Thomas Rowe

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Thomas Rowe (20 July 1829 - 7 March 1899), was one of Australia's leading architects of the Victorian era.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Thomas Rowe was born in Penzance, Cornwall, England, the eldest son of Richard Rowe and attended Barnes Academy. At 15 he became a draftsman in his father's building business before the family emigrated to Australia in 1848. From 1857 until 1895 he practised as an architect in Sydney, Bathurst, Orange, Newcastle and Goulburn. He was often successful in competitions and his firms built commercial premises, large houses and many Methodist churches. Rowe Street in Sydney is named after him.

[edit] Key works

Sydney Hospital, Macquarie Street, Sydney
Sydney Hospital, Macquarie Street, Sydney

[edit] Architectural Partners

  • W B Field
  • Sydney Green
  • Alfred Spain

[edit] References

Founders' Wing, Newington College
Founders' Wing, Newington College
  • M Berry, A History of Colonel Thomas Rowe (B Arch thesis, UNSW, 1969)
  • J M Freeland, Architect Extraordinary (Melb, 1970)
  • J M Freeland, The Making of a Profession (Syd, 1971)
  • J M Freeland, Thomas Rowe, pp 68-69, Volume 6, Australian Dictionary of Biography (MUP, 1976)