List of works by Grayson and Ould
Appearance
Grayson and Ould was the title of an architectural practice based in Liverpool, Merseyside, England. George Enoch Grayson (1833/4–1912) (usually known as G. E. Grayson) established an independent practice in Liverpool in 1857.[1] Edward Ould (1852–1909) trained with John Douglas in Chester.[2] The partnership was formed in 1886; prior to this each designed buildings separately. After 1886 most of the works were designed together, with some exceptions shown in the list. Grayson's son, George Hastwell Grayson (1871–1951), joined the partnership in 1896.[3]
In the list below, buildings designed by Grayson alone are denoted by † in the "Name" column, and Ould's designs by *.
Key
[edit]Grade | Criteria[4] |
---|---|
Grade I | Buildings of exceptional interest, sometimes considered to be internationally important. |
Grade II* | Particularly important buildings of more than special interest. |
Grade II | Buildings of national importance and special interest. |
Works
[edit]Name | Location | Photograph | Date | Notes | Grade |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
St Michael's Church † |
Hough Green, Widnes, Cheshire 53°22′16″N 2°46′33″W / 53.3712°N 2.7758°W |
1870 | Constructed in red sandstone with a bellcote between the nave and the chancel.[5] | —
| |
All Hallows Church † | Allerton, Liverpool 53°22′51″N 2°54′13″W / 53.3807°N 2.9035°W |
1872–76 | Designed for John Bibby, it is constructed in sandstone in Perpendicular style. Almost all the stained glass was made by Morris & Co. to designs by Edward Burne-Jones. The church includes a mausoleum for the Bibby family.[6][7] | I | |
Main House, Irton Hall † |
Irton with Santon, Cumbria 54°23′34″N 3°22′49″W / 54.3927°N 3.3804°W |
1874 | Grayson made alterations to an older house, including adding catellations, and changing the windows. The house was used later as a school.[8][9] | II | |
Scottish Provident Building ↑ | Castle Street, Liverpool 53°24′23″N 2°59′26″W / 53.4063°N 2.9906°W |
1874 | [10] | —
| |
Mersey Chambers ↑ | Old Church Yard, Liverpool 53°24′25″N 2°59′36″W / 53.4070°N 2.9933°W |
c. 1878 | Built as offices for Thomas and James Harrison, shipping agents. In Italianate style.[11] | —
| |
Scottish Equitable Chambers ↑ | Castle Street, Liverpool 53°24′23″N 2°59′27″W / 53.4064°N 2.9907°W |
c. 1878 | In Neoclassical style with bands of polished granite.[10] | —
| |
5, 7, 9 and 11 Fairy Road * | Wrexham, Wales 53°02′24″N 2°59′52″W / 53.0399°N 2.9977°W |
1876–1881 | A single house, "Stafford House" (11), dated 1876,[12] a single house (9) built c.1800[13] and a pair of semi-detached houses (5 and 7), with stepped gables and turrets dated 1881.[14][15][16] | II | |
Bank of Liverpool † | Liverpool 53°24′27″N 2°59′11″W / 53.4076°N 2.9863°W |
1881–82 | Standing on the corner of Victoria Street and Sir Thomas Street, the bank is constructed in stone in Neoclassical style, with columns, pilasters, and a central pediment.[17][18] | II | |
Queen's School * | Chester, Cheshire 53°11′28″N 2°53′51″W / 53.1910°N 2.8975°W |
1881–83 | Designed in an elaborate Vernacular Revival style, the school is constructed in brown brick with red terracotta and stone dressings, and a tiled roof. It has an L-plan and includes a hall, dining room and kitchen.[19][20] | II | |
St Oswald's Church † |
Bidston, Merseyside 53°24′09″N 3°04′02″W / 53.4024°N 3.0671°W |
1882 | Extended the chancel.[21][22] | II | |
Liverpool Savings Bank † | Scotland Road, Liverpool 53°25′21″N 2°58′54″W / 53.4226°N 2.9818°W |
1882 | A branch of the bank, sited on a corner with a round tower.[23] | —
| |
Granite Buildings † | 6–20 Stanley Street, Liverpool 53°24′27″N 2°59′16″W / 53.4075°N 2.9878°W |
c. 1882 | Offices constructed entirely in granite.[24][25] | II | |
Rectory * | Handley, Cheshire 53°06′57″N 2°47′57″W / 53.1159°N 2.7992°W |
