The author, Nicholas Olsberg was Director of the Canadian Centre for Architecture, Montreal and founding Head of Special Collections at the Getty Research Institute. He holds an honours degree in Modern History from Oxford University and a doctorate in Nineteenth Century history from the University of South Carolina. He has written books on the work of Herzog DeMeuron, Carlo Scarpa, John Lautner, Cliff May and Arthur Erickson and been a columnist for the Architectural Review and Building Design.
Description
1. Church and Society, Ancient and Modern, 1837-52; 2. The Social System of the Parish, 1847-73; 3. Reconstructing the Village Church, 1867-92; 4. Church, Health and School in the Burgeoning City, 1849-70; 5. The Church in a Changing Townscape, 1859-79; Spiritual and Sanitary Hygiene in Smaller and Greater London, 1871-96; 7. The Missionary Church; 8. University Reform, 1857-84; 9. The Reconception of Youth, 1870-86; 10. The Regulated Grammar School, 1877-8; 11. Heaths Court, 1878-83; 12. St Michaels Home, Cheddar, 1878-82; 13. Retreat; Repose; Remembrance, 1885-97
Reviews
A disciplined and gracefully written study of the most challenging of all the great English Gothic Revival architects. The book is packed with fascinating insights and illustrations, including many of Butterfield’s own fine drawings. - Andrew Saint is Professor of Architectural History at the Bartlett School of Architecture. He was the General Editor of The Survey of London and author of Richard Norman Shaw and Architect and Engineer.