W. N. Ashbee
William Neville Ashbee (1852 – 30 April 1919[1]) was a railway architect, notable for stations on the Great Eastern Railway, including the London terminus at Liverpool Street Station.
Career
Ashbee was articled as an architect to Alfred Maberley, the Diocesan Surveyor for Gloucester (the place of his birth). He became an associate in 1881 and a fellow in 1890 of the Royal Institute of British Architects.[2]
In 1874 he joined the engineering firm of Edward Wilson & Co working on the construction of Liverpool Street Station and, while with the firm, designed most of the new Great Eastern Railway stations built in that period, working with John Wilson as engineer. In 1883 Wilson resigned from the firm to join the GER as chief engineer and Ashbee followed him.[2]
Ashbee was appointed as the head of the architectural department of the GER in 1883, a position he held until 1916.[3] His major early work after appointment was the elaborate Norwich Thorpe station, built in 1884–6 in a "Free Renaissance" style. He later worked with John Wilson as the architect for the 1894 expansion of Liverpool Street Station, built in neo Tudor style.[3]
Following his appointment to the GER in 1883 Ashbee started to adopt the "Domestic Revival" style of architecture which had been used by the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway on its new lines in Sussex in the early 1880s. His earliest work in this style was the Up Side at Ingatestone railway station in 1884/5, followed by Wivenhoe and Frinton stations in 1886 and 1888.[2]
Ashbee was the creator of the New Essex style, later known as the Ashbee style; this was named after the 15 stations which Ashbee designed for the Shenfield to Southend Line and the Crouch Valley Line, the so-called "New Essex" lines, which were opened in 1888/9. These reflected a standardisation of his Domestic Revival style across several common plans, characterized by red brick, tiled gables and elaborate timber canopies.[2] Trimley railway station was one of only two stations outside Essex to be built in this style.[4] The brick and gables often featured also on the cottages built close to stations for their staff.
His smaller stations of the 1890s were however plainer in style, although red brick remained a feature, while other stations of this decade, such as Chappel and Buckhurst Hill, were quite different. He returned however to the more elaborate style closely related to the New Essex style for his work in the early 1900s on the Yarmouth–Lowestoft Line and Fairlop Loop.[2]
Wolferton station was built to serve the Royal Family’s Sandringham estate and included a suite of Tudor-style royal reception and retiring rooms as well as a spacious carriage dock and a small gasworks, which lit the entire station.[5]
Stations by Ashbee
Notable stations
Ashbee was responsible for many stations on the Great Eastern Railway, some of which are now listed buildings. His more notable works include:
- * Liverpool Street (1896)[3]
New Essex stations
Shenfield to Southend Line
The stations on this line are still substantially as built by Ashbee:[2]
Crouch Valley Line
Most of the original Ashbee buildings on this line were demolished in 1968, although some parts of Burnham and Southminster remain:[2]
Fairlop Loop
Six original stations on the Fairlop Loop of the Central Line, but originally part of the Great Eastern, were designed by Ashbee:
Personal
Ashbee was living at Rose Valley House in Brentwood, Essex at the time of his death in April 1919.[1]
References
- 1 2 Find a Will UK - Government Probate Search, accessed 31 August 2015
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Kay, Peter (2006). Essex Railway Heritage. Wivenhoe UK: Peter Kay. pp. 28–29. ISBN 978 1 899890 40 8.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Conserving the Railway Heritage, p178, eds Peter Burmann & Michael Stratton, accessed 31 August 2015
- ↑ Trimley Station Community Trust: History, accessed 31 August 2015
- ↑ Ten Great English Railway Stations, accessed 31 August 2015
- ↑
- British Listed Buildings - Hertford East Station, accessed 31 August 2015
- ↑ Labyrinth: A Journey Through London's Underground by Mark Wallinger, p179, accessed 31 August 2015