Purcell Miller Tritton, National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty
Corinne Marie Gillian BennettMBE (3 March 1935 – 10 July 2010)[1] was an English conservation architect. She worked on the restoration and preservation of many historic buildings in England throughout her career, including Winchester Cathedral and the Royal Pavilion. She worked for the National Trust in the 1980s and became the first national cathedrals architect for English Heritage in 1991.
Early life
Bennett was born Corinne Marie Wilson in London in 1935.[2] Her father Gilbert was a professor of geology at Imperial College London and her mother Lucile was French Canadian.[1] She was evacuated with her mother and younger brother to Montreal during World War II, and returned to England in 1944.[2][1] She attended the Sacred Heart convent school in Hove.
She had decided by the age of 12 to pursue a career in the preservation and repair of historic monuments and buildings, and a male teacher was specially hired by the convent to conduct drawing lessons for Bennett.[2]
She attended University College London's Bartlett School of Architecture from 1952 to 1957.[1]
Bennett began working for Purcell Miller Tritton in 1968, for whom she completed her first cathedral-repair project on Ely Cathedral. After she was made a senior partner at the Purcell Miller Tritton firm, she opened a branch office at Sevenoaks, Kent. In 1974 she commenced a 15-year-long project of restoration work on Winchester Cathedral, thereby becoming the first woman to be a consultant architect to an English cathedral.[1]
In 1991 Bennett joined English Heritage as the national cathedrals architect—the first person to hold the position[1]—and retired from most of her other duties.[3] She was also the representative for English Heritage on the Cathedrals Fabric Commission from 1996 to 2006.[1] Other committees in which she was involved in her later career included the fabric committees at St George's Cathedral, Southwark, and Chichester Cathedral, and the art and architecture committee of Westminster Cathedral.[2]
Bennett was a Roman Catholic. She married Keith Bennett, another conservation architect, in 1979. She and her husband were frequent visitors to Corsica and were the only English members of the island's historical organisation, Fédération d'Associations et Groupements pour les Etudes Corses.[2] They lived for most of their married life in the village of Michelmersh and later moved to Brighton and Hove.[4]