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George Goldie (architect)

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George Goldie (9 June 1828 – 1 March 1887) was a nineteenth-century English ecclesiastical architect who specialised in Roman Catholic churches.

Life

SS Mary and John church, Ballincollig, Ireland

Goldie was born in York, the grandson of the architect Joseph Bonomi the Elder. He was educated at St Cuthbert's College, Ushaw, County Durham.[1]

He trained as an architect with John Grey Weightman and Matthew Ellison Hadfield of Sheffield, from 1845 to 1850, and thereafter worked in partnership with them. After Weightman left the partnership in 1858, Hadfield and Goldie remained in partnership for a further two years. Goldie then practised alone until 1867 when Charles Edwin Child (1843–1911) joined him in partnership.

In 1880 Goldie's son Edward (1856–1921) entered the partnership, having first been apprenticed in 1875. Edward Goldie's work includes Hawkesyard Priory in Armitage, Staffordshire, built for the Dominican Order 1896–1914, and the church of Our Most Holy Redeemer and St Thomas More, Chelsea, built in 1895.

Goldie died at Saint-Servan, Brittany and was buried at Saint-Jouan-des-Guérets.

Work

Our Lady and St Edmund church, Abingdon-on-Thames
Interior of the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, Sligo

See also

References

  1. ^ Dictionary of Scottish Architects
  2. ^ St Pancras, Ipswich
  3. ^ Galloway, Peter (1992). The Cathedrals of Ireland. The Institute of Irish Studies. pp. 201–203. ISBN 0-85389-452-3.

Further reading