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Charles Cowles-Voysey
English architect From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Charles Cowles-Voysey (24 June 1889 – 10 April 1981) was an English architect.
Career
Charles Voysey studied at the Architectural Association School and the UCL Bartlett School of Architecture. Between 1909 and 1912 he was articled to Horace Field and assistant to John James Burnet and to Horace Farquharson, before starting his own practice in 1912.[1] John Brandon-Jones worked for Cowles-Voysey, became a partner in the business and finally took over the firm.[2]
Voysey's father, the Arts and Crafts movement architect and designer C. F. A. Voysey (1857-1941), was recognized by the seminal The Studio magazine.[3]
In 1912, Charles married Dorothea Denise Cowles (1885-1980) and amended his surname to Cowles-Voysey.[4]
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Architectural works
- White Rock Pavilion (1922), Hastings[5]
- Bridgeton Public Halls (1924), Glasgow[5]
- Kingsley Hall (1927), London[5]
- 1&2 Bunkers Hill, 34-42 Wildwood Road & 19 Wellgarth Road (1929), Hampstead Garden Suburb, London[5]
- Chance Wood (1929), Sevenoaks, Kent[5]
- Bognor Regis Town Hall (1930), Bognor Regis, West Sussex[6]
- Municipal Offices, High Wycombe (1932), High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire[7]
- Worthing Town Hall (1933), Worthing, West Sussex[8]
- Watford Town Hall (1937-1939), Watford, Hertfordshire[9]
- Cambridge Guildhall, Peas Hill Guildhall (1939), Cambridge[10]
- Bromley Town Hall extension (1939), Bromley, Kent[11]
- Magistrates' Court (1939), Bromley, Kent[5]
- Maybridge Estate (1940s), Worthing, West Sussex[5]
- Morley College reconstruction (1958), Waterloo, London[5]
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References
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