Percy Richard Morley Horder

Percy Richard Morley Horder
University of Nottingham, Trent Building at night
Born 1870
Torquay
Died 1944
?London
Nationality English
Alma mater City of London School. Articled to Devey and Williams.
Occupation Architect
Practice

Williams and Morley Horder 1895

Morley Horder and Briant Alfred Poulter. 1919–1925.

Morley Horder and Verner O Rees. 1925–1929.
Buildings Trent Building, Nottingham University.
Projects Shops for Boots the Chemist
Highfields Park, Nottingham Cascade

Percy Richard Morley Horder (18 November 1870 – 7 October 1944) was an English architect who worked from offices in London. His work included the designing of new country houses or partially rebuilding existing houses. He also designed country house gardens and is noted for laying out Highfields Park, Nottingham together with the adjacent Nottingham University Campus. His early work was in the Arts and Crafts style, but after the First World War his buildings are increasing in the Neo-Georgian fashion. He undertook architectural work many parts of the British Isles including Ireland and at Thurso in Caithness. He is probably best remembered for the Trent Building in the University of Nottingham.[1] and for design of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

Horder appears to have been an eccentric character with a domineering character. In a recent discussion of Horder’s character and achievements, Professor White remarks Percy Richard Morley Horder is not a name to be conjured with. A mostly forgotten architect, he made it into the Dictionary of National Biography, but does not rate an entry on Wikipedia (!). To his pupils he was "Holy Murder" (a Spoonerism on his name). According to his daughter, he was most charming…and most awful. Whyte describes him as pushing artistic temperament to its limits, Morley Horder looked and behaved like a cantankerous Old Testament prophet.[2]

However, Horder was a remarkably successful architect and he must be rated amongst the leading architects designing English Neo-Georgian architecture.[3] His work at Upton House, Warwickshire for Viscount Bearsted is notable, but it is his work for Jesse Boot, both the Boot’s the Chemists stores, but most importantly the Trent Building and the laying out of the Nottingham University Campus, which influenced design at other English universities, for which he must take the greatest credit.[2]

Biography

He was born in Torquay, the son of the Congregationalist minister, William Garrett Horder.[4] The Horder family lived at 6 (now 18) Hamilton Terrace, St John’s Wood and his daughter Barbara Morley Horder (1898 – 1986) became a noted actress.[5]

Court House, East Meon.

In 1927 Morley Horder acquired the Court House at East Meon in Hampshire. This was a country residence of the bishops of Winchester. It was in a badly dilapidated state and he set about restoring the building. Of this residence, the great hall, a solar, and a garderobe block survive largely intact. The Court House is remarkable for its fine state of preservation. It was commissioned by the bishop, William of Wykeham and built by his master mason William Wynford, one of the greatest of 14th-century architects, who remodelled the nave of Winchester Cathedral and designed Winchester College and New College, Oxford. Morley Horder added a north wing, joining the medieval house to the 18th century thatched cottage on the roadside, and he laid out the gardens between the house and the 18th century thatched barn on what had become a farmyard. Morley Horder also bought and restored a number of thatched cottages in the village. An account of Morley Horder's restoration work is given in a Country Life article.[6]

Architectural work

Churches and Chapels

  • Queen's Avenue, Congregational Church. Muswell Hill (1897–1900). According to Cherry and Pevsner Nicely detailed, Perpendicular…roughcast with stone dressings.Handsome inside with piers without capitals,broad barrel-vaulted roof, and galleried transepts.[7]
  • Trinity Congregational Chapel, Lauriston Road, Hackney. (1901). Red brick and Sandstone in a late Gothic style.[8]
  • Congregational Church. High Street, (Bushey, Hertfordshire 1904). Now a theatre.
  • Ealing Green (1911) Congregational Church.
  • Penge Congregational Church.
  • Brondesbury Park Congregational Church (1911)
  • Westfield College Chapel, Camden.(1928–9). Rendered with deep eaves and small rectangular windows high up lighting an austere but well proportioned interior. Doric porch leads into a foyer at gallery level, from which two flights of stairs descend.[9]

University and College buildings

Former Cheshunt College
  • Cheshunt (Congregational) College, Bateman Street, Cambridge. 1913–4. Later combined with Westminster College. Free Tudor style. Main range with square central porch-tower. and two symmetrical bay winds. Pale brick with buff stone dressings.[4] Now the provincial Grand Lodge of the Freemasons.

