1839 in architecture
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Buildings and structures
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The year 1839 in architecture involved some significant architectural events and new buildings.
Events
- May - Cambridge Camden Society is established in England by John Mason Neale, Alexander Hope and Benjamin Webb to promote Gothic architecture.[1][2]
Buildings completed
- Ponce Cathedral, Puerto Rico
- St Mary's Church, Derby, England (Roman Catholic), designed by Augustus Pugin
- St Francis Xavier Church, Hereford, England (Roman Catholic), designed by Charles Day
- Halifax County Courthouse (Virginia), designed by Dabney Cosby
- Old Customshouse (Erie, Pennsylvania), designed by William Kelly
- Lyceum (Alexandria, Virginia)
- Åbo Svenska Teater, Åbo (Turku), Finland
- Pulkovo Observatory, Russia
- Söderarm, lighthouse, Sweden
- Nine Elms railway station, London, designed by William Tite
- Avon, Maidenhead and Moulsford Railway Bridges on the Great Western Railway of England, designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel
- Queen's Tower (Sheffield), England, a house designed by Woodhead & Hurst[3]
Awards
- Grand Prix de Rome, architecture: Hector Lefuel.
Births
- May 17 - Alexander Davidson, Scottish architect active in Australia (died 1908)
- June 13 - Ernest George, English architect and painter (died 1922)
- November 12 - Frank Furness, American architect (died 1912)
Deaths
- May 22 - William Atkinson, English Gothic Revival country house architect (born 1774/5)
- August 31 - William Wilkins, English architect, classical scholar and archaeologist (born 1778)
- November 15 - Giocondo Albertolli, Swiss-born architect, painter and sculptor active in Italy (born 1743)
References
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