Francis Johnson (architect)

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See Francis Johnston (architect) for Irish architect of similar name.

Francis Johnson was the subject of a monograph in 2001 as well as an exhibition at the RIBA.
Francis Johnson was the subject of a monograph in 2001 as well as an exhibition at the RIBA.

Francis Frederick Johnson CBE, (18 April 1911-29 September 1995), was an English architect.

Contents

[edit] Education and Early career

Johnson trained at the Leeds School of Architecture. He toured Europe in 1931 on a travelling scholarship before going to work for Allderidge & Clark in Hull. He began his own practice in 1937 in his home town of Bridlington, East Riding of Yorkshire. His career was interrupted by the Second World War and he served in the Royal Engineers from 1943 to 1946.

[edit] Work

Francis Johnson’s favoured field of work was domestic architecture and he is particularly known for his country houses in the Georgian style. He designed a number of churches in the post war period for clients including the Church of England Commissioners; these simple buildings often show the influence of the Scandinavian classical architecture he had admired on his European tour.

Francis Johnson also restored and remodelled a large number of historic buildings including Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, Belton House, Lincolnshire, Burton Agnes Hall and Fairfax House[1], York. In his approach to restoration, involving detailed research into the original colour schemes of buildings, he was ahead of his time in the 1960s.

[edit] Churches

[edit] Private Houses

[edit] Other

[edit] References

John Martin Robinson & David Neave, (2001), Francis Johnson Architect, Oblong Creative, ISBN 978-0953657438.

Nikolaus Pevsner & David Neave, (1972, 2nd Ed. 1995), Yorkshire: York and the East Riding: The Buildings of England, ISBN 0-300-09593-7.

[edit] External links