*Chapel Court, Jesus College, Cambridge.

Jesus College boathouse 1932
  • Jesus College Cambridge boathouse. The boathouse was designed by the Morley Horder, and was built in 1932 to replace the Victorian structure destroyed by fire in September of that year. The roof is hipped, with a central clock tower topped by a weathervane. The roof tiles are said to have come from old farm buildings owned by the College. The first floor has a central balcony with a timber balustrade displaying the College crest.
  • Darbishire Quad, Somerville College, Oxford (1934), Morley Horder was commissioned to build a quadrangle and the porters' lodge and the New Council Room, were constructed at the entrance to the quad, which housed undergraduate and fellows' rooms.[10]

London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine

London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine building
  • London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine 1926-8. (with Verner O Rees). A competition to design a new building to be sited in Gower Street, was held involving five architects, all experienced in laboratory design and construction. This was won in 1925 by Morley Horder and Verner Rees who located the main entrance in Keppel Street. Minimally decorated classical or Neo Georgian facade of four storeys in meticulously cut Portland stone. Austerely detailed, with large wreaths and names of medical scientists in relief. The iron balconies have delicately gilded tropical flora and fauna.[11] The building was opened in 1929 by HRH the Prince of Wales. The purchase of the site and the cost of a new building was made possible through a gift of $2m from the Rockefeller Foundation.
Gilded Vectors of Disease - on balcony - designed by Morley Horder.

Orphanage

  • Gyde Orphanage, Painswick, Gloucestershire. 1915–18.

Public buildings

  • Village Hall, Pitsford, Northamptonshire. Tudor in style.[12]

New Houses

  • 52-54 Brook Street London, (1896–7)
  • Moonhill, Cuckfield, Surrey. (1902). In Arts and Crafts style.
  • Greystock in Warwick (1905)
  • Mallory Court, Bishop's Tachbrook, Warwickshire.(1914). The site was part of an estate owned by the who sold c.9 acres (c 3.5ha) to James Thomas Holt, a retired cotton-bleacher from Manchester. Plans for a house by Percy Morley Horder (1870–1944) dated May 1914 were submitted and approved in June 1914, and construction appears to have begun almost immediately. The new house was occupied in 1916.[13] While Horder's plans do not show details of the proposed gardens, the elevations, which were also submitted for approval, show the principal garden compartments as realised, together with the formal garden to the south of the house in broadly the form which was implemented. The Garden is listed Grade II[14]
  • Periton Mead Manor House, Somerset. (1915–1922).

Filkins, Oxfordshire. Council Housing (1929–?1935)

Morley Horder worked with the Labour politician and landowner Sir Stafford Cripps and the local stonemason George Swynford on the provision of council housing in the village. Cripps insisted that the new buildings should be of stone and stylistically in keeping with local vernacular traditions, meeting the difference in cost for the council housing, re-opening quarries on his own land to provide building. This was recorded in Country Life by . As a result, by 1944 Filkins was being hailed as 'a modernised village' and 'an illustration of contemporary village planning', in an article in Country Life by Christopher Hussey.[15]

Historic houses that have been added to or extensively rebuilt.