1884 | In brick and red stone.[26] | —
| |
Uffington House * | Chester, Cheshire 53°11′29″N 2°52′40″W / 53.1915°N 2.8777°W |
1885 | A house built for Thomas Hughes. A tall brick house with brick and terracotta dressings. It has three storeys with corner turrets.[27][28] | II | |
Old Rectory * | Halkyn, Flintshire, Wales 53°14′11″N 3°11′21″W / 53.2363°N 3.1891°W |
1885 | Built at the expense of the Duke of Westminster. The ground floor is stone-faced, the upper storey has tile-hanging in the style of Norman Shaw.[29][30] | II | |
Church House † | Hanover Street, Liverpool 53°24′10″N 2°59′09″W / 53.4028°N 2.9857°W |
1885 | Designed partly for the Mersey Mission to Seamen, including a chapel and meeting rooms, and partly as a temperance hotel on the corner of Hanover Street and Paradise Street. It is in red and yellow brick with a tiled roof, in three storeys and an attic.[31][32] | II | |
Union Bank of Liverpool † | 43–47 Bold Street, Liverpool 53°24′12″N 2°58′43″W / 53.4033°N 2.9785°W |
1885 | Originally a central doorway led into the banking hall; later the frontage is all occupied by shops, the central one under a pediment.[33] | II | |
Oakfield Manor * | Upton-by-Chester, Cheshire 53°13′31″N 2°52′45″W / 53.2252°N 2.8792°W |
c. 1885 | Built as a house, later partly rebuilt. In red brick with blue brick diapering and a slate roof. Later used as offices and a restaurant for Chester Zoo.[34][35] | II | |
Hamilton Square Station † | Birkenhead, Merseyside 53°23′41″N 3°00′50″W / 53.3947°N 3.0138°W |
1886 | A station building for the Mersey Railway in brick and terracotta and in Italianate style. It incorporates a hydraulic tower.[36][37] | II | |
8 and 10 Lower Bridge Street * | Chester, Cheshire 53°11′18″N 2°53′28″W / 53.1882°N 2.8910°W |
1886 | A shop with accommodation in brick and timber framing with plaster panels.[38][39] | II | |
St Peter's Church | Woolton, Liverpool 53°22′34″N 2°52′10″W / 53.3760°N 2.8694°W |
1886–87 | A new church replacing an older one; in Gothic Revival style. with a southeast tower.[40][41][42] | II* | |
Lychgate, St Peter's Church |
Woolton, Liverpool 53°22′34″N 2°52′08″W / 53.3760°N 2.8689°W |
c. 1886–87 | Large and ornate, consisting of a timber-framed canopy on stone side walls, surmounted by a cross.[40][43] | II | |
Wightwick Manor * | Wightwick, West Midlands 52°35′01″N 2°11′39″W / 52.5836°N 2.1942°W |
1887 | A house in Vernacular Revival style for Theodore Mander. Extended in 1893. It is constructed in brick with stone dressings and timber framing with tiled roofs. Now owned by the National Trust.[44][45][46] | I | |
Queen Insurance Building | Castle Street, Liverpool 53°24′23″N 2°59′27″W / 53.4065°N 2.9908°W |
1887–88 | With decoration in terracotta.[10] | —
| |
British and Foreign Marine Insurance Company | 3–5 Castle Street, Liverpool 53°24′24″N 2°59′28″W / 53.4068°N 2.9910°W |
1888–89 | A office building in red brick, red sandstone and terracotta. It is in five storeys with attics, and has five bays.[10][47] | II | |
British and Foreign Marine Insurance Company | Castle Street, Liverpool 53°24′24″N 2°59′27″W / 53.4066°N 2.9909°W |
1888–90 | In red brick with red sandstone and terracotta dressings. Above the first floor is a mosaic with scenes of shipping.[10] | —
| |
Latham Building, Trinity Hall | Cambridge 52°12′22″N 0°06′54″E / 52.2060°N 0.1149°E |
1890 | Constructed in red brick with stone dressings, it has four storeys, and is in seven bays. The architectural style is Elizabethan.[48] | II | |
Midland Bank | The Cross, Oswestry, Shropshire 52°51′32″N 3°03′21″W / 52.8590°N 3.0558°W |
1890 | Built in red brick, stone, and terracotta, with gables and oriel windows.[49] | —
| |
Rectory and Hall, St Mary's Church |
Handbridge, Chester, Cheshire 53°10′58″N 2°53′24″W / 53.1829°N 2.8901°W |
c. 1890 | A two-storey rectory with an attic, in red brick with pargeting. The right wing was originally the church hall.[50][51] | II | |
