Francis Longstreth Thompson Explained

Francis Longstreth Thompson, OBE (3 May 1890  - 19 March 1973) was a British town planner and writer.

He was born in Croydon, Surrey, and studied at University College, London, where he took a degree in engineering.[1] In 1917 he published The Town Plan and the House, co-authored with Ernest G. Allen, showing the connection between housing design and site development.[2] In 1923 he wrote Site Planning In Practice: an investigation of the principles of housing estate development, which laid down many of the principles adopted in identifying and developing suitable sites for housing.[3] He worked with Thomas Adams on plans for the development of West Middlesex, co-authoring with Adams The West Middlesex Final Report in 1925.[4] He set up his own town planning consultancy, and was President of the Town Planning Institute in 1932-33.[5]

He died at Walmer, Kent, in 1973, aged 82.[6] His son was the historian Francis Michael Longstreth Thompson.

Notes and References

  1. https://archive.org/stream/longstrethfamily00tayl#page/370/mode/2up Agnes Longstreth Taylor, The Longstreth Family Records, 1909, p.371
  2. http://liverpool.metapress.com/content/q200628376188612/ The Town Planning Review, Volume 7, Number 3-4, April 1918
  3. Reviewed work: Site Planning in Practice, F. Longstreth Thompson . 40101485 . Lloyd . T. Alwyn . The Town Planning Review . 1923 . 10 . 3 . 207–209 . 10.3828/tpr.10.3.212663716432r083 .
  4. Reviewed work: The West Middlesex Final Report, Thomas Adams, Longstreth Thompson . 40101660 . 3 . 1925 . The Town Planning Review . 11 . 205–207 . 10.3828/tpr.11.3.g55m4837572853kp .
  5. http://www.rtpi.org.uk/about-the-rtpi/governance/rtpi-past-presidents/ RTPI Past Presidents
  6. https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/45971/page/5848/data.pdf London Gazette, 8 May 1973, p.5848