Thomas Archer
{{Short description|English Baroque architect}}
{{other people}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{Use British English|date=June 2023}}
{{Infobox architect
|name=Thomas Archer
|image = Thomas Archer architect.jpg
|nationality=English
|birth_date={{circa|1668}}
|birth_place=
|death_date={{death date|1743|5|22||df=yes}}
|significant_buildings=St. Paul's, Deptford
St John's, Smith Square
St Philip's Cathedral
North Front & Cascade Chatsworth House
Heythrop Park
Garden pavilion Wrest Park}}
Thomas Archer (1668–1743) was an English Baroque architect. His buildings are important as the only ones by an English Baroque architect to show evidence of study of contemporary continental, namely Italian, architecture.{{Cite book|title=Oxford illustrated encyclopedia|date=1985–1993|publisher=Oxford University Press|others=Judge, Harry George., Toyne, Anthony.|isbn=0-19-869129-7|location=Oxford [England]|pages=21|oclc=11814265}}
It is said that his work is somewhat overshadowed by that of his contemporaries Sir John Vanbrugh and Nicholas Hawksmoor.
Life
Archer spent his youth at Umberslade Hall in Tanworth-in-Arden in Warwickshire, the youngest son of Thomas Archer, a country gentleman, Parliamentary Colonel and Member of Parliament, and Ann Leigh, daughter of the London haberdasher, Richard Leigh.The Little London Directory of 1677: the oldest printed list of the merchants and bankers of London. Edited by John
Camden Hotton, 1863. A reprint of A Collection of the Names of Merchants living in and about the City of London, 11 October 1677, under licence from Roger L'Estrange. Richard Leigh and his wife Mary had six children, of which Ann was the eldest. The family lived in the parish of St. Helen's Bishopgate. Ann married Thomas Archer, the architect's father in 1649 in the parish of St. Peter-le-Poor. The exact date of Archer's birth is unknown, but can be inferred from the two documentary sources that mention his age. One is an entry in the Oxford University register recording his matriculation at Trinity College on 12 June 1686, aged 17; the other, his epitaph, survives in the parish church of Hale, Hampshire. If these records are accurate, he must have been born between 12 June 1668 and 22 May 1669. Thomas is the only one of the Archer children not to have his birth recorded in the Tamworth-in-Arden parish register, which suggests he may have been born elsewhere.Joseph Foster, Alumni Oxonienses: The Members of the University of Oxford, 1500–1714 (Oxford: James Parker & Co., 189 1). Marcus Whiffen, Thomas Archer, vol. 3 (London: Art and Technics, 1950). Marcus Whiffen, Thomas Archer, architect of the English baroque, [New ed.] ed. (Los Angeles: Hennessey & Ingalls, 1973). He attended Trinity College, Oxford, from which he matriculated on 12 June 1686.page 10, Thomas Archer Architect of the English Baroque, Marcus Whiffen, 1973, Art and Technics After leaving university, he went on a Grand Tour, spending four years abroad and was influenced by the work of Bernini and Borromini.
Churches
Among Archer's churches was St John Evangelist, Westminster, suggestive of Hawksmoor's baroque influence. Its four towers were originally built to stabilise subsidence. Historians believed that was more likely than following Sir John Vanbrgh's style. Built in 1750, St Paul's, Deptford, sweeping semi-circular porticos were not copied for a century until Smirke's magnificent church at St Mary's, Bryanston Square that dominated the street. At St Philip's, Birmingham, now Birmingham Cathedral there was a strong sense of the Italianate Lombardic influences of High Baroque style of churches: ornate, high ceilings, with cupola and dome. External to St Philips is the roof balustrade quite unusual in English church architecture.G.Cobb, The Old Churches of London (1942), p.96 St John's and St Paul's were both built for the Commission for Building Fifty New Churches. John Summerson said these two buildings "represent the most advanced Baroque style ever attempted in England". According to the minutes of the Commissioners, Archer also "improved" Hawksmoor's designs for St Alfege's at Greenwich, although the nature of the improvements, or whether they were implemented, is unknown.{{cite book |last1=Downes|first1=Kerry |title=Hawksmoor |series=World of Art |year=1987 |orig-year=first published 1970 |publisher= Thames and Hudson|location=London |pages= 110–11}} Downes suggests the use of the giant order of pilasters around the church may have been Archer's idea.