Houses | Thornton Hough, Merseyside 53°19′11″N 3°02′39″W / 53.3196°N 3.0443°W |
1890s | Village houses built for Lord Leverhulme.[52][53][54][55][56][57][58][59] | II | |
Houses * | Wightwick, West Midlands 52°35′00″N 2°11′29″W / 52.5832°N 2.1914°W |
1890s | Houses built for Theodore Mander for the Wightwick Manor estate.[60][61][62][63] | II | |
South Wing, Trinity Hall |
Cambridge 52°12′20″N 0°06′57″E / 52.2056°N 0.1158°E |
1890–92 | Wing altered and re-fronted.[64] | I | |
Hill Bark | Frankby, Merseyside 53°21′48″N 3°08′16″W / 53.3632°N 3.1379°W |
1891 | Built for the soap manufacturer Robert William Hudson on a different site, and then known as Bidston Court. Moved to Frankby in 1929–31, and used later as a hotel.[65][66][67] | II* | |
The Mount * | Tettenhall Wood, West Midlands 52°35′16″N 2°11′10″W / 52.5879°N 2.1862°W |
1891 | Enlarged and altered by Ould for Charles Tertius Mander, first baronet; further alterations with addition of large Library and Music Room in 1908. A house in brick with stone dressings and a tile roof. It has an L-plan, and is in Arts and Crafts style. Later used as a hotel (alterations).[68][69][70][71] | II | |
Bidston Court Lodge | Bidston, Merseyside 53°23′33″N 3°04′35″W / 53.3925°N 3.0764°W |
c. 1891 | A building in rendered brick with pargeted panels. Bidston Court has been moved to a different site and renamed Hill Bark.[72][73] | II | |
Quaker Meeting House † | Birkenhead, Merseyside | 1892 | [74][75] | —
| |
Victoria Chambers | 42 Castle Street, Liverpool 53°24′23″N 2°59′28″W / 53.4063°N 2.9912°W |
1893 | Offices in Renaissance style, incorporating sculptures of mermen.[76] | —
| |
Hesketh Grange | Thornton Hough, Merseyside 53°19′23″N 3°02′57″W / 53.3231°N 3.0493°W |
1894 | Built for the father and sisters of Lord Leverhulme. It has an L-plan and is in two storeys, built in stone with a stone slate roof.[77][78] | II | |
Lodge and stables, Hesketh Grange | Thornton Hough, Merseyside 53°19′25″N 3°02′55″W / 53.3237°N 3.0487°W |
1894 | The lodge is in stone with a timber-framed first floor and a Dutch gable. Behind it is a single-storey, four-bay stable range.[77][79] | II | |
Leyland and Bullen's Bank | 36 Castle Street, Liverpool 53°24′22″N 2°59′28″W / 53.4062°N 2.9911°W |
1895 | Later the Bank of Scotland, on the corner of Brunswick Street. On its corner is a turret surmounted by a dome.[80][81] | II | |
Thornton House | Thornton Hough, Merseyside 53°19′14″N 3°02′33″W / 53.3206°N 3.0425°W |
1895 | Built for James Darcy Lever. A mixture of stone and half-timbering. Later divided into separate residential units.[82][83] | II | |
North Lodge, Thornton House |
Thornton Hough, Merseyside 53°19′20″N 3°02′35″W / 53.3222°N 3.0430°W |
1895 | Built for James Darcy Lever. A timber-framed lodge in one storey with an attic in three bays.[77][84] | II | |
South Lodge, Thornton House |
Thornton Hough, Merseyside 53°19′17″N 3°02′38″W / 53.3214°N 3.0440°W |
1895 | Built for James Darcy Lever. A timber-framed lodge in one storey with an attic and a Dutch gable.[77][85] | II | |
Stables, Thornton House |
Thornton Hough, Merseyside 53°19′16″N 3°02′37″W / 53.3212°N 3.0436°W |
1895 | Built for James Darcy Lever, later converted for residential use. A single-storey five-bay range, with a single-bay return range at each end.[86] | II | |
Chester Hospital | Chester, Cheshire 53°12′34″N 2°53′50″W / 53.2095°N 2.8972°W |
1895–98 | A complete 404-bed hospital, replacing an earlier hospital on the same site. It had an E-plan with a pedimented centre. Now replaced by the Countess of Chester Hospital.[34] | —
| |
Houses and terraces | Port Sunlight, Merseyside 53°21′04″N 2°59′56″W / 53.351°N 2.999°W |
