Sir James Pennethorne (4 June 1801 – 1 September 1871) was a notable 19th century English architect and planner, particularly associated with buildings and parks in central London.
Contents |
Born in Worcester, Pennethorne travelled to London in 1820 to study architecture under, first, August Pugin and then John Nash. Pennethorne's father, Thomas was a first cousin of Nash's wife.[1]
In October 1824 he set off on a tour of France, Italy, and Sicily. At Rome he studied antiquities, and made a design for the restoration of the Forum, which he subsequently exhibited and was elected a member of the academy of St. Luke.
On his return to London, at the end of 1826, he entered the office of John Nash, and, as his principal assistant, directed the West Strand, King William Street, and other important improvements.[2], completing the Park Villages, East and West, in Regent's Park after Nash's death.[3]
In 1832 he was directly employed by the commissioners of her majesty's woods to prepare plans for further improvements in the capital. One of his aims was to form a great street running from the extreme east to the extreme west of London, but this proved too ambitious for the government. However four streets were constructed to modified versions of his plans: New Oxford Street, Endell Street , Cranbourn Street (a remnant of his ambitious east-west thoroughfare), and Commercial Street. In 1846 an act was obtained for the extension of Commercial Street from Spitalfields Church to Shoreditch, but this was not completed until 1858. In 1855 the newly formed Metropolitan Board of Works constructed Garrick Street, Southwark Street, Old Street to Shoreditch, and other thoroughfares from Pennethorne's earlier designs.
The Museum of Practical Geology, which also housed the offices and laboratories of the Geological Survey was built to Pennethorne's designs in 1847-9, on a long, narrow site with frontages in Piccadilly and Jermyn Street.It opened in 1851. [4] In 1847 he drew up designs for the Public Record Office in Fetter Lane. A much modified version of the scheme was adopted in 1850, though only portions of it were ever built. In 1848 he removed the colonnade of the Quadrant, Regent Street inserting balcony and mezzanine story. Between 1852 and 1856 he completed the west wing of William Chambers' Somerset House.
In 1852 he worked on improvements to Buckingham Palace and the area between St James's Park and the Royal Mews. His works at the palace included the ball-room, supper-room, and connecting galleries. On the south side of the palace he erected the Duchy of Cornwall office, the district post office, and other buildings.[2]
He was one of the architects invited, in 1862, to submit designs for a memorial to Prince Albert, but his suggestion for a monument in the form of a Classical mausoleum was rejected in favour of George Gilbert Scott's Gothic construction.[5]
His last work was for the University of London in Burlington Gardens. The adjoining Burlington House, in Piccadilly, had been acquired by the government on his advice, to accommodate the learned societies removed from Somerset House, and the Royal Academy. The plans for the University of London were approved in 1866, but underwent some modification.
Pennethorne was knighted, in recognition of his public services, in November 1870.[2]
His pupils included Henry Saxon Snell (1830–1904). His brother John Pennethorne (1808–1888) was also an architect.