In 1889, while working as a draughtsman in the office of the Queensland Colonial Architect, Henry Atkinson submitted an entry into a competition for a new Head Fire Station on the corner of Ann and Edward Streets in Brisbane. Having won the competition, he left the Queensland Public Service and started his own private practice. The Head Fire Station was completed in December 1890 but has since been demolished. However, his architectural practice has continued through a series of partnerships.[1][2]
In 1907, he took Charles McLay as his partner creating Atkinson and McLay.[3] That partnership lasted until 1918, when McLay died. Atkinson then partnered with Arnold Henry Conrad (who had joined the firm in 1907) to create Atkinson and Conrad which lasted from 1918 until 1939 (Atkinson having died in 1938).[4]
In 2015, the practice founded by Henry Atkinson is known as Conrad Gargett.[2]
^ abConrad Gargett; Hitch, John; Dods, Robin; Hall, T. R.; Krubers, L.; Job, Aubrey Horswill; Conrad, Arnold Henry; Gargett, Thomas Brenan Femester; Atkinson, H. W.; McLay, Charles H.; Kershaw, John; Voller, R. W.; Leven, J. F.; McPhee, J. D.; Finch, F. P.; Watson, R. J.; Fulton, C. W. T.; Collin, James Musgrave; Rylance, Mervyn Hamilton; Sapsford, Thomas S.; Cook, Harold Morton; Hall, Francis Richard; Frost, K.; Herman, Morton; et al. (1893), Architectural drawings, [1893-1986], archived from the original on 22 December 2020, retrieved 21 December 2014