Thursday, 8 January 2026

Thomas Warr Atwood - the Monument in the Graveyard at Weston, Bath.

 


to be continued...............


 The monument to the architect/builder Thomas Warr Atwood, died 1775, in Weston churchyard, Bath, reputedly designed by T. Baldwin. 




Not dissimilar to the Weston monument is the Chest tomb at St Nicholas Church Winsley surmounted with a classical urn, c1810, ashlar, elongated hexagon plan with reeded strips at angles and oval south plaque with rosettes in spandrels. Husk drop in canted sections. High raised concave curved and fluted top with urn. 

South side is the inscription to Richard Atwood of Turleigh Manor, died 1808. T.W. Atwood was younger brother.


The Urn and therefore the monument were almost certainly carved in the Yard of the parsons at Claverton Street, Widcombe.

The Urn is no. 96 from the Parsons  book of Drawings - Bath Central Library, ref. B731.7 PAR 38:18

 I am very grateful to the archivists at Bath Archives for allowing me access and to take the photograph here of this manuscript.

 I have posted previously at some length on the 18th Century stone carvers of Widcombe, Bath, Somerset see:

 https://english18thcenturyportraitsculpture.blogspot.com/2018/07/parsons-and-greenway-sculptors-of-bath.html

 For an article on the Journal of Thomas Parsons see:  An Artisan in Polite Culture: Thomas Parsons, Stone Carver, of Bath, 1744–1813 Lawrence E. Klein, Huntington Library Quarterly Vol. 75, No. 1 (March 2012), pp. 27-51 (see link above).

See my previous posts -

https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2019/07/the-parsons-of-bath-18th-century-stone.html













................................


Some known Atwood Buildings in Bath


The Paragon (1768).

Oxford Row, Lansdown Road. (1773).

The New Gaol, Bathwick (1772-3).

Guildhall, Bath.





Friday, 2 January 2026

The 18th Century Monuments in All Saints Church Weston, Bath. No 8.

 


The Monument to William Hall (died 1753).
and his wife and Daughter.






Some more random notes regarding the Ford Family of Stone and Marble Masons - 18th Century Builders of Bath.

 


I have already metaphorically put pen to paper regarding the Careers of the Ford Family of stone and Marble Masons of Bath.

This post is a series of notes to act as an aide memoire.

John Ford I (1711 - 67) brother Stephen Ford (d.1785).


John Ford I was the son of William Ford mason of Colerne, who had married Mary Mullins 13 April 1710 at Colerne.


His will PROB 11/932/343 dated 31 May 1763 - his executors his son John Ford (II) and nephew William Ford, witnessed by Sarah Elkington, George Penny and William Hooper.

To son John his interests in the water pipes cisterns etc for the Kings Circus and Gay St.

The property in Charles St with the courtyard and gardens and workshops adjoining.

The plot or piece of ground in the Parish of St James, Bath which he used as workyards which he had purchased from Thomas Garrard and his wife.

Daughters Betty, Martha and Susannah and Mary (Plura) £250 and her children Joseph, John and Mary


He leaves his sisters property leased at Colerne where they lived with their mother.


Work yard and shops in John St. (Walcot, Bath) to the testators son John.

...............................

Ref.  land at the Vinyards -

Garden in Walcott, Winniard close, Great Kingsmead. (Hayne, Ford, Sainsbury, Omer, Jelly, Morris, Davey). 1755 - 62)

https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/8e5cc821-c677-4b58-99c1-49819a6896af



.......................





The Death of William Ford - Bath Journal - Monday 25 September 1786.

Builder and Mason - Dwelling house at the Vinyards.





The Will of William Ford - 23 July 1786.

Father of John and Stephen.


Mentions properties in the Vinyards, Hoopers Court (Hedgemead), Gibbs Court ( behind Chatham Row) Walcot St), Miles Court (now Miles Buildings), and Gay Street (home of his mother - ultimately devised to his son Stephen) Bath.

He was a partner in the water works which supplied the Circus and Gay Street.

He also His leasehold premises shop and yard near the road from Monmouth Street towards Bristol to his son Stephen.

His messuage or tenement in Edgar Buildings, (George St.) coach house, stable, garden and vaults leaves to his wife until her demise or remarriage) and the devised to his son John Ford I.


....................................



 

It appears that he had already made separate arrangements for his daughter Mary and her husband the sculptor Joseph Plura and their children - Joseph (Giuseppi) Plura married Mary the 17 year old daughter of John Ford I in 1750 - he arrived in England and was settled in Bath by 1749 - he probably arrived from Italy with the bath sculptor Prince Hoare. He had set up his own workshop in Bath in 1763.

 In 1742 the surveyor Thomas Thorpe produced  a map - An Actual Survey of the city of Bath in the County of Somerset and of five miles round in nine sheets. Both John Ford and his brother Stephen were subscribers along with many of the great and good including Ralph Allan, the Earl of Chesterfield and Alexander Pope.


