Walter Green Penty

Walter Green Penty (19 June, 1852 – 23 January, 1902) was an architect working in York, England, and the father of Arthur Penty (1875–1937) and Frederick Thomas Penty (born 1879), both architects. He was born in Gate Fulford.[1]

Penty's first commission was the Burnholme Social Club in Heworth, York. He also designed the new Lighthorseman pub at the junction of Fulford Road and New Walk Terrace in the 1870s. A previous pub with that name on that site appears on the 1852 Ordnance Survey map of York. He designed Botterill's Horse Repository in Tanner's Moat (of which two arches survive) around 1880. This was a sort of 'garage' for horses of gentlemen who had ridden into the city to stay, possibly to go on the railway.[2] In the 1890s, Arthur joined his father to form the firm of Penty & Penty. Among other works, they built the Terry Memorial almshouses in Skeldergate in 1899, and a number of streets in the Clementhorpe area of York, before Arthur left the city to work in London.[3]

References

  1. Descendents of John Paintiff
  2. Peter Blackwood Brown, Views of York, 2012.
  3. Evans, Antonia (ed) (2002). The York Book. York: Blue Bridge. p. 187. ISBN 0-9542749-0-3.