1895–1907 | Workers' accommodation built for Lord Leverhulme.[87][88][89][90][91][92][93][94][95][96][97][98][99][100][101][102][103][104][105][106][107][108][109][110][111][112][113][114][115][116][117][118][119][120][121][122][123][124][125][126][127][128][129][130][131][132][133][134][135][136][137][138] | II | |
Lever Club | Port Sunlight, Merseyside 53°20′57″N 2°59′53″W / 53.3491°N 2.9980°W |
1896 | Built as a men's social club in brick with stone dressings and a timber-framed jettied upper storey.[139][140] | II | |
7 Water Street | Liverpool 53°24′24″N 3°59′32″W / 53.4066°N 3.9921°W |
c. 1896 | On the corner of Fenwick Street; the range on Water Street has been demolished and replaced. The Fenwick Street range is in granite.[141] | —
| |
St Faith's Church | Waterloo, Sefton, Merseyside 53°28′52″N 3°01′22″W / 53.4811°N 3.0227°W |
1898–1900 | A large church in red brick with red sandstone dressings, and green slate roofs. It has an octagonal southeast turret with a pointed roof.[142][143][144] | II | |
North range, Westcott House |
Cambridge 52°12′30″N 0°07′21″E / 52.2084°N 0.1226°E |
1899 | The earliest part of the college, in red brick with stone dressings, incorporating a central gatehouse.[145] | II | |
Bridge Inn | Port Sunlight, Merseyside 53°21′10″N 2°59′42″W / 53.3527°N 2.9950°W |
1900 | A public house with a U-plan, the wings having jettied gables, decorated bargeboards and bow windows.[146][147] | II | |
Hall i' th' Wood * | Bolton, Greater Manchester 53°36′02″N 2°25′08″W / 53.6005°N 2.4190°W |
c. 1900 | A former manor house restored by Ould with Jonathan Simpson for Lord Leverhulme. It was then donated to Bolton Corporation and has been used as a museum. The building is partly timber-framed and partly in stone.[148][149] | I | |
Council Offices | Chirk, Wrexham, Wales 52°56′05″N 3°03′25″W / 52.9347°N 3.0569°W |
1902 | Built in red sandstone with a red tiled roof in Jacobean Revival style.[150][151] | II | |
Church Drive Primary School | Port Sunlight, Merseyside 53°21′17″N 2°59′46″W / 53.3547°N 2.9961°W |
1902–03 | Built in brick with a tiled roof, mainly in one storey, including a tower with a turret, cupola and weathervane.[152][153] | II | |
Consumption Hospital | Mount Pleasant, Liverpool 53°24′13″N 2°58′23″W / 53.4037°N 2.9731°W |
1903–04 | In red brick and terracotta, with a central pediment.[154] | —
| |
Thornton Manor | Thornton Hough, Merseyside 53°19′39″N 3°03′06″W / 53.3276°N 3.0517°W |
1904 | Added a kitchen and a service wing for Lord Leverhulme.[155][156] | II* | |
Liberal Club | Thornton Hough, Merseyside 53°19′15″N 3°02′42″W / 53.3209°N 3.0450°W |
c. 1904 | Built as a Liberal Club, later used as a Post Office and village club. It is timber-framed on a stone base, with a U-shaped plan. The wings have jettied first storeys with quatrefoil panels.[157][158] | II | |
Inverforth House | Camden, Greater London 51°33′54″N 0°10′52″W / 51.5649°N 0.1810°W |
c. 1905 | Alterations for Lord Leverhulme, including rebuilding the central block, and adding north and south wings and terrace to the garden front.[159] | II | |
Barclays Bank | Old Swan, Liverpool 53°24′50″N 2°54′50″W / 53.4138°N 2.9138°W |
c. 1905 | On a corner site with an L-plan. Constructed in red brick with stone dressings, it has a canted entrance on the corner rising to a turret with a cupola. On each side are wings with Dutch gables.[160][161] | II | |
Bank of Liverpool | 33 High Street, Wrexham, Wales 53°02′42″N 2°59′32″W / 53.0450°N 2.9923°W |
c. 1906–12 | Later Martin's Bank; in red ashlar stone, elaborately decorated, with a tetrastyle Corinthian portico.[162] Cadw describes the exterior as "white ashlar to ground floor, red sandstone above".[163] | II | |
Dining Hall, Selwyn College |
Cambridge 52°12′03″N 0°06′22″E / 52.2007°N 0.1062°E |
1909 | In the style of the 17th century with a Jacobean entrance. It is in two storeys with the main hall at the upper level.[164] | II |
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