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Owen Browne Carter


Owen Browne Carter (1806 – 30 March 1859) was an English architect, based in Winchester.

Carter was born in London in 1806. He spent 10 years employed in the office of the architect William Garbett (1770–1834) in Winchester, where he was to spend most of his life. Following Garbett's death, Carter oversaw the construction of St John's South, a group of almshouses, to his late employer's design.

In about 1829–30 he went to Egypt in the company of Robert Hay. He spent some time in Cairo, where he made a large number of architectural and topographical drawings, about fifty of which are in collection of the British Museum. Some of these drawings were lithographed under Carter's supervision, and published by Hay in 1840 in a folio volume entitled Illustrations of Cairo.

He drew up designs for the new church of St Peter, Southampton, and for the rebuilding of St Matthew, Otterbourne (in collaboration with the squire, William Yonge, replacing an older church about half-a-mile away), St Mary, Nutley, and St. Michael and All Angels, Knights Enham, although the last of these was not carried out. Carter was also responsible for restorations or alterations at St. Peter ad Vincula, Colemore; St. Leonard, Grately and St Leonard, Oakley, all in Hampshire.

His buildings in Winchester included the New Corn Exchange (now a public library), with a central portico modelled on that of Inigo Jones' St Paul, Covent Garden. Describing the front of the building, The Gentleman's Magazine said that Carter had "endeavoured to avoid the flimsy effect of the modern Grecian school, and to keep in view the more legitimate style of design inculcated by Palladio in Italy, and at home by our own countrymen, Jones and Wren." In 1845 he restored the Great Hall of the Royal Palace at Winchester, renewing the stonework of the parapet and gables, and the plate tracery in the windows, removing the late 18th-century wooden window frames, and replacing the Georgian brick porch with one of a Gothic design.


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