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Horace Field

Horace Field
Born 1861
Died 1948

Horace Field was a London born architect. His work was often in a Wrenaissance style, as well as other post-gothic English historical revival styles, with influences from the Arts and Crafts movement and Richard Norman Shaw. His commissions including large houses and offices; he produced a number of works for Lloyds Bank as well as offices for the North Eastern Railway in London and York.

Horace Field was born 17 July 1861 at Chalcot Crescent, London; the son of Horace Field (architect, District Surveyor of Putney and Roehampton, 1823–1879) and his wife Christina née White (d. 1866).

Horace Field trained as an architect at the Glasgow firm of John Burnet, then under Robert William Edis of London. Fields was not inspired by Edis's work, but developed great admiration and respect for Richard Norman Shaw architect of Hampsted, who he knew socially – both for his work and as an example of humanity.

Field started his own practice in 1882, as Field and Moore, together with his father's assistant Edwin Emmanuel Moore; their first work was Wedderburn House (1884–5), a six-storey block of flats in Hampstead; Wedderburn Cottage (1886) followed adjacent.

In 1887 he married May Francis Campbell, and joined the Art Workers Guild in 1889. "The Hoo" (17, Lyndhurst Gardens) in Camden was built 1899, and further properties at Nos. 19–21.

In 1890 Field took on Michael Bunney as a trainee; Bunney became Field's chief assistant, until 1902, when he formed his own practice. Together they wrote English domestic architecture of the XVII and XVIII centuries. Field's first commercial business client was Lloyds Bank who commissioned bank buildings at Hampstead c.1895; subsequently Lloyds used Field as architect over a 30-year period.

In 1898 the North Eastern Railway (NER) chose Fields as architect for their new main headquarters in York. Working with William Bell the company's architect, whose input was mainly structural or contractual, the office buildings were constructed between 1900 and 1906, with Field receiving £1,750 payment for his work. Field also received the commission to design the NER's London offices in Cowley Street, his plans were submitted 1904 and the building completed 1906.


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