In his will (PROB 11/932/343) our John Ford II mentions his wife Martha (Elkington), his mother Mary Ford (nee Mullins), sisters Sarah and Alice (of Colerne), daughters Mary (m. Joseph Plura sculptor and assistant to Prince Hoare), Betty, Martha and Susanna. The Elkingtons were Bath merchants.


When he died he had several properties including three in Pierrepoint St, St James Parish which he left to each of his daughters and a property in Duke St (off the Grand Parade - between North and South Parades) designed by John Wood), and property in Charles St (off Queen Square) including courtyard, garden and workshops, and property in John St. which he left to his son John Ford II.



 ...........................


John Ford I was the master-mason responsible for building amongst many Bath properties, King Edward's Grammar School in Broad  Street in 1752. 

Rupert Gunnis noted that "almost certainly he executed" some of the earlier funeral monuments which had previously been listed under his son, John Ford II (1736 - 1803) but only one can be identified with any certainty.


 This should be treated with some caution - it is not implausible but it is most likely that the sculptural work was carried out in his workshops - on the other hand, his son John II describes himself as a statuary (in his will), whilst there is no documentary evidence it seems most likely that John Ford II worked with Prince Hoare and Joseph Plura (who married his sister Mary.

John Ford I was an executor of the will of Dr Bennett Stevenson (d. 1757) who was the minister from 1720 of the Presbyterian church in Frog Lane (later rebuilt as New Bond St). Stevenson was a founding governor and sat on the Mineral Water Hospital Committee.


...............................


The Death of  John Ford I at Weymouth.

Salisbury and Winchester Journal - 14 September 1767.




...............................



Winchcombe Howard Packer Monument.

after 1747.

Bucklebury - west Berkshire

inscribed Ford and Parsons.







.................................


The Fords and the Buildings of Bath.


 

The following attributions of buildings by the Fords need to be checked - info from -https://julianorbach.weebly.com/uploads/2/3/7/5/23756946/wiltshire_architects.odt

 

 1765. Probably built a wing Burton Pynsent house, Curry Rivel, Som, for William Pitt, Earl of Chatham, which remains after the rest was demolished; RL2 63; Ford builder but Pitt may have designed it himself, SC notes;

 1765-7, mason, Burton Pynsent column, Curry Rivel, Somerset, for William Pitt to design by Capability Brown, cf Follies Journal 7, 2007 41-55;

 

1768 - Ford the Younger was involved in the building as Mason of 25 Royal Crescent Bath along with Charles Coles plasterer.



...........................

 

 The Other John Fords of Bath.

 

There are several other John Fords of Bath which he shouldn't be confused with - John Ford, Mayor of Bath 1660, and John Ford, the apothecary - this John Ford was the son of an apothecary, Richard Ford Mayor of Bath in 1713 and again 1741 to whom he had been apprenticed. In 1741 a certain John Garden accused him of making ‘a sodomitical assault’ on his person. 

A further complaint of 1742 claimed he was neglecting his civic duties. He leased property in Stall Street (including the ‘Back House’), part of the White Swan in Cheap Street, the Boat Tavern in Walcot Street, and a lodging house at the Cross Bath.


...........................


The Fords and the Building of Gay Street and the Circus

Very low resolution and almost unreadable image of a plan at Bath Record Office.

Showing the plots of the houses in Gay Street and the first houses to be built in the Circus.

I will hopefully be able to obtain better images in due course.

West side of Gay Street

1, Gay Street in trust Thomas Jelly

2 and 3, Gay Street - John Ford.

8. Gay St - Prince Hoare.

9. John Ford and Thomas Jelly.

17. Dr Oliver.

..................

The Circus.

1, The Circus John Ford and Thomas Jelly.

2. The Circus John Ford and Thomas Jelly.

.................

East side of Gay Street.

4. Gay St. John Ford and Thomas Jelly.

8 & 9. Gay St. John Ford

10 and 11 Gay St - John Mullins 

(It is probably no co incidence that John Ford had married Mary Mullins 13 April 1710 at Colerne. The Mullins were land and quarry owners at Box and Colerne - a few miles east of Bath - http://www.boxpeopleandplaces.co.uk/mullins-family-schoolmasters.html



......................

Popes Bath Chronicle 9 December 1762.


......................


Bath Chronicle and Weekly Gazette - Thursday 18 April 1765.

The reference here is also to his brother Stephen Ford (mason) d. 1785.




..........................


William Ford, Stephen Ford. - Property at The Vinyards, Bath - sometimes called Harlequin Row.

Adapted and improved from -

https://historyofbath.org/images/ProceedingsPDFs/PROCEEDINGS%2007%202018-19.pdf

On 26 February 1755 Charles Hayne, a descendant and heir of Thomas Hayne, sold to Thomas Omer, Gentleman, and Thomas Jelly, carpenter, "All that close of meadow or pasture ground called the Winniards (Vinyards) containing by estimate 5 acres being in the parish of Walcot and adjoining to the city of Bath". 

Omer and Jelly were among the leading developers of Georgian Bath, Omer as a financier and Thomas Jelly as the architect and builder.


