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Late Georgian Churches: ‘Absolutely Wretched’ or the Triumph of Rational Pragmatism?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 November 2017

Abstract

This article considers the late Georgian church and argues that this huge group of buildings, involving almost all the country's major architects, has never been properly assessed by historians. This is principally a result of the opprobrium heaped on these churches by the Ecclesiologists who needed them to be marginalised in order to promote their own agenda of church design and worship, and the view that they are largely worthless lives on in places, even today. The article proposes their re-evaluation, suggesting that judging them by the standards the Ecclesiologists applied retrospectively is both illogical and inevitably destined to produce verdicts of failure. Instead, it seeks to place these buildings within the context of late Georgian society, religious attitudes and especially the period's building world. It argues that the best of them, especially the big ‘town’ churches, display a high degree of intelligent, functional planning and a fascinating exploitation of new materials and structural innovations that do great credit to their designers.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Architectural Historians of Great Britain 2017 

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References

NOTES

1 The figure of ‘around 1,500’ is not offered as a definitive but the available evidence suggests it is a reasonable calculation. Gilbert, Alan D., in his Religion and Society in Industrial England (London, 1976), p. 28 Google Scholar, shows that, 1,289 churches were added to the Anglican stock between 1801 and 1841. In addition, this writer's research has identified 63 churches that were either built or rebuilt between 1790 and 1801, and over 150 churches were rebuilt between 1801 and 1840. The notoriously unreliable 1851 religious census states that there were 1,095 additional churches in the period 1801–41, 194 less than Gilbert's estimate but including a further 2,118 where no date of erection is shown, some of which would, surely, have been built in the 1801–41 period. See Mann, Horace, Census of Great Britain. 1851, Religious Worship (London, 1854), pp. 106–07Google Scholar.

2 In purely numerical terms, Gilbert correctly states that rather more Nonconformist chapels were built than Establishment churches; Religion and Society, pp. 28 and 34. However, while some fine chapels were erected, many in his calculation were exceedingly modest and, in the context of this study, cannot be classed as ‘major public buildings’.

3 The Ecclesiologist, 11 (1851), p. 174 Google Scholar.

4 Goodhart-Rendel, Harry S., English Architecture Since the Regency (London, 1989), p. 50 Google Scholar.

5 Friedman, Terry, The Eighteenth Century Church in Britain (New Haven, London, 2011)Google Scholar.

6 See Porter, Roy, Enlightenment (London, 2000), pp. 96129 Google Scholar: ‘Rationalising Religion’.

7 The following offer a summary of attitudes: Overton, John H., The English Church in the Nineteenth Century (London, 1894), pp. 158–59Google Scholar; Summerson, John, Architecture in Britain, 1530–1830 (Harmondsworth, 1970), p. 515 Google Scholar; Clarke, Basil F.L., The Building of the Eighteenth Century Church (London, 1963), pp. 12 Google Scholar.

8 Brittain-Catlin, Timothy, Bleak Houses (Cambridge, Massachusetts, 2014), p. 39 Google Scholar.

9 The Ecclesiologists regularly referred to their endeavours as a science’, e.g. The Ecclesiologist, 7 (1847), p. 234 Google Scholar. An early example is Montague, Richard, Articles of Enquiry Put Forth at the Primary Visitation (Cambridge, 1841), p. xxxv Google Scholar.

10 This fascination with ‘industrial’ buildings and building techniques is amply illustrated in the comments about innovative English structures by the following: re the French architect François-Joseph Belanger, see Diestelkamp, Edward, ‘Building Technology & Architecture 1790–1830’, in Late Georgian Classicism, ed. White, Roger and Lightburn, Caroline (London, 1988), pp. 7391 (p. 73)Google Scholar; re the German architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel, see Bindman, David and Riemann, Gottfried (eds), Karl Friedrich Schinkel ‘The English Journey’ (New Haven, London, 1993), pp. 2, 175 and 188Google Scholar; re the German prince Herman von Puckler-Muskau, see von Puckler-Muscau, Herman, A Regency Visitor: The English Tour of Prince Puckler-Muskau (London, 1957), pp. 3 and 237Google Scholar; re the American architect Thomas Walter, see Thomas U. Walter, ‘European Notebook’, MS (1838), Walter Collection, Athenaeum of Philadelphia; and re the French-American merchant Louis Simond, see Simond, Louis, Journal of a Residence in Great Britain , 2 vols (Edinburgh, 1817), I, p. 31 Google Scholar. The writer is grateful to Dr Jennifer A. Amundson for alerting him to the Walter material.

