Frederick Strouts
{{Short description|New Zealand architect}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2014}}
{{Use New Zealand English|date=May 2014}}
File:Ivey Hall, Lincoln University, New Zealand.jpg
Frederick Strouts (1834 – 18 December 1919) was a notable New Zealand architect. He was born in Hothfield, Kent, England in 1834. He arrived in Lyttelton in 1859 and lived in Christchurch. Notable buildings include Ivey Hall at Lincoln University, the Canterbury Club building, the Lyttelton Harbour Board building, the Rhodes Convalescent Home in Cashmere, Strowan House (now part of St Andrew's College), and Otahuna homestead on Banks Peninsula. He was supervising architect at the Church of St Michael and All Angels in Christchurch.{{DNZB|title=Frederick Strouts|first= Jonathan|last= Mane-Wheoki|id=2s49|accessdate=23 April 2017}} Strouts took on Cecil Wood in 1893 when Wood was 15 years of age.{{DNZB|Helms|Ruth M.|4w25|Wood, Cecil Walter|29 January 2022}}
References
{{Reflist}}
Further reading
- {{cite book |last1= Mew |first1= Geoff |last2= Humphris |first2= Adrian |year= 2020 |title= Architects at the Apex: The Top 50 in New Zealand 1840–1940 |location= Martinborough |publisher= Ngaio Press |type= Softcover |isbn= 978-0-9941349-4-3}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Strouts, Frederick}}
Category:English emigrants to New Zealand
Category:People from Hothfield
Category:19th-century New Zealand architects
Category:Architects from Christchurch
{{NewZealand-architect-stub}}