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The new Law Courts competition, 1866-67
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 April 2016
Extract
It is just a century since an architectural competition was held for building new courts of justice in London, and it may be an appropriate moment to re-examine the history of that unfortunate episode. Only forty-two years earlier a new range of law courts had been completed at Westminster to the designs of Sir John Soane (1753-1837). Because of interference by the House of Commons, these courts proved inadequate from the start. A difficult task had been imposed on Soane: Westminster Hall had for centuries been the seat of the courts of law; and when it became necessary to provide more adequately for the needs of justice in the early 1820s, enthusiasm for tradition and legal conservatism combined to demand that the new courts should be as close as possible to the Hall. A restricted site to the north-west was available as a result of the demolition of the old Exchequer Buildings.
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- Copyright © Society of Architectural Historians of Great Britain 1968
References
Notes
1 Soane, J., Designs for Public Improvements (1827), pp.8–10.Google Scholar
2 Parliamentary Papers, 1860, xxxi Google Scholar, Report of Commissioners to inquire into concentration of superior courts of law and equity, p. 230.
3 Selborne, Lord, Memorials Personal and Political, i (1898), p. 23.Google Scholar
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5 Parl. Pap., 1845, xii, pp.5 et seq.Google Scholar
6 Parl. Pap., 1861, xiv, Select Committee on Courts of Justice Building (Money) Bill.Google Scholar
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8 Public Record Office, Works 12/34 (4), ff.1-8.
9 Atlay, J. B., The Victorian Chancellors, ii (1908), p.256 Google Scholar; Nash, T. A., Life of Richard Lord Westbury, ii (1888), p. 45.Google Scholar
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11 PRO, Works 12/32/4, f. 10.
12 Report, Parl. Pap., 1860, xxxi.Google Scholar The further fusing of common law and equity by legislation of that year made the step still more desirable.
13 ibid., p.x.
14 ibid., p.v.
15 British Museum, Add. MS. 44337, ff. 187–191.
16 ibid., 44636, ff.55-58.
17 ibid., 44337, f. 197.
18 Nash, , Westbury, ii, p. 45.Google Scholar The Museum Trustees were urging the Government to provide a separate museum for their natural history collections.
19 PRO Works 12/32/5.
20 ibid., 12/30(4), ff. 1–207.
21 BM, Add. MS. 44599, ff.29–42.
22 Selborne, , Memorials Personal and Political, i, p. 24 Google Scholar; Atlay, , Victorian Chancellors, ii, p. 428.Google Scholar
23 Quoted, Nash, , Westbury, ii, p. 100.Google Scholar
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25 Scott, George Gilbert, Personal and Professional Recollections (1879), p. 273.Google Scholar
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30 Athenaeum, 1867, p. 162.Google ScholarPubMed
31 Lockwood, , Report on a design for the Concentration of the Law Courts (1867), p. 14.Google Scholar Lockwood had been the first to apply for inclusion in the competition (23 Feb. 1865) and the only one chosen from those whose applications are extant, PRO, Works 12/33 (1).
32 e.g. ‘Remarks on the album of Villard de Honnecourt', R.I.B.A. Transactions, 1858-59.Google Scholar
33 Parl. Deb., 3 ser., clxxxv, 814–823 (22 Feb. 1867).Google Scholar The belief that Gothic was the predetermined style is mentioned in Builder, xxv (1867), p. 109,Google Scholar and Building News, xiv (1867), p. 58 Google Scholar (where the commission was critized for not choosing the twelve best Goths).
34 PRO, Works 12/33 (1), f.20; Spectator, 1867, p.212.
35 BM, Add. MS. 44607, ff.61-62.
36 Each competitor submitted remarks (frequently illustrated) on his designs to the commissioners, and these were published during 1867.1 have based this and the following paragraphs on these remarks, as well as the lithographed sets of plans.
37 Spectator, 23 Feb. 1867, in which all designs were reviewed. The Building News declined to take any notice of Abraham's design.
38 Building News, xiv (1867), p. 153.Google Scholar
39 Quoted by Hitchcock, H.-R., Early Victorian Architecture in Britain, i (1954), p. 606.Google Scholar
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44 Building News, xiv (1867), p. 186 Google Scholar; Builder, xxv (1867), pp.69, 108.Google Scholar
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52 Parl. Pap., 1868-69, xlvii, p.681.Google Scholar
53 ibid.
54 PRO, Works 17/13/15, Minutes of Judges, 18 Feb. 1868.
55 Parl. Deb., 3 ser., cxciii, 342, 29 June 1868.Google Scholar
56 PRO, Works 12/33 (1), ff.83–90; The Times, 15 June 1868.
57 ‘… after my recent experience, it would surprise me little if I were to find that the whole thing has been put forward only as a blind to be withdrawn as soon as it has served its purpose’ (Barry to A. H. Layard MP, 13 July 1868, BM, Add. MS. 38995, f.247).
58 BM, Add. MS. 38995, f.233; Parl. Deb., 3 ser., cxciii, 324–343, 29 June 1868.Google Scholar
59 Recollections, p. 276.
60 Street, A. E., Memoir, p. 175.Google Scholar
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