Other parts of Winniards (Vinyards) were being laid out for building at this time in a rather piecemeal fashion. To the south on the same day, 21 December 1756, Omer and Jelly conveyed to John Hutchins of Bath, plasterer, the plot on which now stand 10 Vineyards and the houses behind. Hutchins in turn conveyed the plot to John Hensley of Bath, carpenter, on 25 September 1760. 


By that time the adjoining plot had been acquired by Selina, Countess of Huntingdon. The Huntingdon Chapel was completed in 1765 as the home for her strict Methodist sect, the Connexion. 

By a deed of 26 February 1761, Omer and Jelly conveyed the 20 Vineyards plot to William Sainsbury and John Mann.

Omer and Jelly conveyed the plot containing 18 and 19 Vineyards to Biggs and Prynn by deeds of 16 and 17 April 1765. By a deed of 19 April 1765, Biggs and Prynn conveyed a plot extending "123 feet backwards towards the west" to two other Bath builders, John Hensley (who had built No.10) and William Davis, who then built the houses which are now 18 and 19 Vineyards and sold them to the Reverend Edward Sheppard (is this Dr Shepherd of Chatham Row?).

The plots on which 1 to 6 Vineyards stand were conveyed on 22 February 1764 by Omer and Jelly to a number of builders:

• Henry Gibbs of Bath carpenter and James Allen of Bath baker

• John Latty of Bath carpenter and Richard Lingers of Bath mason.

• William Davis of Bath tyler and plasterer and Samuel Rundell of Bath barber.

• Jasper Davis of Bath painter and Samuel Rundell of Bath barber.

William Ford of Bath mason and Stephen Ford of Bath master builder (5 & 6).

7 Vineyards must already have been built by then, as the builders were required to erect a 'good and substantial messuage in such a form as the tenement erected by Benjamin Chilton in the same row'. Chilton, a plumber, had the plot immediately to the north. 

The line dividing these plots from Belmont was marked by a trench cut in the ground.

These names and occupations speak of a great local entrepreneurial spirit. Everyone seems to have been getting in on the development act. We also see the same combination of artisan and financier as with Jelly and Omer.

13 and 15 Vineyards are similar in design. They were complete by about 1770, but curiously there was a 20' gap between them. In 1771 the Chronicle carried an advertisement by Mr Walter Bennett, who occupied No.13, offering his "well-built brick dwelling house" for sale together with a 20 foot plot "on which another house might be erected, having the walls on both sides, from the Roofing quite down to the Kitchen Floor, already built". The house and vacant plot were still being offered for sale in September 1774 but the space had been filled with a new house by 1779, cleverly linking the two earlier houses.



Garden in Walcott, Winniard close (Vinyards), Great Kingsmead. (Hayne, Ford, Sainsbury, Omer, Jelly, Morris, Davey).


...........................

Jelly and Ralph Allen's Town House.

 The building is north - and behind North Parade Passage and Church St 

The land to the North was formerly the Bowling Green

In 1620 Thomas Cotterell obtained a lease to build against the orchard wall, and this may have been the foundation of 7 and 30, though the two properties shown on this present map are slightly larger than the dimensions given on his lease.

 In the Survey of the Manor before John Hall's death, and again in 1718, 7 is called the Post House, but by 1726 it is named the Old Post House.

 

In 1727 Ralph Allen held the site, having become a sub-tenant there as early as 1718. He also acquired part of the Bowling Green as a garden. The ornamental front designed for him in 1727 can still be seen on the north side of the property, facing east. There is no trace however of a further "northern wing", a misunderstanding. 

The 1762 development lease for the grounds of Abbey House leaves no room for such a wing, and there is no sign of it on later maps.


In I733 the Kingston rental lists 7 as "Mr Ralph Allen his Heirs''. By 1750 Philip Allen is listed for the property. In the 1760's it is given as being in the occupation of Prince Hoare.


Holland (2007) claims that the N wing on the opposite side was never built: she notes that the land on which it supposedly stood had been granted to Jelly and Fisher for development in 1762. Current stonework at the South corner of the Ralph Allen Town House and to the rear elevation of 2 North Parade Passage does suggest both these buildings were linked at some stage.

As suggested by Cotterell's map of Bath of 1852, Ralph Allen's town house had by then been subdivided into three properties: 1 and 2 North Parade Passage and what is now called the Ralph Allen Town House. The three properties are also shown on the 1:500 Ordnance Survey Town Map for Bath published in 1886.


The building was later occupied by the sculptor Prince Hoare - it is likely that his workshops were on the site of the Bowling Green which had earlier been the garden of Ralph Allen.


Bath Chronicle 19 April 1770, - Property: to let - house near North Parade, Bath lately in possession of Mr Prince Hoare. Details from Mr Edw. Parker, wine merchant in Westgate St, Bath. This refers to the house referred to as Ralph Allen's Town House the Old Post Office.



The map below shows the area before the building of Church Street which cut through from the Abbey Green to the Abbey via Kingston Parade.

Abbey house was demolished in 1755.

