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Philip Hepworth

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Philip Dalton Hepworth
Born1890
Died21 February 1963 (aged 72–73)
NationalityBritish
Alma materArchitectural Association School of Architecture
École des Beaux-Arts
OccupationArchitect
BuildingsWalthamstow Town Hall

Philip Dalton Hepworth (1890[n 1] – 21 February 1963) was a British architect. He studied in both the UK and France, at the Architectural Association School of Architecture and the École des Beaux-Arts, and returned to work as an architect after serving in the First World War. He rose to prominence in the 1930s, featuring in a book by architectural critic Trystan Edwards and winning the commission in 1932 to design Walthamstow Town Hall, which was eventually completed in 1942. He lived in Zoffany House in Strand-on-the-Green, Chiswick, London, from 1936.

During the Second World War, he was appointed one of the Principal Architects of the Imperial War Graves Commission (now the Commonwealth War Graves Commission). In this post-war stage of his career, he designed several war memorials and numerous cemeteries for the British war dead. Examples of his Commission work are found in France, Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany. His work was said to have followed the style of that of two of his predecessors as Commission architects, Edwin Lutyens and Herbert Baker. Hepworth, who died in 1963, was described in his obituary as an architect of "great speed and brilliance" and "sensitivity and eccentricity", influenced by "classical, English and local Norman styles". A number of his buildings are listed.

Studies and early career

Hepworth studied at the École des Beaux-Arts

Hepworth was born in 1890.[1] His initial architectural studies were at the Architectural Association School of Architecture from 1906 to 1910, during which time he also attended the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, France.[1][2] He became assistant to London-based architect Walter Frederick Cave, and after further travels in France he passed his Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) qualifying exam in 1911. He was awarded RIBA's 1914 British School at Rome scholarship.[1] During the First World War, he served in the Royal Engineers.[3]

After the war, he returned to working as an architect. Architectural historians the Lingards describe him as "one of the finest architectural draughtsmen of his day".[3] One of his works from this period was L'Usine (1922), described by the Lingards as "a utopian industrial city scene" with "influences of early Futurism".[3] Hepworth produced the design for the Lloyds Bank branch in Southwark that opened in 1928. In the design, he used "rusticated stone up to the sills of the first-floor windows and red brick in Flemish bond for the remaining two storeys, surmounted by a hipped roof clad in pantiles."[4] Another early design was that of an arts-and-crafts thatched house named 'Bolton Muir' (1930) in Gifford, East Lothian.[1]

Pre-war and municipal work

Walthamstow Town Hall (1942)
Hepworth's residence at Zoffany House

In 1931, Hepworth was featured in a book by architectural critic Trystan Edwards. Published in Zug, Switzerland, this 91-page hardback book, part of a series on the leading architects of the day, was titled Some recent work of Philip Hepworth. It was illustrated mostly with black-and-white photographs of the buildings designed by Hepworth. The embossed clothbound cover shows the Roof Garden House in Bickley, with the cover artwork described in 2015 by RIBA's British Architectural Library as "[an] image charged with the energetic spirit of Art Deco".[5][6]

Hepworth won a major municipal architectural commission in the 1930s with his design for Walthamstow Town Hall (now known as Waltham Forest Town Hall). Built from 1937 to 1942, this complex of buildings is also known as Walthamstow Civic Centre and the commission was awarded to Hepworth in 1932 following an architectural competition launched in 1929 by the newly created municipal borough of Walthamstow.[7] The building became Grade II listed on 9 March 1982.[8]

Hepworth's design of Walthamstow Town Hall (and associated buildings) was described by architectural historian Nikolaus Pevsner in 1954 as in "the Swedish style of c.1925 which became so popular in England amongst those who were not satisfied to be imitatively Neo-Georgian nor wanted to go modern or earnest."[9]

From 1936, Hepworth lived in and restored Zoffany House in Strand-on-the-Green, Chiswick, London,[2] formerly the home of the 18th-century painter Johan Zoffany. Zoffany House was listed as Grade II* on 11 July 1951.[10] Hepworth also designed Wiltshire County Hall in Trowbridge (begun in 1938 and finished in 1940).[11] Around the start of World War II, Hepworth designed a Roman Catholic church in Wales, paid for by the Hon. Fflorens Roch, (wife of Walter Roch and daughter of Lord Treowen). This is Our Lady of Peace (1939–40) at Newbridge, now a Grade II* listed building, with a large campanile.[12][13] This church was granted Grade II* listed status on 17 March 1999.[14]

World War II and CWGC

In World War II, as he was too old for active service, Hepworth served in the Home Guard.[2] During the war, he was appointed to the Royal Academy of Arts' Planning Committee for the rebuilding of London following the damage caused during the Blitz. This committee was chaired by Sir Edwin Lutyens, who was a good friend of Hepworth.[3]