11 Britton, John, Salisbury Cathedral (London, 1814), p. 2 Google Scholar.

12 Neale, John P., Views of the most Interesting Collegiate and Parochial Churches , 2 vols (London, 1825), IIGoogle Scholar, ‘The Abbey Church, Shrewsbury’, n.p.

13 Yates, Richard, The Basis of National Welfare (London, 1817), pp. 146 and 157Google Scholar.

14 Yates, Richard, The Church in Danger (London, 1815), p. 51 Google Scholar.

15 Best, Geoffrey A., Temporal Pillars (Cambridge, 1964), pp. 354–56Google Scholar; Hole, Samuel R., Pulpits, Politics and Order in England 1760-1832 (Cambridge, 1989), p. 199 CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Yates saw a thriving Church of England as being of ‘very high importance to the stability and prosperity of our constitutional government’: Yates, Church in Danger, p. 3.

16 Quoted in Port, Michael H., 600 New Churches: The Church Building Commission 1818-1856 (Reading, 2006), pp. 8588 Google Scholar.

17 Ibid., p. 32.

18 Proceedings of a Meeting … For the Purpose of Forming a Church Building Society, p. 24, quoted in Visitations of the Archdeaconry of Stafford 1829-1841, ed. Robinson, David (London, 1980), p. xvii Google Scholar.

19 Lambeth Palace Library, ICBS, file 666.

20 An important exception is a series of articles by Edward J. Carlos in the Gentleman's Magazine through the 1820s and 1830s.

21 Church Building Commission, Pudsey file, no 16,039.

22 Wren, Stephen, Parentalia or, Memoirs of the Family of the WRENS (London, 1750), p. 320 Google Scholar.

23 Port, 600 New Churches, pp. 61–62.

24 Wren, Parentalia, pp. 320–21.

25 Nicholson, Peter, Dictionary of Architecture, 2 vols (London, 1819), II, pp. 810–12Google Scholar.

26 Elmes, James, Memoirs of … Sir Christopher Wren (London, 1823), pp. 429–32Google Scholar.

27 Soane's written advice to the Commissioners of the 1818 Act, as quoted in Port, 600 New Churches, p. 63.

28 White, John, Some Account of the Proposed Improvements of the Western Part of London (London, 1814), pp. 7789 Google Scholar, ‘On the Proposed New Churches’. A second edition ‘with additions’ appeared in 1815.

29 Ibid., p. 86.

30 Ibid., pp. 86–87.

31 Enfield, William, The History of Liverpool (London, 1774), pp. 4546 Google Scholar.

32 Champness, John, Thomas Harrison (Lancaster, 2005), p. 85 Google Scholar.

33 Sopwith, Thomas, All Saints Church, in Newcastle upon Tyne (Newcastle, 1826), pp. 7071 Google Scholar.

34 Quoted in Paul F. Norton and Mary Hill, New Saint Chad's and its Architect (Shrewsbury, n.d. [mid-twentieth century]), p. 5.

35 Ibid., p. 8.

36 Quoted in Stillman, Damie, English Neo-Classical Architecture, 2 vols (London, 1988), II, p. 442 Google Scholar.

37 Gentleman's Magazine, 66:2 (1796), p. 993 Google Scholar.

38 The Correspondence and Miscellaneous Papers of Benjamin Latrobe, ed. Van Horne, John C. and Formwalt, Lee W., 2 vols (New Haven, London, 1984), I, p. 406 Google Scholar; quoted in Friedman, Terry, ‘The Octagon Chapel, Norwich’, Georgian Group Journal, 13 (2003), pp. 5477 (p. 72)Google Scholar.

39 White, Account, p. 82.

40 Saunders, George, A Treatise on Theatres (London, 1790)Google Scholar.

41 Colvin, Howard, A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects 1600-1840 (New Haven, London, 2008), p. 903 Google Scholar.

42 Saunders, Treatise, p. x: ‘In designing a theatre, the first question that naturally arises is in what form does the voice expand? To me it is a matter of surprise that so simple a question should not yet have engaged a serious examination.’