Anne Bushells House west of the Ralph Allen,s Post office


The house on the corner of Abbey Green and Church St was built by Thomas Jelly for the Duke of Kingston's Estate in 1762.


Jelly and Fisher also obtained permission to make vaults fifteen feet long stretching under Abbey Green.


The Kingston Estate Map. 1725 Copied 1882.


A Map of the Scite of the dissolved Priory of Bath called ye Bath Abby with the several Lands & Tenements within the Liberty & Precincts thereof adjoyning to the City of Bath . . . Copied Jan 7 1882 Original dated 1725.

KE 1725 Bath Library.

Anne Bushells House is to the West of Ralph Allen's and later his brothers Old Post House.

This property became the premises of the sculptor Prince Hoare.

Next door in what became Sally Lunns 1743 the Duke of Kingston, who had acquired all the land of John Hall, sold the property to William Robinson and the legal documents from this transaction can be seen today displayed on the walls. 

From 1781 to 1786 James Wicksteed operated here as a seal engraver. His father John had pioneered a water powered seal engraving machine, based for decades in Widcombe, where the Wicksteed Machine became one of the local sights. (this needs checking)


Lilliput Alley was previously called -


..............................

. A Map of the dissolved Priory or Abbey of Bath belonging to his Grace the Duke of Kingston 1750.

ref KE 1750

Peach Collection, Irvine Collection, Bath Library.



......................................



................................


Locating Fords workshops and the Jelly's Timber Yard.

Ranging along the north side of the Bristol Road (the continuation west of Monmouth St, from East to West are Sir Peter Rivers Gay’s Kitchen Gardens, a Coal Yard (intended site of a Farm House and Offices), and a large block of storage buildings and auction rooms (formerly Jelly & Sainsbury’s  and Jelly and Fishers Timber Yard) west of Queen Square in Stable Lane (now Palace Yard Mews).

Currently Davies Painters and Decorators supplies.

The yard of William Ford (and likely John Ford I and his son) as mentioned in his will was also located in the same area along the road to Bristol - a continuation of Monmouth St. - I suspect between the Coal Yard and 

Brett's Timber Yard was some meters further West.


Detail from Map of Bath dated 1795 by C. Harcourt Masters.

Stable Lane - now Palace Mews






.........................


Jelly and Atwood in Broad St, Bath.

Walborough (St Werberghs) Meadow later called Cockey’s Gardens, the house of Edward Cockey is mentioned as standing there in 1709 and 1756.

In 1734 the Corporation issued a lease of the triangular corner site (corner of Broad St and Bladud's Blgs) to Edward Newman. By July 1757 it leased ‘two messuages’, i.e. Nos. 17 and 18, Broad St to Thomas Jelly. It seems likely that he built 17 and 18, though it is apparently uncertain whether

Thomas Jelly or Thomas Atwood designed Bladud’s Buildings to the north-east of 17 and 18 Broad St


......................................................


Jelly, Palmer and St James Parade.


St James's Parade, originally Thomas Street, was the centrepiece of a development from 1765 onwards by Richard Jones, Thomas Jelly and Henry Fisher who were granted liberty in September 1765 to 'pull down the Boro' walls next to the Ambry gardens in order to build new houses there'. 

The street was closed off with bollards at each end, and the houses fronted a broad paved walk in place of the road. The elevations, attributed to Thomas Jelly and John Palmer (c. 1738 – 19 July 1817) show the influence of John Wood the Younger's work elsewhere, as in Rivers Street. The houses were mainly built in c1768.


The  aim of making the Avon navigable as far as Bath was achieved in 1727 and a quay constructed just below the bridge on the Ambury meadows complete with warehouses. These early warehouses appear to have remained standing, although their use had changed over time, until at least the 1930s.

It was from the new town Quay, completed in 1729 with warehousing, timber yards and houses designed by John Strachan, that most of the imported materials for the Georgian building developments were supplied.

The Ambry: The most easterly of these grounds adjoined Southgate Street and St.Lawrence’s Bridge rebuilt as the Old Bridge in 1750 and was known (with a variety of spelling) as the Amery, Ambry or Ambury, a name perhaps derived from an isolated property in the north-east corner of the meadow by the South Gate (still marked by Amery Lane) which is thought to have been the site of the Almonry where alms were dispensed at the city’s entrance.


After the Dissolution of the monastery in 1539, the King’s Barton and the Manor of Walcot, together with the Ambry, passed through various hands, and from 1699 were all acquired by Robert Gay, a London surgeon. 

It was he who made the first agreements for the Georgian development of the upper part of the town with John Wood, but it was his daughter, Margaret Garrard who completed the agreement in 1765 for the development of the Ambry with Henry Fisher, Thomas Jelly and Walter Taylor. This led to the complete infill of the remaining open area with streets, including St.James’s Parade (initially called Thomas Street), Wine Street and Peter Street (initially Queen Street or Lower Queen Street) on the north side, and to the south, Somerset Street (initially Garrard Street), Corn Street (linked to the Quay by a narrow passage called The Ambury), Back Street, and Little Corn Street (initially Clarke’s Lane).