In 1944, Hepworth was appointed the Principal Architect for North-West Europe for the Imperial War Graves Commission (later the Commonwealth War Graves Commission [CWGC]). Other Principal Architects appointed by the Commission to take on the task of designing a new set of memorials and cemeteries after World War II included Sir Hubert Worthington and Sir Edward Maufe.[15] Hepworth designed post-World War II CWGC cemeteries in Normandy, France, as well as in Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany.[2] The CWGC memorials he designed were the Dunkirk Memorial (1957) to the missing of the British Expeditionary Force that fell at the start of the war during the fall of France, and the Bayeux Memorial (1955) to the missing of the British forces that fell in the Normandy Campaign in the liberation of France.[16][17]

The CWGC cemeteries he designed included the Berlin 1939–1945 War Cemetery, Becklingen War Cemetery, Bény-sur-Mer Canadian War Cemetery, and Groesbeek Canadian War Cemetery.[2] Others were Brouay War Cemetery (Brouay),[18] Tilly-sur-Seulles War Cemetery (Bayeux), La Délivrande War Cemetery (Douvres-la-Délivrande), Jerusalem War Cemetery (Chouain), Ranville War Cemetery (Banneville-la-Campagne), Bretteville-sur-Laize Canadian War Cemetery (Bretteville-sur-Laize), Kiel War Cemetery (Kiel), Rheinberg War Cemetery (Rheinberg) and Reichswald Forest War Cemetery (Klever Reichswald).[2] Hepworth planned the layout of his cemeteries only after intensive consultations with gardeners.[19]

One of the watchtowers at Bény-sur-Mer Canadian War Cemetery
Entrance to Brouay War Cemetery
One of the watchtowers (left) at Bény-sur-Mer Canadian War Cemetery and the entrance (right) to Brouay War Cemetery

Historian Philip Longworth, author of a history of the Commission, gave his view on Hepworth's Commission work in a 1963 obituary:

Hepworth, another Beaux-Arts man, was an architect of great speed and brilliance, a man of sensitivity and eccentricity, whose work, though careful and often witty in detail, sometimes lacked total cohesion through dint of pressures to economise. Rarely modernistic, he was influenced by classical, English and local Norman styles, and was probably the most obvious follower of his predecessors. His cemetery at Brouay has a gabled barrel-vaulted entrance reminiscent of Baker's work, and there is more than a hint of Lutyens in his watch-towers at Beny-sur-Mer.

— Philip Longworth, The Builder, 1 March 1963[18]

Final years

Hepworth died in a London hospital on 21 February 1963.[2] Obituaries were published in volume 70 of the RIBA Journal and in volume 204 of The Builder.[18]

Architectural works

Notes

  1. ^ The RIBA Journal obituary by E. J. Miller states that Hepworth was born in Hampstead in 1888. Other sources give 1890 as his birth year.

References

  1. ^ a b c d Philip Dalton Hepworth. Retrieved 6 August 2016. {{cite encyclopedia}}: |work= ignored (help)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Quinlan, Mark (2005). British War Memorials. New Generation Publishing. ISBN 978-0755201860.
  3. ^ a b c d "L'Usine, 1922". Gallery Lingard. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
  4. ^ Kennett, David H. (September 2006). "Brick and its Uses in the Twentieth Century – 4: Britain 1919–1939: Brick and the Urban Centre" (pdf). Information (102). British Brick Society: 11–26. ISSN 0960-7870. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
  5. ^ Yau, Wilson (2 November 2015). "Cover of 'Some recent work of Philip Hepworth'". RIBA. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
  6. ^ "Some Recent Work of Philip Hepworth". Pallant House Gallery Bookshop. Retrieved 6 August 2016. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  7. ^ Victoria, Thornton (2012). Open House London: An Exclusive Glimpse Inside 100 of the Most Extraordinary Buildings in London. Random House. pp. 82–83. ISBN 9780091943622.
  8. ^ "Walthamstow Town Hall, Waltham Forest". British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 13 August 2016.
  9. ^ Pevsner's Buildings of England, Essex (1954), quoted in East, John; Rutt, Nicola (2012). The Civic Plunge Revisited (pdf). Twentieth Century Society. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
  10. ^ "Zoffany House, Hounslow". British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 13 August 2016.
  11. ^ "COUNTY HALL". PastScape. Retrieved 13 August 2016.
  12. ^ Wooding, Jonathan M. (2011). The Churches and Chapels of Wales. University of Wales Press. p. 162. ISBN 9780708324141.
  13. ^ "Our Lady of Peace: A Short History". Our Lady of Peace. Retrieved 23 August 2016.
  14. ^ "Church of Our Lady of Peace and attached Presbytery, Newbridge". British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 13 August 2016.
  15. ^ "Our Architects". Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
  16. ^ "Dunkirk Memorial". Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
  17. ^ "Bayeux Memorial". Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
  18. ^ a b c Longworth, Philip (1 March 1963). "Philip Hepworth". The Builder. 204: 447.
  19. ^ "Hard and Soft Landscaping in War Cemeteries" (pdf). Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 6 August 2016.