43 Ibid.

44 Ibid., pp. 52–53.

45 Ibid., p. 8.

46 Church Building Commission, Surveyors Report Book 1, p. 133.

47 Liscombe, Rhodri, ‘Economy, Character and Durability: Specimen Designs for the Church Commissioners, 1818’, Architectural History, 13 (1970), pp. 4357 (p. 46)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

48 Wilkins, William, The Civil Architecture of Vitruvius (London, 1812), pp. 132–33Google Scholar.

49 Cockerell, Charles R. et al. , Antiquities of Athens, (supplementary volume) (London, 1830), pp. 37 and 39Google Scholar.

50 Pocock, William F., Designs for Churches and Chapels (London, 1819)Google Scholar. There were subsequent, identical editions in 1823 and 1835. There was also Hamilton, George E., Designs for Rural Churches (London, 1836)Google Scholar, but the designs are so inept they can hardly be taken seriously.

51 Pocock, ibid., p. 9.

52 Ibid., p. 10. The wording is somewhat ambiguous as it is not clear if by ‘the extremity’ Pocock means the wall in front of, or behind, the speaker. Surprisingly, there is only one relevant design in the book and this contains both.

53 Ibid., p. 11.

54 For this interesting aspect of late Georgian worship see Webster, Christopher, ‘Patterns of Church Seating from Waterloo to 1850, and the Role of the Cambridge Camden Society’ in Pews, Benches and Chairs, ed. Cooper, Trevor and Brown, Sarah (London, 2011), pp. 197210 (p. 203)Google Scholar.

55 A phrase much used by smug Ecclesiologists, e.g. ICBS, file 4359, Lambeth Palace Library.

56 RIBA Drawings Collection, 66540.

57 Church Building Commission, file 18074, pt I; quoted in Liscombe, Rhodri W., William Wilkins (Cambridge, 2010), p. 142 Google Scholar.

58 Blackburn Mail, 28 June 1826.

59 Ibid., 12 September 1827.

60 Leeds Intelligencer, 24 December 1836.

61 The brick tax (1784–1850) made first-class bricks expensive, but a wall of inferior bricks, covered in stucco, was still significantly cheaper than stone. See Crook, J. Mordaunt, The Architect's Secret (London, 2003), p. 61 Google Scholar.

62 Whiffen, Marcus, Stuart and Georgian Churches (London, 1947-48), p. 57 Google Scholar; Saint, Andrew, ‘The Building Art of the First Industrial Metropolis’, in London – World City 1800–1840, ed. Fox, Celina (New Haven, London, 1992), p. 56 Google Scholar.

63 Saint, ‘First Industrial Metropolis’, p. 56.

64 Busby, Charles A., West Elevations of the Intended Churches at Leeds and Oldham (London, 1821), p. 1 Google Scholar.

65 An example is Lewis Vulliamy's St John the Divine, Richmond-on-Thames (1831); RIBA Drawings Collection, SC117/1(9).

66 Perhaps the earliest example of this sort of composite truss appeared in Pain, William, The Practical House Carpenter (London, 1788), plate 6Google Scholar. There were nine further editions to 1823. See also Yeomans, David, ‘Early Carpenters’ Manuals’, Construction History, 2 (1986), pp. 1333 Google Scholar.

67 Published London, Thomas Kelly, plate XXVI and pp. 128 and 157. Nicholson was a prolific publisher and, although the titles of his books might change, the same plates re-appeared, many well into the second half of the century. Similar diagrams of trusses, along with the dimensions of their components, appeared in Hoskins, William, Treatise on Architecture and Building (Edinburgh, 1832), plates CLI–II, p. 154Google Scholar.

68 Nicholson, Peter, New Carpenter's Guide (London, 1826)Google Scholar, plates LXXXIV and BB. Plate BB, which gives three different designs for church roofs supported by arcades, first appeared in the 1808 edition.

69 Port provides much useful information about the use of iron in Commissioners’ churches; Port, 600 New Churches, pp. 129–76.