For the  Ambury estate: the Corporation gave ‘Messrs. Richard Jones, Thomas Jelly and Henry Fisher…liberty to pull down the Boro Wall next to the Ambury Gardens [for which Fisher and Jelly paid the rate - St. James’s Rate Book, 1765-66, Bath Record Office], in order to build new houses there…’(Council minutes, 30 September 1765); see also building leases for St. James’s Parade, etc., granted by Jelly, Fisher and Taylor (a grocer, and beneficiary under will of Richard Jones, deceased), BC 153/121a, 1to 4, Bath Record Office;

 For Kingsmead: the Lidiard papers, Box I, DD/CRM, Somerset Record Office, show, inter alia that in1785, Henry Fisher gave Giles Fisher (of the tiler & plasterer branch of the family) ‘our third of the Kingsmeads’ (the other two thirds having belonged to Thomas Jelly and John Ford, respectively), in trust for Robert and Thomas Lidiard, both masons, who had recently purchased it, and continued building there.


From A New and Correct Plan of the City of Bath and places adjacent, 

published by Taylor and Meyler, 1750-1751.




.



A New Plan of the City of Bath, 

published by Leake and Taylor, c.1770.






https://historyofbath.org/images/documents/8dd19670-1336-4a5e-8e5a-c777d3aea0ec.pdf



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St Swithin's Church Walcot, Bath.

Walcot Church (St Swithin’s) was located at the junction of today’s Paragon, Walcot Street and London Street and was rebuilt in 1777 - 80 by John Palmer and Thomas Jelly.



............................


Of Tangential interest.

Deeds of  7, The Circus etc.


Deeds sold by Bonhams referring to Garrard and the development of the Kings Circus in particular 7 The Circus built for William Pitt Earl of Chatham - together with attested copies made in 1767 of the bargain and sale from Thomas Garrard to Jenny, widow of John Wood, and John Wood Jr of The Hayes, Walcot (just to the east of Bath above the London Road).

 “for the purpose of building the King’s Circus and Gay Street, Bath”, 1754, 

of the sale of No.7 by William Pitt to Robert and Charles Dingley, 1763, of the sale by the Dingleys and Thomas Nuthall to Charles Dingley, 1766, and of the sale by Charles Dingley to W.A. Ashhurst, 1767, and of the sale by Ashhurst to Lady Bradshaigh, 1771; plus later and related deeds and copies, the originals (from 1775) on vellum, the transcripts on paper, the first duty-stamped, some dust-staining etc., folio

https://www.bonhams.com/auction/15066/lot/883/bath-collection-of-deeds-relating-to-no7-the-kings-circus-bath-comprising-a-counterpart-release-from-dorothea-lady-bradshaigh-to-diana-molyneux-1775-a-conveyance-in-fee-of-the-same-property-from-lady-bradshaigh-to-john-taylor-a-conveyance-in-fee-of-the-property-from-taylor-to-david-ross-1783-and-from-his-son-colonel-robert-ross-to-mrs-sutherland-1810-together-with-attested-copies-made-in-1767-of-the-bargain-and-sale-from-thomas-garrard-to-jenny-widow-of-john-wood-and-john-wood-jr-of-the-hayes-walcot-just-outside-bath-for-the-purpose-of-building-the-kings-circus-and-gay-street-bath-1754-of-the-sale-of-no7-by-william-pitt-to-robert-and-charles-dingley-1763-of-the-sale-by-the-dingleys-and-thomas-nuthall-to-charles-dingley-1766-and-of-the-sale-by-charles-dingley-to-wa-ashhurst-1767-and-of-the-sale-by-ashhurst-to-lady-bradshaigh-1771-plus-later-and-related-deeds-and-copies/

Tuesday, 30 December 2025

The 18th Century Monuments in All Saints Church Weston, Bath. No 7. Thomas Peterson d. 1803 inscribed and firmly attributed to the Greenway Brothers of Bristol.







I had no intention when I commenced this piece to write the life histories of the Mangotsfield / Bristol Greenway brothers but a little investigation brought up some interesting facts not least the later career as an architect of Francis Howard Greenway after transportation for forgery to New South Wales Australia.

Francis Howard Greenway  - the father of Australian architecture.


Francis Howard Greenway (1777 - 1837). Olive Greenway (1775 - 1846) and John Tripp Greenway. 

Some notes -


Francis Greenway (1777 - 1837) the architect was born at Mangotsfield, Bristol - died East Maitland, Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia.

He was the youngest son of Francis Greenway (sometimes Grinway) mason (d.c 1793) and Anne Webb (of Colerne).

There are several mentions of Francis Greenway (Snr) mason at the house at Stoke Gifford in the Badminton Muniments at Gloucester Archives - it became known as Stoke Park, and was rebuilt in 1750 by Norborne Berkeley, 4th Baron Botetourt (died 1770), from a neo-classical design by Thomas Wright.
References including - 1788 - Francis Greenway repairing and cleaning the monument in Stoke church


Their grandfather was John Greenway, born 1720, who married Mary Tripp, a member of a family also well-known round the outskirts of Bristol. This also explains how John Tripp Greenway, one of Francis Greenway’s brothers, came to be so named.


