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Edward Joseph Hansom

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Nationality
  
English

Role
  
Architect

Uncles
  
Joseph Hansom

Name
  
Edward Hansom

Cousins
  
Joseph Stanislaus Hansom

Practice
  
Dunn and Hansom

Parents
  
Charles Francis Hansom

Occupation
  
Architect

Died
  
May 27, 1900


Born
  
22 October 1842 (
1842-10-22
)

Awards
  
President of the Northern Architectural Association

Buildings
  
Downside Abbey transepts

People also search for
  
Charles Francis Hansom, Joseph Hansom, Joseph Stanislaus Hansom

Edward Joseph Hansom (22 October 1842 – 27 May 1900) was an English Victorian architect who specialised in ecclesiastical buildings in Gothic Revival style, including many Roman Catholic churches.

He was the son of Charles Francis Hansom and the nephew of Joseph Aloysius Hansom (1803–1882), of an architectural dynasty from York. He was articled to his father in Bath in 1859 and was taken into partnership in 1867, when the practice was based in Bristol. He moved to Newcastle-upon-Tyne in 1871 to enter into partnership with Archibald Matthias Dunn (1832–1917), practising under the name of Dunn and Hansom.

Hansom was admitted ARIBA in 1868 and FRIBA in 1881. He served as President of the Northern Architects' Association in 1889-90 and was the first to represent the region on the RIBA Council.

After a long period of ill-health, Hansom suffered from depression such that he was unable to work and shot himself in the office and died on 27 May 1900.

Notable work includes the transepts, representing the first phase of building, to Downside Abbey, Somerset (1882); St Bede's College, Alexandra Park, Manchester; Our Lady Star of the Sea Roman Catholic Church, North Berwick (1879); St Mary's RC Cathedral, military memorial, Edinburgh (1889); and the baptistery to St John's Church, Bath (1871).

References

Edward Joseph Hansom Wikipedia