nephew H.W. Moore from 1881. In his long career Wilkinson had a number of pupils, including H.J. Tollit (1835–1904).

Works

Churches

In 1841, at the age of only 22, Wilkinson designed a new Church of England parish church, Holy Trinity at Lew, Oxfordshire. His other work on churches included:

  • St Leonard's parish church, Eynsham: restoration, 1856
  • Witney Cemetery: lodge and two chapels, 1857
  • Witney Workhouse: chapel, 1860
  • All Saints' parish church, Middleton Cheney, Northamptonshire: Horton family mausoleum, 1866–67
  • St Andrew's parish church, Headington, Oxford: added north aisle, 1880

Police buildings

Former police station in Witney Wilkinson moved to Oxford in 1856 and succeeded J.C. Buckler as architect to the local police committee.[2] Oxfordshire County Constabulary was formed in 1857, and Wilkinson designed several buildings for the new force.

  • Watlington police station, 1858–59
  • Witney police station, 1860
  • Woodstock police station, 1863
  • Chipping Norton police station, 1864–65
  • Burford police station, 1869
  • Magistrates' room at Deddington Court House, 1874

Houses

Wilkinson designed Home Farm on the Shirburn Castle estate, built in 1856–57. From 1860 he laid out the Norham Manor estate in north Oxford. The estate was slowly developed with large villas, a number of which Wilkinson designed himself. Wilkinson also designed town houses and small country houses elsewhere in Oxfordshire:

  • 23 Cornhill, Banbury
  • Hollybank, Wootton, 1862–63
  • 10, Broad Street, Oxford, 1863
  • Whittlebury, Northamptonshire: farmhouse, 1864
  • The Holt, Middleton Cheney, Northamptonshire, 1864
  • 60 Banbury Road, Oxford, 1865–66
  • Bignell House, Chesterton, 1866 (partly demolished)
  • 23 and 24 Cornhill, Banbury, 1866
  • Astrop Park, Northamptonshire: lodge, pheasantry and cottage, 1868
  • Witney Almshouses: restoration, 1868.
  • Brashfield House, Caversfield, 1871–73
  • Shelswell Park, Shelswell, 1875
  • Cowley Place (now St Hilda's College, Oxford): extension, 1877–78

Clergy houses

A number of the houses that Wilkinson designed were for clergy. Most were for the Church of England, but he also designed a presbytery that was built for the Roman Catholic Church.

  • Ramsden parsonage, 1862
  • Chadlington parsonage, 1863 (now Chadlington House)
  • Duns Tew rectory, 1864 (now Priory Court)
  • Godington parsonage, 1867 (now the Old Vicarage)
  • Upper Heyford parsonage, 1869
  • Rousham rectory: enlargement and remodelling, 1873.
  • St Aloysius' presbytery, Woodstock Road, Oxford, 1877–78
  • Combe vicarage and Institute (with H.W. Moore), 1892–93

Educational establishments

Wilkinson designed the library for the Oxford Union, built in 1863. He designed a number of schools, of which the largest was St Edward's School, Oxford, whose buildings he completed in phases from 1873 until 1886.

'''His other schools include:'''
  • Hailey School, 1848
  • Minster Lovell School, 1870–72
  • Burford Elementary School, 1875–77
  • Thame Grammar School, 1877–79
  • Salesian College, Crescent Road, Cowley, 1880
  • Industrial buildings
  • Late in his career Wilkinson undertook one industrial commission: a new smith shop and foundry for William Lucy's Eagle Ironworks in Jericho, Oxford. This single-storey building was completed in 1879. It was demolished after Lucy ceased production in England in 2005.

Publications

  • Wilkinson, William (1875) [1870]. English Country Houses: Sixty-one Views and Plans of Recently Erected Mansions, Private Residences, Parsonage-Houses, Farm-Houses, Lodges, and Cottages; with Sketches of Furniture and Fittings; and a Practical Treatise on House-Building (second ed.). London: James Parker and Co.
  • Reference: Ancestry Genealogy - SmartCopy: Apr 10 2021, 13:03:45 UTC
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William Wilkinson's Timeline

1819
November 4, 1819
Witney, Oxfordshire, England, United Kingdom
1901
January 24, 1901
Age 81
Randolph Hotel, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England UK
January 28, 1901
Age 81
St Mary, Witney, Oxfordshire, England