Henry Currey (architect)

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Henry Currey (18201900) was an English architect and surveyor.

Family life

He was born in October 1820, the third son of a solicitor, Benjamin Currey of Old Palace Yard, Westminster. He married Emily Harriet Rugge-Price in Spring Grove, London on 2 April 1845. Emily, born in 1818 and two years Henry's senior, was the daughter of Sir Charles Rugge-Price. There were four children from the marriage: Annette, Charles, Henrietta and Percival, who also became an architect.[1]

Education and work

Educated at Dr Pinckney's School at East Sheen and at Eton College, where he rowed in the school eight against Westminster, Currey was articled to the architect Decimus Burton for five years. He then worked for five years at the office of William Cubitt (1791–1863) and Company of Gray's Inn Road, London. His first medical works were for the Surrey Lunatic Asylum, and soon after, in 1847, he was appointed as the architect and surveyor to the governors of St Thomas' Hospital, a post he held until his death.[2] In this post he designed the new hospital, built in the 'pavilion style',[3] which opened on the Albert Embankment by Westminster Bridge in 1871, including a teaching hospital and a nursing school to a design approved by Florence Nightingale. He was also the architect and surveyor to Coram's Foundling Hospital and to the Magdalen Hospital in London.

Other notable works include:

  • the hotel at London Bridge Station, 1861-2, a grand 250-room terminus hotel built at a cost of £111,000, later turned into offices for the LBSCR in 1892 and demolished after bomb damage in 1941
  • the Pump Room at Buxton, 1875 and the nearby Natural Baths.

He was a Fellow of the RIBA from 1856 and became its vice-president in 1874-7 and 1889-93. He was also a fellow of the Surveyors' Institute (now the RICS) and an associate of the Institute of Civil Engineers.

Work at Eastbourne

Henry Currey’s Grade II listed Devonshire Park Theatre in Eastbourne
In 1859, he was appointed by the 7th Duke of Devonshire, the owner of many buildings and much land in Eastbourne, to replace his former architect, James Berry. In 1870, he designed the original College House for Eastbourne College, a project which was followed three years later by drawings for the chapel, and in 1879 Currey was to design the school's Cavendish Library. The gables and dormer windows of many of the large houses in the same part of Eastbourne (now known locally as 'Lower Meads') also bear witness to his style of architecture. Between 1874 and 1875, he designed the Winter Garden and Pavilion in Devonshire Park, both of which are now Grade II listed buildings. Nearby is the Devonshire Park Theatre, in Italianate style, a building which was influenced by his travels to Italy in the early 1860s. The Queen's Hotel on Marine Parade was his largest single project in the town. The building took a mere 11 months to erect and opened for guests in June 1880. The hotel stands in a prominent position opposite the pier and enjoys easterly views to Hastings and to Beachy Head in the west. His Kentish ragstone and Bath Stone St Peter's, again in the 'Lower Meads' area of the town, was completed in 1895 in English Style and could accommodate 800 worshippers. It was, however, made redundant and demolished in 1971.[1][4]

Death and interment

He died at his home, The Chestnuts, Lawrie Park, Sydenham on 23 November 1900 and was buried in West Norwood Cemetery.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Robertson, Dave (Summer 2009). "Henry Currey FRIBA (1820 - 1900)". Eastbourne Local Historian (152): 13–15. 
  2. http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-204399-block-9-of-st-thomas-s-hospital-medical-
  3. Cook, GC (2002). "Henry Currey FRIBA (1820–1900): leading Victorian hospital architect, and early exponent of the "pavilion principle"". Post Graduate Medical Journal 78 (920): 352–359. PMC 1742402. PMID 12151691. Retrieved 2011-12-31. 
  4. See the list of demolished places of worship in East Sussex at

External links

  • For more about Henry Currey (in particular his hospital buildings) see
  • For more about St Thomas's Hospital see British History Online at
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