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Charles Beazley
British architect (1834–1897) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Charles Nightingale Beazley (1834–1897), was a British architect. His work spans the period 1853–97.[1]
Career
Beazley was articled to William Wardell in 1853 and was an RIBA student 1854–56.[1] In 1856–58 he was an assistant to G.E. Street,[1] who was the diocesan architect for the Church of England Diocese of Oxford. Beazley began independent practice in 1860,[1] and from 1884 worked in partnership with H.W. Burrows.[2] Like Street, Beazley worked on a number of commissions to restore Church of England parish churches and design new ones. In the 1870s and 1880s Beazley worked extensively in Westgate-on-Sea, Kent.[3] He was made a Fellow of the RIBA in 1880 but resigned in 1897, the year of his death.[1]
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Work
- St. Eadburg's parish church, Bicester, Oxfordshire: restoration, 1862–63[4]
- St. Mark's parish church, Cold Ash, Berkshire, 1864–66[5]
- St. Michael & All Angels parish church, Newton Purcell, Oxfordshire: restoration, 1875[6]
- St. Mildred's parish church, Acol, Kent, 1879[7]
- Ellingham, St Clement's Road, Westgate-on-Sea, Kent, 1883[8]
- St. Saviour's parish church, Westgate-on-Sea, Kent, 1884[9]
References
Sources
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