For an useful overview of the life and works of Francis Greenway and his family see -


see also -









..........................


Francis (Howard) Greenway - Architect.


Probably the most useful source of information is the article by Allan Keevil pages - 44 in the The Survey of Bath and District The Magazine of the Survey of Old Bath and Its Associates No.21, October 2006.

I have quoted or adapted liberally from this essay.

The Magazine of the Survey of Old Bath and Its Associates No.21, October 2006 - Allan Keevil 






On 28 March 1792, ‘Francis Grinway [sic] son of Francis Grinway [sic] and Mary Webb (of Colerne, Wiltshire) of Downend, County of Gloucester, [was] put to William Paty, Architect, and Sarah his wife for seven years. Friends to find apparel and washing’


William Paty (1758-1800) was the son of Thomas Paty (1718-1789), a Bristol mason, statuary and architect, described by Walter Ison, as ‘perhaps the most talented member of this family’. 

Thomas Paty had been called in by Bath Corporation to arbitrate in the dispute about the plan to be used for the building of the new Bath Guildhall, in 1775. His son, William, was the first Bristol architect to be trained in London at the Royal Academy architectural schools. He then worked in partnership with his brother and father in Bristol, from 1777. Like his father, he was an extremely accomplished statuary, and the effect of his London training began to show in his architectural work in the 1780s, in a highly accomplished Adamesque manner. Work by him included Blaise Castle House, Henbury, in 1795 (described as remarkably forward-looking, and possibly influenced by Humphry Repton), for John Scandrett Harford the Elder (1754-1815), a member of the wealthy Quaker family of  Bristol merchants and bankers.

For Francis Greenway, Paty’s influence and training would have been invaluable; it is clear that Greenway was an apt pupil. 

He must have completed his seven-year apprenticeship in 1799, the year before his master William Paty died, when the business was taken over by James Foster the Elder (1748-1823), who had also been a pupil and apprentice of William Paty.




Francis Greenway was then employed by and became a protégé of the architect John Nash, at 28 Dover Street with whom he began to build both a minor reputation and career. 

The son of a Welsh millwright, London-born Nash had served an apprenticeship with the architect and former sculptor Sir Robert Taylor before branching out on his own as a surveyor, carpenter and builder. An indifferent early career in London soon came unstuck, with the failure of speculative ventures in Bloomsbury Square and Great Russell Street. In 1783, a bankrupted Nash retreated to the town of Carmarthen on the River Towy in South Wales and the support of his mother’s family. And so began what the architectural historian Sir John Summerson described as ‘ten years of provincial oblivion

In 1800, Greenway exhibited two architectural drawings at the Royal Academy,  he gave his address as ‘At Mr. Nash’s.

From Nash’s office in 1800, Greenway exhibited drawings or paintings of ‘The Saxon Gateway, College Green, [Bristol Cathedral] Bristol’ and ‘West door, Magdalen College chapel, Oxford’. 

In 1802, he submitted a work, or works, entitled ‘Chapel, Library, etc., [designed for the side of a quadrangle] at Bristol’. This second appearance at the academy may have been with Greenway’s own designs executed under a new-found autonomy, but it is his exhibit for 1803 that is most intriguing of all. The catalogue lists a work named ‘Thornbury castle restored, with a canal brought from the river Severn up to Thornbury



He later perhaps designed the “Market House, at Carmarthen”,  the Chapel Library, the Clifton Club, and the restoration work at the Thornbury Castle.



Shortly after his marriage in 1804, Greenway went into business with his two brothers, Olive Greenway and John Tripp Greenway, offering the services advertised in the Bristol Gazette in 1805: 

“All orders for marble monuments, Chimney Pieces, and every kind of ornamental stone work shall be carefully attended to, and executed in the most artist-like manner.” 



  On 26 January 1805 – by coincidence the seventeenth anniversary of the entry of the First Fleet into distant Port Jackson, New South Wales – the three Greenway brothers announced in the Bristol press that they were open for business:

"Beg leave to inform their friends and the public that they have opened a room and a yard at No. 7 Limekiln Street opposite the Riding School … All orders for marble monuments, chimney pieces, and every kind of ornamental stone work shall be carefully attended to, and executed in the most artistlike manner. Designs for houses, lodge gates, and every part of domestic architecture may be seen at the office drawn by F. Greenway – who takes this opportunity of offering his services to the Public in the capacity of Architect, Statuary, and Landscape-Gardiner .1

 

In his own eccentric style, Francis then took the readers of Felix Farley’s Bristol Journal through an explanation of the decoration above the doorway to the Greenway office. Perhaps he thought prospective clients would come and inspect this tribute to the Ancients and find the Greenways agreeably steeped in classicism:

 N.B. The Bass-Relief [sic] over the Doric Door, is intended to represent Minerva giving the Plan of the Pantheon … to Architecture; Mechanics is next to him as a necessary attendant; the boy on the left hand of Minerva is drawing a building, while Sculpture is modelling the famous torso, so highly admired by MICHAEL ANGELO.

