Yeoville Thomason
Birmingham Council House
Singers Hill Synagogue
The Union Club, Bamford's Trust House, 85-89 Colmore Row//Newhall Street
Monument, Kensal Green Cemetery
Henry Richard Yeoville Yardley Thomason (17 July 1826 – 19 July 1901) was a British architect active in Birmingham . He was born in Edinburgh to a Birmingham family, and set up his own practice in Birmingham 1853–54.[ 1]
Life
Yeoville Thomason was a grandson of Sir Edward Thomason , a silversmith and medallist in Birmingham, and son of Henry Botfield Thomason and Elizabeth Yardley.[citation needed ]
He was a pupil of Charles Edge , and after qualifying as an architect he worked for the borough surveyor. He designed the Council House after winning a competition.
As architect to Birmingham, Dudley and District Banking Company he designed several bank buildings in the area.[ 1]
He retired in 1896. He died in 1901 and is buried in Kensal Green Cemetery .
Significant works
He designed, amongst others:
In Birmingham:
The Council House and its immediate extension, the original Art Gallery, 1874–85, Grade II* listed [ 2]
Singers Hill Synagogue , 1856, Grade II* listed[ 3]
Great Hampton Works, 80–82 Great Hampton Street, Hockley , c 1880, Grade II* listed[ 4]
Union Club, 85–89 Colmore Row , on the corner with Newhall Street , now called Bamford's Trust House, 1870, Grade II listed[ 5] The new building was noted by the Illustrated London News in 1869.
Birmingham Banking Company , Bennetts Hill, Birmingham. Designed new entrance in 1868. Became Midland Bank .[ 6] Grade II listed[ 7]
38 Benetts Hill, 1868–70, Grade II listed[ 8]
Highcroft Hospital, Main Building, Highcroft Road, Erdington (former Aston Union Workhouse). 1869, Grade II listed[ 9] [ 10]
Birmingham Town and District Bank, 63 Colmore Row , Birmingham. (1867–69) Head Office later to become part of Barclays Bank , facade later remodelled by Peacock and Bewlay .[ 11]
Lewis's department store, Corporation Street , 1886, (demolished 1929 and replaced by a seven storey building), Birmingham's first iron and concrete building[ 12]
Acocks Green Chapel, Warwick Green, Acocks Green , 1860 (closed in 1956).
St Asaph's Church, Birmingham 1868 (demolished 1961)
St John the Baptist's church, Harborne (destroyed by enemy action, 1941)
Elsewhere:
Public Hall, High Street, Smethwick , (1866–67), now the Public Library.[ 13]
References
^ a b "Yeoville Thomason (1826-1901)" . The Victoria Web. Retrieved 30 September 2014 .
^ Historic England . "Council House (1210333)" . National Heritage List for England . Retrieved 20 August 2006 .
^ Historic England . "Singers Hill Synagogue (1075712)" . National Heritage List for England . Retrieved 20 August 2006 .
^ Historic England . "Great Hampton Works (1075544)" . National Heritage List for England . Retrieved 20 August 2006 .
^ Historic England . "Union Club (1210201)" . National Heritage List for England . Retrieved 20 August 2006 .
^ Birmingham , Douglas Hickman, 1970 Studio Vista. p25
^ Historic England . "Birmingham Banking Company (1075753)" . National Heritage List for England . Retrieved 20 August 2006 .
^ Historic England . "38 Benetts Hill (1075754)" . National Heritage List for England . Retrieved 20 August 2006 .
^ Historic England . "Highcroft Hospital (1351967)" . National Heritage List for England . Retrieved 20 August 2006 .
^ Historic England . "Highcroft Hospital front entrance (1351968)" . National Heritage List for England . Retrieved 20 August 2006 .
^ Birmingham , Douglas Hickman, 1970 Studio Vista. p35
^ Birmingham Buildings, The Architectural Story of a Midland City , Bryan Little, 1971, ISBN 0-7153-5295-4
^ The Buildings of England: Worcestershire , Nikolaus Pevsner, 1968 Penguin. p81
External links
International Artists People