NOTES: All Souls was designed by John Nash and built in 1822-1824. Severe damage to the roof was sustained following a World War II mine explosion in 1940, necessitating an extensive restoration scheme under the direction of Goodhart-Rendel which was completed in 1951.
NOTES: The West Hackney Church was founded in the 1820s and sustained extensive bomb damage in 1940 during World War II. It was replaced by the Church of St Paul.
NOTES: A third of the City's buildings were destroyed by aerial attack between September 1940 and March 1945. This design is one of a number produced by Holden & Holford between 1945 and 1955 for the proposed reconstruction of the City of London following World War II.
NOTES: Plumpton Place is an Elizabethan manor, the house of which was remodelled for Edward Hudson by Sir Edwin Lutyens in 1928-1934, and the gardens landscaped in collaboration with Gertrude Jekyll.
NOTES: This neoclassical palace, built in 1799-1803 and attributed to Charles Cameron, replaced a Baroque palace built fifty years earlier by Andrey Vasilievich Kvasov for Count Kirill Razumovsky. It was restored in 1911 by Lukomsky.
NOTES: This neoclassical palace, built in 1799-1803 and attributed to Charles Cameron, replaced a Baroque palace built fifty years earlier by Andrey Vasilievich Kvasov for Count Kirill Razumovsky. It was restored in 1911 by Lukomsky.
NOTES: H. S. Goodhart-Rendel made alterations and additions to this house in 1913-14 for Sir Eustace Clarke Jervoise, Bt. The Idsworth Estate was purchased by the Clarke Jervoise family in 1789, whose descendants continued to live there until 1974.
NOTES: Completed in 1824, All Souls Church is the last surviving church built by John Nash. Goodhart-Rendel was responsible for its restoration and new fittings in 1923-1927, and following war damage in 1947-1951.
NOTES: Completed in 1824, All Souls Church is the last surviving church built by John Nash. Goodhart-Rendel was responsible for its restoration and new fittings in 1923-1927, and following war damage in 1947-1951.