 Orders received at Downend as usual.

The move to Limekiln Street (or Lime Kiln Road as it is today), on the south-west edge of Bristol - close to the Cathedral and with easy access to the nearby River Avon and docks, now placed the Greenway brothers close to the scene of much of their ongoing work.



In 1806 Francis designed the Hotel and Assembly Rooms in the Mall at Clifton, which his brothers contracted to build. During the same period the brothers were buying unfinished houses in Clifton in a speculative capacity, which they completed and then sold. 

Francis Greenway, architect, married Mary Moore on 27 April 1809 in Bristol by licence, witnesses John Tripp Greenway and Mary Greenway.

In 1809 the brothers became bankrupt and the Clifton Assembly Rooms were completed by Joseph Kay.

It appears that for the next four years, the business continued  until April, 1809, when legal questions were raised regarding both the family business and some of its present and past contracts. 


One month later, the word “bankruptcy” appeared in the paper, and the Greenway’s career became jeopardized. As a result, the Greenways’ possessions were put up for auction in order to satisfy their creditors. The precise reasons for the legal actions and subsequent bankruptcy have been lost in local legend and unclear newspaper reports regarding a long-standing issue of water rights in and around Bath (where construction of buildings for the use of visitors who wanted to take advantage of the healing waters was common). Greenway tried to show how he had been fooled by speculators and false promises, but his attempt proved fruitless.

 

Despite this setback, Francis Greenway was still working as an architect in 1810.

Problems then arose regarding a contract that Greenway had made with Colonel Richard Doolan, for whom he was doing some work. Greenway swore that the colonel had authorized an additional £250 for some extra work Greenway had provided. However, the contract was lost and the colonel denied the charge. Greenway eventually produced the lost contract. In the court proceedings that followed, it was proved that Greenway had forged the contract, and Greenway was held at Newgate prison for sentencing. 

Three months later, in March of 1812, Greenway found himself in the dock at the Bristol Assizes. He pleaded guilty to the charges and was sentenced to death by hanging  He still had some influential friends, and they managed to get his sentence reduced first to lifelong exile in Australia (which was then a penal colony) and later commuted to transportation to the colony for a term of fourteen years.


  

It is unclear why he had pleaded guilty, but some believe that this was due to his bankruptcy and the dire circumstances he may have faced. 

His motive appears to have been to benefit his creditors rather than himself .

Whilst awaiting deportation to Sydney, Greenway spent time in Newgate Prison, Bristol, where he painted scenes of prison life.

He was then transported to Australia.  

The ships Windham and General Hewett left England the 24th of August, in convoy with the Wansted, Capt. Moore, who sailed from hence last Thursday for Batavia; the General Hewett arrived at Rio the 17th of November, and sailed again the 2nd of December. Together with the military detachments, she received on board for this Settlement 300 male prisoners, of whom we are sorry to report the death of 35, whose names we shall endeavour to procure an account of, and publish in the next Gazette, for the information of their friends and families in Great Britain.

Sydney Gazette, Sat 12 Feb 1814.

Francis Greenway arrived in Sydney New South Wales on the General Hewitt in February 1814 to serve his sentence. He was described as an "architect & painter" in the ship's convict records which also gave his description: age 34, 5ft 6¾in, fair ruddy complexion, light hair, hazel eyes.


From the convict indent (shipping list).

image below courtesy -

https://mhnsw.au/stories/general/francis-greenway/





He found a patron and protector in Governor Lachlan Macquarie, who employed him on various ambitious plans for public works in the colony.

Macquarie appointed him to act as Civil Architect in 1816 and he designed, among other buildings, the lighthouse at South Head, the Female Factory at Parramatta, the Convict Barracks in Sydney, churches at Sydney, Windsor and Liverpool, and the Courthouse at Windsor.

Greenway was granted a conditional pardon on 16 December 1817, and on 24 March 1819 Governor Macquarie wrote to Lord Bathurst concerning the Civil Architect’s salary, stating it was "…very inadequate to his useful and important services as Architect" and further noting that "in consequence of Mr Greenway’s Scientific Skills, Judgment and superior taste, the Government Buildings Erected by him are not only Strong, durable and substantial, but also Elegant and good models of Architecture."

 

Greenway was granted an Absolute pardon on 4 June 1819. It is noted that the Absolute (Free) Pardon was delivered (personally) by His Excellency, Governor Macquarie.




In 1816 he was appointed government architect and in this capacity designed many of the public buildings in Sydney, including St James’s Church. 

Macquarie appointed him to act as Civil Architect to the government in 1816 and he designed, among other buildings, the lighthouse at South Head, the Female Factory at Parramatta, the Convict Barracks in Sydney, St James' Church Sydney, and churches at Windsor and Liverpool, and the Courthouse at Windsor all in New South Wales.






