Henry Stock Explained
Henry Stock |
Birth Date: | 1824/5 |
Birth Place: | London, England |
Death Date: | 11 June 1909 |
Death Place: | Sandown, Isle of Wight |
Henry Stock (1824/5–1909) was a British architect. He served as the county surveyor for Essex for nearly 50 years, and as the surveyor and architect to the Worshipful Company of Haberdashers. The latter appointment led Stock to undertake a considerable number of educational commissions, but his primary field of activity was in the construction of manufacturing sites and warehouses in London.
Life and works
Henry Stock was born in 1824/5. He came from a family of builders and developers located in London's East End.[1] Articled to George Allen, of Tooley Street, Southwark, in 1840, Stock took over the business on Allen's death in 1847, going into partnership with a surveyor, William Snooke, at Allen's old offices at 69, Tooley Street.[2]
Stock and Snooke's business was primarily industrial and commercial. Their buildings included a biscuit factory at Bermondsey for Peek Freans;[2] the Anchor Brewery in Southwark for Barclay, Perkins & Co.; another brewery, the Ram Brewery at Wandsworth for Young & Co.; and the cotton warehouse on Tooley Street, which had earlier been designed by Snooke and was renamed The Counting House, following its rebuilding after destruction in the 1861 Tooley Street fire.[2]
Stock and Snooke were appointed architects and surveyors to the Worshipful Company of Haberdashers in 1882, although both had undertaken work for the company prior to this date. Examples of their work in Wales include: the Design and Technology Centre (Stock alone), day houses and School House (the former by Snooke in 1877–1878 and the latter by Stock in 1895–1896), the Chapel and Library (1860–1865), and the central block (Stock alone 1895–1896), all at Monmouth School for Boys; Haberdashers' Monmouth School for Girls in the Jacobethan style he favoured for schools, and West Monmouth School. Snooke and Stock also undertook residential developments at New Cross and at Telegraph Hill in south London. The New Cross estate had been purchased in 1614 to provide a source of funding for the school established at Monmouth by William Jones.[3]
Stock held the post of County Surveyor for Essex from 1856 to 1900 and designed many public buildings and bridges in the county. In 1885 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects.[4] He retired to Sandown on the Isle of Wight in 1904 and died there in 1909. His son, Henry William Stock, was also an architect and worked in his father's practice.[5]
Works
- Monmouth School for Boys (1860–1890s) – work with Snooke and independently
- Tooley Street warehouses (1860) – by Snooke and Stock
- Buck's Row (Durward Street), Whitechapel (c.1861) – Manure works for George Torr, now the site of Swanlea School[6]
- Church of St Mary, Stifford, Essex (1861–1863) – restoration[7]
- School, Buck's Row, 6 Durward Street, Whitechapel (1862) – a ragged school sponsored by George Torr[8]
- Braintree and Bocking Literary and Mechanics' Institution, Braintree, Essex (1863) – a gift to the town from George Courtauld
- St John the Baptist's Church, Finchingfield, Essex (1865–1866) – addition of a porch and restoration
- Bridge, Battlesbridge, Essex (1872–1873) – built by William Webster to Stock's design after the earlier bridge, designed by Stock's predecessor as County Surveyor, Thomas Hopper, was destroyed by a steam traction engine.
- Peek Freans factory, Clement Road, Bermondsey (1880s) - part of a large manufacturing and packing plant with workers’ housing, shops, an independent fire brigade etc., which saw the area nicknamed Biscuit Town.[9] As of 2020, being redeveloped as residential accommodation.[10]
- Ram Brewery (1882–1883) – rebuilding following a fire
- St Anne's Church, Kew (1884) – reconstruction of the southern end of the church
- Police station, Saffron Waldon, Essex (1884–1886) – undertaken in his role as County Surveyor
- The Counting House, Tooley Street, Southwark – rebuilding in 1887 following the 1861 Tooley Street fire[11]
- Haberdashers' School for Girls (1890)[12]
- Haberdashers' Monmouth School for Girls (1892–1896)
- Church of St Catherine, Pepys Road, New Cross (1893–1894) – much altered
- West Monmouth School (1897)
Sources
Notes and References
- Web site: Between Poplar High Street and East India Dock Road. Survey of London. 16 September 2022.
- Web site: History. John. Fowler. Stock Page Stock Limited. 16 September 2022.
- Web site: Telegraph Hill conservation area. Lewisham Council. 7 October 2022.
- 26 June 1909 . Obituary . Journal of the Royal Institute of British Architects . 16 . 16 . 608. 6 October 2022.
- Web site: Henry William Stock. Derbyshire County Council. 16 September 2022.
- Web site: Swanlea Secondary School. Survey of London. 16 September 2022.
- Web site: St Mary, Stifford, Essex. The Corpus of Romanesque Sculpture in Britain and Ireland. 16 September 2022.
- Web site: 6 Durward Street. Survey of London. 16 August 2022.
- Web site: Bermondsey takes the buscuit. Annie. Kelly. The Guardian. 20 October 2004. 6 October 2022.
- Web site: £500M Bermondsey masterplan will celebrate old Peek Frean biscuit factory. Southwark News. 29 March 2018. 6 October 2022.
- Web site: Warehouses, Hay's Wharf, 51-67 Tooley Street, Southwark, London. RIBA. 16 September 2022.
- Web site: History. 30 November 2020 . Haberdashers' Girls School. 16 September 2022.