Nether Lypiatt Manor
  • Rodborough Court, Rodborough Gloucestershire. (1899) The house was extended to the north-east in 1899 by Morley Horder and apparently increased in height.[16]
  • Otley Hall, Suffolk. Dated to 1512 and home of the Gosnold family until 1674 was not altered apart from minor works in 1600 until Horder made additions and alterations in 1910-11 including a new entrance on the S side through the stair turret and addition of a small extension at the south end of the south wing, as well as removing some of the external plaster and rebuilding the chimney tops.[17]
  • Nether Lypiatt Manor, Gloucestershire. Built in 1702–1705 by an unknown architect for Judge John Coxe, with one wing added in 1931 by Horder, the small house forms a perfect square of 46 feet (14 m) on each side, with sash windows, tall chimneys, hipped roofs and gate piers and railings.The attic storey with dormers was removed in 1844, but replaced by Horder c. 1923.
  • Rockbeare House, Devon.
  • Steeple Manor
Upton House (National Trust) - The main entrance
  • Upton House, Warwickshire.(1927–28). The original house dates from 1695 In 1927 the house was acquired by Walter Samuel, 2nd Viscount Bearsted, whose father was the founder of Shell Transport & Trading. Lord Bearsted commissioned Morley Horder to make alterations to house. The house with gardens and art collection were donated to the National Trust in 1948. Horder extensively rebuilt the and the segmented pediment over entrance is hoarder's work. Horder added the art gallery and the interior of the house is nearly completely by Horder.[18]
  • Winwick Manor House.Winwick, Northamptonshire (1926 & 1937). Elizabethan house, brick with stone dressings[19] with a large extension to the south-east designed by P.H. Morley-Horder in 1926, keeping in keeping with the style of the original building, and a further extension in 1937.[16]
  • South Barn, Southcliffe Road, Swanage, Dorset. (1937). An 18th-century house that was virtually re-built by Morley Horder.[20]
  • Waterston Manor, Puddletown, Dorset.

Work for Jesse Boot (Lord Trent)

Through his friendship with Sir Jesse Boot he obtained the commission to design the buildings at University College, Nottingham from 1922–28. This included the Highfields Park, the Highfields Lido and the Trent Building.[4]

Shops for Boots the Chemist

Boots, High Street, Lincoln 1924
  • Bristol
  • Lincoln (1924)
  • Windsor.
  • Regent Street, London

Public Houses

Former Greyhound in Stroud, Gloucestershire

Early in his career Morley Horder had a Stroud office which mainly undertook work for the brewers Godsells & Sons Brewery. The brewery was taken over by the Stroud Brewery in 1928. A notable example of his pub architecture is the former Greyhound in Stroud. The Greyhound was rebuilt by Godsells & Sons in 1903, and was designed in the Arts and Crafts style. It was eventually closed as a pub in 2010; it has since reopened as a café.

References

  1. Parks & Gardens UK
  2. 1 2 ”Whyte” (2015), p. 177
  3. While Wikipedia does have an article on Morley Horder, it has yet to have an article on English or British Neo-Georgian architecture, so it is difficult to relate Horder to other architects working in this style such as Percy Thomas in Cardiff or Arthur John Hope of Manchester.
  4. 1 2 3 Dictionary of Scottish Architects
  5. The Horder Family Architect, Actress, Physician, Musician
  6. Arthur Oswald (1937) The Court House, East Meon, Hampshire - The Home of Mr P Morley Horder, Country Life Vol. 81, 8th May 1937
  7. Cherry anD Pevsner, London 4:North, The Buildings of England. p. 552.
  8. Cherry anD Pevsner, London 4:North, The Buildings of England. p. 487.
  9. Cherry anD Pevsner, London 4:North, The Buildings of England. p. 211.
  10. "Somerville College - British History Online". www.british-history.ac.uk.
  11. Cherry and Pevsner, London 4:North, The Buildings of England. pg. 280.
  12. Pevsner, Northamptonshire p. 374.
  13. Spennells Directory, 1914-16
  14. Historic England
  15. C. Hussey, 'Filkins, Gloucestershire: a Modernised Village', Country Life, 28 Apr. 1944, pp. 728–31;
  16. 1 2 Nicholas Kingsley
  17. Bettley & Pevsner The Buildings of England Suffolk: East, Yale (2015) p.453.
  18. Pevsner N & Wedgwood A (1966) The Buildings of England: Warwickshire pg439
  19. Pevsner, Northamptonshire p.464.
  20. Rightmove

Literature

  • Brodie A. (ed), Directory of British Architects, 1834–1914: 2 Vols, British Architectural Library, Royal Institute of British Architects, 2001. pp. 211–212.
  • Gray A. Stuart(1985), Edwardian Architecture, pp. 214–5.
  • Kathryn A. Morrison, (2003) English Shops & Shopping, Yale University Press.(for Boot's architecture.)
  • Whyte Wiilliam (2015) Redbrick A social and architectural history of Britain's civic universities Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198716129
  • Dictionary of Irish Architects
  • The Horder Family Architect, Actress, Physician, Musician
  • Boot’s architecture. Building our Past
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