Yeoville Thomason

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File:Birmingham Council House detail.jpg

File:Singers Hill Synagogue 82.jpg

File:The Union Club Birmingham.jpg

File:Yeoville Thomason, Kensal Green Cemetery.JPG

Henry Richard Yeoville Yardley Thomason (17 July 1826 – 19 July 1901) was a British architect active in Birmingham. He was born in Edinburgh to a Birmingham family, and set up his own practice in Birmingham 1853–54.{{cite web|title=Yeoville Thomason (1826-1901) |url=http://www.victorianweb.org/art/architecture/thomason/index.html |publisher=The Victoria Web |access-date=30 September 2014 }}

Life

Yeoville Thomason was a grandson of Sir Edward Thomason, a silversmith and medallist in Birmingham, and son of Henry Botfield Thomason and Elizabeth Yardley.{{citation needed|date=September 2014}}

He was a pupil of Charles Edge, and after qualifying as an architect he worked for the borough surveyor. He designed the Council House after winning a competition.

As architect to Birmingham, Dudley and District Banking Company he designed several bank buildings in the area.

He retired in 1896. He died in 1901 and is buried in Kensal Green Cemetery.

Significant works

He designed, amongst others:

  • In Birmingham:
  • The Council House and its immediate extension, the original Art Gallery, 1874–85, Grade II* listed{{NHLE |num=1210333 |desc=Council House |access-date=20 August 2006}}
  • Singers Hill Synagogue, 1856, Grade II* listed{{NHLE |num=1075712 |desc=Singers Hill Synagogue |access-date=20 August 2006}}
  • Great Hampton Works, 80–82 Great Hampton Street, Hockley, c 1880, Grade II* listed{{NHLE |num=1075544 |desc=Great Hampton Works |access-date=20 August 2006}}
  • Union Club, 85–89 Colmore Row, on the corner with Newhall Street, now called Bamford's Trust House, 1870, Grade II listed{{NHLE |num=1210201 |desc=Union Club |access-date=20 August 2006}} The new building was noted by the Illustrated London News in 1869.
  • Birmingham Banking Company, Bennetts Hill, Birmingham. Designed new entrance in 1868. Became Midland Bank.Birmingham, Douglas Hickman, 1970 Studio Vista. p25 Grade II listed{{NHLE |num=1075753 |desc=Birmingham Banking Company |access-date=20 August 2006}}
  • 38 Benetts Hill, 1868–70, Grade II listed{{NHLE |num=1075754 |desc=38 Benetts Hill |access-date=20 August 2006}}
  • Highcroft Hospital, Main Building, Highcroft Road, Erdington (former Aston Union Workhouse). 1869, Grade II listed{{NHLE |num=1351967 |desc=Highcroft Hospital |access-date=20 August 2006}}{{NHLE |num=1351968 |desc=Highcroft Hospital front entrance |access-date=20 August 2006}}
  • Birmingham Town and District Bank, 63 Colmore Row, Birmingham. (1867–69) Head Office later to become part of Barclays Bank, facade later remodelled by Peacock and Bewlay.Birmingham, Douglas Hickman, 1970 Studio Vista. p35
  • Lewis's department store, Corporation Street, 1886, (demolished 1929 and replaced by a seven storey building), Birmingham's first iron and concrete buildingBirmingham Buildings, The Architectural Story of a Midland City, Bryan Little, 1971, {{ISBN|0-7153-5295-4}}
  • Acocks Green Chapel, Warwick Green, Acocks Green, 1860 (closed in 1956).
  • St Asaph's Church, Birmingham 1868 (demolished 1961)
  • St John the Baptist's church, Harborne (destroyed by enemy action, 1941)
  • Elsewhere:
  • Public Hall, High Street, Smethwick, (1866–67), now the Public Library.The Buildings of England: Worcestershire, Nikolaus Pevsner, 1968 Penguin. p81

References

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