Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-xbtfd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-19T15:28:51.991Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

E. Bassett Keeling, architect

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 April 2016

Extract

Much has been written concerning those Victorian architects who, for one reason or another, have been considered seriously by scholars and critics. A great deal of the fabric of Victorian cities, however, was designed by men who have been largely dismissed by commentators. This paper considers the career of one of those placed by Goodhart-Rendel in the category of ‘Rogue Architects’. The story is in many ways a tragic one, and is perhaps not atypical of many other architects in the nineteenth century.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Society of Architectural Historians of Great Britain 1973

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1Baptisms register of the Sans Street Wesleyan Methodist chapel. Information kindly provided by Dr W. A. L. Seaman, Durham County Archivist.Google Scholar
2Minutes of Sans Street Leaders’ Meeting; Durham County archives.Google Scholar
3Minutes of the Sunderland Circuit Quarterly Meeting, Durham County archives.Google Scholar
4Information kindly provided by Mrs. A. D. Fell, Assistant Librarian, Leeds Polytechnic.Google Scholar
5 The Architect, 19 November 1886.Google Scholar
6RIBA archives. Keeling's registration number was 1834,82. His name apappears in Notices and Proceedings of 1859–60 and 1871–72.Google Scholar
7Marriage certificate, Somerset House, London.Google Scholar
8 Building News, 23 December 1864, p. 952; The Builder, 1 January 1865, p. 18.Google Scholar
9 The Builder, 1 November 1862, p. 790; 5 December 1863, p. 866.Google Scholar
10In 1972.Google Scholar
11 The Builder, 1 November 1962, p. 790.Google Scholar
12 Building News, 13 August 1869, p. 121.Google Scholar
13 Building News, 18 September 1863, p.716.Google Scholar
14 Pepperell, W., The Church Index (1872), pp.3334.Google Scholar
15 Building News, 22 July 1864, p. 560.Google Scholar
17 Pepperell, , op. cit.Google Scholar
18 Pepperell, , op. cit., p. 4.Google Scholar
19Information kindly provided by the present incumbent, the Rev. Jeremy Sampson.Google Scholar
20 The Times, 11 February 1864, p. 10; Building News, 12 February 1864, p. 121. The case, Keeling v. The Brighton Club & Norfolk Hotel Co. Ltd, was heard at the Court of Common Pleas, Westminster, before Lord Chief Justice Earl.Google Scholar
21 Building News, 12 February 1864, p. 121.Google Scholar
22 ibid., 20 May 1864, p. 391.Google Scholar
23 Building News, 20 November 1863, p. 868.Google Scholar
24 ibid., 21 October 1864, p.795.Google Scholar
25 Goodhart-Rendel, H. S., ‘Rogue Architects of the Victorian Era’, The Architect & Building News cixv (1949), pp. 359362, 381–384.Google Scholar
26 Building News, 21 October 1864, p. 780.Google Scholar
27 ibid., 28 October 1864.Google Scholar
28 ibid., 18 November 1864.Google Scholar
29 Hollingshead, J., Gaiety Chronicles (1898), p. 18.Google Scholar
30The Times, 17 January 1865, p. 9.Google Scholar
31 ibid., 19 July 1866, p. 10.Google Scholar
32 ibid., 18 March 1865, p. 13.Google Scholar
33RIBA Proceedings.Google Scholar
34 The Builder, 18 May 1878, p. 521. The case, Keeling v. Lake, was heard in the Bloomsbury County Court, and the sum involved was 7 guineas.Google Scholar
35 The Builder, 14 August 1880, p.215.Google Scholar
36Middlesex Land Registry, 1884, Book 6, No.93, London, County Hall.Google Scholar
37MLR, 1883, Book 33, No. 1008.Google Scholar
38MLR, 1884, Book 12, Nos.340–342; The Builder, 21 June 1884, p.912.Google Scholar
39 The Builder, 14 August 1886, p. 232.Google Scholar
40 ibid., 10 May 1884, p.668.Google Scholar
41Death certificate, Somerset House, London.Google Scholar
42Abney Park cemetery records.Google Scholar
43Keeling's eldest son, Edgar Bassett Newby Keeling, was a partner, with John Hunter Sewell, in a firm of art metal workers at No. 14 Elm Street, Gray's Inn. Another son, Norman B. Keeling, was present at his father's death.Google Scholar
44Letters of administration, Somerset House, London.Google Scholar
45MLR, 1887, Book 5, Nos.563–565; ibid., Book 9, No. 15.Google Scholar