70 Saint, Andrew, Architect and Engineer (New Haven, London, 2007), p. 70 Google Scholar.

71 Enfield, Liverpool, p. 47.

72 Hughes, Quentin, Seaport Architecture and Townscape in Liverpool (London, 1964), p. 7 Google Scholar.

73 Diestelkamp, ‘Building Technology’, p. 75.

74 Port, 600 New Churches, p. 63.

75 Osborne, Ray, ‘Cast Iron Windows in Anglican Churches 1791-1840’, Construction History, 24 (2009), pp. 4647 Google Scholar. Neither the architect nor founder at Wetheral has been identified. The article contains much useful information on its subject.

76 See Friedman, Eighteenth Century Church, p. 166.

77 For Porden, see Geoffrey Tyack, ‘William Porden’ in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, at www.oxforddnb.com (accessed 30 March 2017).

78 For the beginnings of Rickman's career in Liverpool, see John Baily, ‘Thomas Rickman Architect and Quaker. The Early Years to 1818’ (doctoral thesis, University of Leeds, 1977). I am grateful to Dr Baily for permission to quote from this].

79 RIBA Drawings Collection, SC117/2(8).

80 See Brandwood, Geoff, ‘Anglican Churches before the Restorers: a Study from Leicestershire and Rutland’, Archaeological Journal, 144 (1987), pp. 383408 (p. 405)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

81 Plaw instructed the contractor to use timber ‘properly framed and braced and Iron Tyres, Straps and Screws’; see Friedman, Terry, ‘“Acrobatic Architecture”: St Mary Paddington’, Westminster History Review, 2 (1998), pp. 2327 (p. 24)Google Scholar.

82 Godwin, George, The Churches of London, 2 vols (London, 1839), II, p. 2Google Scholar (but not consistently paginated).

83 RIBA Drawings Collection, VOL/50f.13.

84 Port, 600 New Churches, p. 80.

85 RIBA Drawings Collection, Shelf B4, Francis Edwards volume.

86 Wightwick, George, Nettleton's Guide to Plymouth (Plymouth, 1836), pp. 1617 Google Scholar.

87 Foulston, John, Public Buildings in the West of England (London, 1838)Google Scholar. The book includes numerous illustrations of the construction of the theatre, along with the author's explanation of the principles he used.

88 Jenkins, Frank, ‘John Foulston and his Public Buildings in Plymouth, Stonehouse and Devonport’, Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, 27 (1968), p. 128 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

89 Picton, James A., Memorials of Liverpool, 2 vols (London, 1875), II, p. 74 Google Scholar.

90 Baily, ‘Rickman’, p. 160.

91 Ibid., p. 169.

92 Cragg, James, Remarks on the Gothic Style of Building (Liverpool, 1814)Google Scholar. It seems unlikely that Baily knew of this very rare pamphlet in the 1970s.

93 Ibid., p. 6. He proceeds to rehearse the standard argument that the cathedrals like York produce ‘impressions of awe and pleasure’ not found at St Paul's.

94 Ibid., pp. 10–11.

95 Ibid., p. 15.

96 Ibid., pp. 16–17.

97 These are the six ‘elephant’ portfolios produced by John Carter between 1795 and 1813 and published by the Society of Antiquaries containing surveys of Durham, Exeter and Gloucester cathdrals along with Bath Abbey and St Stephen's Chapel, Westminster.

98 Cragg, Remarks, p. 19.

99 For more on the Cragg–Rickman relationship, see Brown, A.T., How Gothic Came Back to Liverpool (Liverpool, 1937)Google Scholar.

100 Rickman, Thomas, An Attempt to Discriminate the Styles of English Architecture, (London, 1817)Google Scholar.

101 Baily, ‘Rickman’, p. 168.

102 Saint, Architect and Engineer, pp. 74–75.

103 On the Effect which should result to Architecture, in regard to Design and Arrangement, from the general Introduction of Iron in the Construction of Buildings’: Architectural Magazine, 4 (1837), pp. 277–87 (p. 284)Google Scholar. The author signed himself ‘M’. Pickett's, William V. A New System of Architecture (London, 1845)Google Scholar, was urging the development of a new ‘system’ of architecture exploiting iron as the nineteenth century's contribution to architectural development. The text claims the system would have been equally applicable to secular and religious buildings, although the book contains no illustrations.

104 Eastlake, Charles L., The Gothic Revival (London, 1872), appendix, p. 63 Google Scholar.

105 A Few Words to Churchwardens (Towns) (Cambridge, 1841), p. 5 Google Scholar.