Percy Richard Morley Horder

Photograph of Percy Morley Horder aged around 28 years.
Photograph of Percy Morley Horder aged around 55 years old.
This portrait hangs in the National Institute of Agricultural Biology in Cambridge, England. Percy Richard Morley Horder was the architect of the building, when it was opened by the King in 1921.

Percy Richard Morley Horder (18 November 1870 - 7 October 1944) was an English architect who specialised in English country houses but also laid out gardens such as Highfields Park, Nottingham. He worked in the Arts and Crafts style and was mainly active in Dorset and the Cotswolds. He was responsible for the Trent Building in the University of Nottingham.[1]

Biography

He was born in Torquay, the son of the Congregationalist minister, William Garrett Horder.[2]

Oeuvre

  • Court House
  • Greystock in Warwick
  • Mallory Court
  • Moonhill, Cuckfield, Surrey.
  • Nether Lypiatt Manor
  • Rockbeare House
  • Steeple Manor
  • Upton House
  • Waterston Manor
  • Winwick Manor[1]

References

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