Tuesday, 30 December 2025

The 18th Century Monuments in All Saints Church Weston, Bath. No 6. Thomas Peterson d. 1803 inscribed and firmly attributed to the Greenway Brothers of Bristol.





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

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

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

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 -






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


Francis Greenway - Architect.


Probably the most useful 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.



On 28 March 1792, ‘Francis Grinway [sic] son of Francis Grinway [sic] 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 the protégé of the architect John Nash, with whom he began to build both a minor reputation and career. 

In 1800, Greenway exhibited two architectural drawings at the Royal Academy, and he later designed the “market house,” the Chapel Library, the Clifton Club, and the restoration of 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.” 


In 1806 he 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. 

In 1809 the brothers became bankrupt and the assembly rooms were completed by Joseph Kay.

It appears that for the next four years, the business ran smoothly 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 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 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 .

He was transported to Australia,  

The 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 2d 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

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


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

Meanwhile, 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 loc cit).

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



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 -




The Monument to Thomas Peterson d. 1803.

in All Saints Church. Weston, Bath. 

Made and inscribed by the Greenway Brothers of Bristol 









 







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