At Hale, Hampshire, he remodelled St Mary's Church, which also contains his memorial, carved by Sir Henry Cheere to Archer's own design.{{cite web|title = The Puzzle of St Mary's Church – Hale|publisher = Judith Leigh |url=http://www.buildingconservation.com/articles/stmaryschurch/stmarys.htm}}{{efn| Brian L. Harris seems to disagree with this assessment. He believes in Guide to Churches and Cathedrals the carving was done by Peter Schiemaker (1692-1786)}}
Secular works
Archer's secular works included Roehampton House, Welford Park in Berkshire, and the Cascade House and the west front and broadly bowed pilastered north front at Chatsworth House. In 1709–11 Archer designed a Baroque garden pavilion for Henry Grey, 1st Duke of Kent at Wrest Park, Silsoe, Bedfordshire. After 1712 Archer designed Hurstbourne Priors in Hampshire for John Wallop (later Earl of Portsmouth).
He was a founding governor of the Foundling Hospital in London in 1739, but was not involved in the construction of the resulting building, completed {{circa|1750}}. The architect for that project was Theodore Jacobsen.
Documented works
- Chatsworth House, North front, Derbyshire, {{circa|1705}}
- Heythrop Hall, Oxfordshire, {{circa|1705}}
- St Philip's, Birmingham, 1708–1715
- Garden pavilion, Wrest Park, Bedfordshire, 1709–1711
- Roehampton House, Surrey, 1712
- Cliveden House, Service pavilions and the quadrant colonnades, Buckinghamshire
- Hurstbourne Priors, Hampshire, 1712
- St John’s, Smith Square, London, 1713–1728
- St. Paul's, Deptford, 1712–1730
- Hale Park, Hampshire, 1715, designed for himself.
- St Mary’s Church, additions, Hale, Hampshire, 1717
- Harcourt House, Cavendish Square, London, 1722
Attributed works
- Welford Park, remodelling of house, Berkshire, 1700
- Chicheley Hall, Buckinghamshire, {{circa|1703}}
- Parish church, chancel, Chicheley, 1708
- Addiscombe House, Croydon, Surrey, {{circa|1703}}
- Monmouth House, Soho Square, London, 1703
- Russell House, King Street, Covent Garden, London, {{circa|1704}}
- Cascade House, Chatsworth House, Derbyshire, 1705
- Hill House, Cain Hill, Wrest Park, Bedfordshire, {{circa|1710}}, demolished
- Bramham Park, Yorkshire, {{circa|1710}}
- Kingston Maurward, Dorset, 1717–1720
- Marlow Place, Buckinghamshire, 1720
- Chettle House, Dorset, {{circa|1730}}
- Monument to Susannah Thomas, Hampton Church, Middlesex, {{circa|1731}}
- Archer Memorial, St Mary’s Church, Hale, Hampshire
- Thomas Archer (his father) monument, St Mary Magdalene's Church, Tanworth-in-Arden, Warwickshire
Gallery
File:St Johns Concert Hall.jpg|St. John's, Smith Square
File:St john smith.jpg|St. John's, Smith Square
File:ArcherPavilion3.jpg|Thomas Archer's garden pavilion at Wrest Park, 2007
File:St Philips Cathedral, Birmingham from the east.jpg|St. Philip's Cathedral, Birmingham
File:St Phillips Cathedral -Birmingham -UK.jpg|St. Philip's Cathedral, Birmingham, west front
File:St Paul Deptford4.jpg|St Paul's Deptford
File:St Paul Deptford2.jpg|St Paul's Deptford, east side
File:St Paul Deptford3.jpg|St Paul's Deptford, north side
File:The Cascade Building Chatsworth House.jpg|Cascade House Chatsworth
File:Chatsworth House 05.jpg|Chatsworth North Front
File:Heythrop ParkFlip.jpg|Heythrop Hall
File:Bramham Park.jpg|Bramham Park
File:BranhamParkJonesViews1829.jpg|Bramham Park
File:Kingston Maurward 1.jpg|Kingston Maurward House
File:CliveGardenFrontVitruviusBritannicus edited.jpg|Cliveden House
File:Roehampton elev Vit Brit edited.jpg|Roehampton House
Notes
{{notelist}}
References
{{Reflist}}
Further reading
- Andor Gomme, ‘Archer, Thomas (1668/9–1743)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, (Oxford University Press, September 2004; online edn, January 2008) [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/628], accessed 8 November 2008.
- Whiffen, Marcus:Thomas Archer: Architect of the English Baroque,
- Hennessey & Ingalls, Santa Monica 1973, {{ISBN|0-912158-23-9}}
External links
{{commons category|Thomas Archer}}
- [http://www.britainexpress.com/History/bio/archer.htm Thomas Archer]
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{{succession box | before=William Rowley | title=Groom Porter |
years=1705–1743 | after=Charles FitzRoy}}
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Category:Alumni of Trinity College, Oxford
Category:18th-century English architects
Category:English Baroque architects
Category:English ecclesiastical architects
Category:People from Tanworth-in-Arden
Category:Architects of cathedrals