Meanwhile brothers Olive and John Greenway recovered from their bankruptcy and continued business in Bristol. As well as executing monuments, Olive probably designed and certainly built Downend Church, Glos, in 1831, ‘in a feeble Gothic style’ (Colvin)





It is currently unclear to me the relationship between the Bath and Mangotsfield Greenways but it is probably more than coincidence that they were all involved in the stone masonry and architects business.

Some of the Bath Greenways also bore the christian name of Francis. For example, there is an indenture of 20 September 1791, when Thomas King,  the statuary of Walcot, with Mr.Charles Harford, gent., as his trustee, conveyed to John Greenway intrust for Francis Greenway, mason, of Walcot (not the Australian architect), who would have been only thirteen at the time], ‘part of a pasture of 2a 22p called Upper Tyning [Walcot], being all those plots on the west side of an intended building called Mount Pleasant and all those two messuages thereon erecting at the cost of Francis Greenway’.



For a brief overview of the Greenway family of Stone Masons of Claverton St, Widcombe, Bath see -



.....................


For the inscriptions on the monuments at Weston see -




The Monument to Thomas Peterson d. 1803.

in All Saints Church. Weston, Bath. 

Made and inscribed by the Greenway Brothers of Bristol.

Probably put up in 1805. The Biographical Dictionary notes the Monument to Robert Sandford at Leonard Stanley of 1804  - currently I am not aware of any other monuments by the Greenways until 1818.









 







Other Petersons buried in the Churchyard at Weston.

https://www.batharchives.co.uk/sites/www.bathvenues.co.uk/files/2022-07/WES%2520Inscriptiions.pdf


447 Joseph PETERSON, gent of this parish died 18th February 1766 aged 45 years

Also the following children of the above Joseph PETERSON by Ann, his wife

Hester PETERSON died 15 November 1777 aged 22 years

Joseph PETERSON died 18 May 1780 aged 16 years

Peggy PETERSON died 25 December 1780 aged 21 years

Sarah and John both died in infancy

Also Ann PETERSON wife of Joseph died 17th September 1794 aged 67 years

Also Thomas son of Joseph and Ann died 19 April 1803 aged 42 years

Also Joseph Peckston, son of Peckston and Susanna died 4th April 1830 aged 22

Also Peckston son of Joseph and Ann PETERSON died 31 March 1842 aged 85

Also Susanna wife of Peckston PETERSON 1st August 1842 aged 70 years

Also Clement BUSH of this parish gent born 10 January 1808 died 26 January 1882

Also Ann BUSH born 3 February 1082 died 29 November 1883

Also Hester PETERSON sister of above Ann BUSH born 25 July 1805 died 2 December 1887



Tuesday, 23 December 2025

The 18th Century Monuments in All Saints Church Weston, Bath. No 6. General Joseph Smith by Viner of Bath, 1790.




Charles Viner, 10 Morford St, Bath (Bath Chronicle 18 Jan.1798).


Gunnis notes that his monuments are quite well executed but not particularly interesting, the best being that to Lady Dundonald, which is a large work in coloured marbles (1). The diary of Sir Charles Throckmorton of Coughton Court, Warks contains the entry ‘l4 April, 1795. Agreed with Mr. Viner, of Morford Street, Bath, to erect a marble monument in the Abbey Church of Bath to the memory of Mr. Metcalfe according to the draught given in, for £15’ (Beard 1951, (2), 1641). In 1814 Viner was paid £133 for black marble for the staircase hall and, two years later, for the chimneypieces for Doddington Park, Glos, then being rebuilt by Christopher Codrington.


Preliminary List of Works - Charles Viner

Lady Dundonald, Funerary Monument d.1779.  All Saints, Weston, Bath Somerset. (below).

Robert Coe. Funerary Monument ?1788 St Swithins, Walcot, Bath, Somerset.

Theophilus Ponting. Funerary Monument ?1791. Norton St Philip, Somerset

Charlotte Wicker.  Funerary Monument ?1795. Weston, Somerset.

John Taylor. Funerary Monument ?1806. Newton St Loe, Somerset.

Mr Metcalfe. Funerary Monument 1795. Bath Abbey, Somerset. untraced

Brigadier-General Joseph Smith        Funerary Monument †1790                  Weston, Somerset.

Several Chimneypieces.  1816. Doddington Park, Glos. untraced.

John Dick. Funerary Monument ?1817.  Devizes, Wilts.






















 

Another Monument by Viner of Bath.

Catherine Countess of Dundonald Died 1779.



















Monument carved by C. Viner of Bath.

Bristol Cathedral.

Martha Vandewall Williams.

d.1789.

 

Died at the Hot Wells /on the 18th March 1789 /and in the 19th Year of her age /Martha Vandewall Williams /Eldest Daughter and Coheiress /of John Williams Esq'r /of Panthowell, /in the County of Carmarthen /and lies interred near this place.

 

https://bristol-cathedral.co.uk/the-cathedral/search-the-collection/collection-item/index1154.html?id=1240136&page=37