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Samuel Sanders Teulon

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Samuel Sanders Teulon
Born(1812-03-02)2 March 1812
Greenwich, London, England[1]
Died2 May 1873(1873-05-02) (aged 61)
Tensleys, 3 The Green, Hampstead, London[1]
Resting placeHighgate Cemetery (west side)
NationalityBritish
OccupationArchitect
RelativesWilliam Milford Teulon (brother)

Samuel Sanders Teulon (2 March 1812 – 2 May 1873) was an English Gothic Revival architect, noted for his use of polychrome brickwork and the complex planning of his buildings.

Family

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Teulon was born in 1812 in Greenwich, Kent, the son of a cabinet-maker from a French Huguenot family. His younger brother William Milford Teulon (1823–1900) also became an architect.

Career

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He was articled to George Legg, and later worked as an assistant to the Bermondsey-based architect George Porter. He also studied in the drawing schools of the Royal Academy. He set up his own independent practice in 1838, and in 1840 won the competition to design some almshouses for the Dyers' Company at Ball's Pond, Islington. After this his practice expanded rapidly. During the next few years his works mainly consisted of parish schools, parsonages and similar buildings, mostly in the Home Counties.[2]

He was a friend of George Gilbert Scott and became a member of the Council of the Royal Institute of British Architects on 6 January 1835. Between 1841 and 1842 he undertook a long study tour of continental Europe with Ewan Christian who remained a lifelong friend and became his executor. Also in company during the tour was Horace Jones who was later knighted and became architect to the Corporation of the City of London and Hayter Lewis, later Professor of Architecture at University College, London.[3][4]

He built his first church, the Early English-style St Paul, Bermondsey, in 1846. Soon after this he designed St Stephen, Southwark, a building adapted to its square site by being planned in the form of a Greek cross, with the recessed angles filled in by the tower, vestry, chancel aisles.[2] Teulon's religious views were Low Church, and his patrons were predominantly members of established aristocratic families who shared his outlook.[5] In 1848 he received a commission from the 7th Duke of Bedford to design cottages for the Thorney estate,[6][7] and the next year he built Tortworth Court, Gloucestershire, a substantial mansion in a kind of Neo-Tudor style, with a large central tower, for the Earl of Ducie.[2] Other clients included John Sumner, archbishop of Canterbury, who commissioned Christ Church in Croydon;[2] the Duke of Marlborough, for whom he refitted the chapel at Blenheim Palace in 1857-9;[8] the 10th Duke of St Albans and Prince Albert.

His work included the remodelling of several unfashionable 18th-century churches to suit contemporary tastes. Archibald Tait, the Bishop of London, praised his alterations at St. Mary's, Ealing, as "the transformation of a Georgian monstrosity into the semblance of a Byzantine Basilica".[2]

As well as Gothic Revival churches, he designed several country houses and even complete villages, as he did at Hunstanworth in County Durham in 1863.[9]

Style

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Despite his classical training, Teulon's early designs were mostly in imitation of Tudor and Elizabethan styles, and he soon became an enthusiastic follower of the latest developments of the Gothic Revival.[2] He was an enthusiastic user of Polychrome brickwork.[10] His planning was often elaborate: Henry-Russell Hitchcock called his mansion at Elvetham Park in Hampshire "so complex in its composition and so varied in its detailing that it quite defies description".[11] Some of his later work was, however, more restrained: for instance at St Stephen's Church, Rosslyn Hill, Hampstead, (1869–76) the exterior is of purple-brown brick,[12] of subtly varied tones[13] with light stone trimming. The massing of the building is also simpler than in his earlier designs.[12]

Death

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For the last 20 years of his life until his death on 2 May 1873,[2] Teulon lived in one of four Georgian mansions on Hampstead Green which were demolished at the start of the twentieth century to make way for Hampstead General Hospital, which was itself demolished in the 1970s and replaced by The Royal Free Hospital. Opposite his home he designed St Stephen's Church, Rosslyn Hill. He is buried on the west side of Highgate Cemetery,[14] not far from the family vault of his former neighbour on Hampstead Green, Rowland Hill.

His great great great nephew, Alan Teulon, published a book on S.S. Teulon in 2009.[15] He was survived by four sons and four daughters.[2]

Works

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References

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  2. ^ a b c d e f g h "Samuel Sanders Teulon, Fellow.". Papers Read at the Royal Institute of British Architects, Session 1872–73. 1873. pp. 215–7.
  3. ^ Brown 1985, pp. 133–134.
  4. ^ Brodie et al. 2001, p. 779.
  5. ^ Jones, Nigel R. (2005). Architecture of England, Scotland, and Wales. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press. p. 79. ISBN 9780313318504.
  6. ^ a b Riches, Sean (16 December 2009). "The Tankyard Buildings, Thorney". www.fensmuseums.org.uk. Archived from the original on 4 October 2017. Retrieved 10 June 2023.
  7. ^ a b "19th Century". www.thorney-museum.org.uk. Archived from the original on 28 July 2021. Retrieved 10 June 2023.
  8. ^ Crossley, Alan and Elrington, ed. (1990). "Blenheim: Blenheim Palace". A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 12: Wootton Hundred (South) including Woodstock. Institute of Historical Research. Archived from the original on 28 July 2014. Retrieved 23 October 2012.
  9. ^ a b Pevsner 1953, p. 172.
  10. ^ Hitchcock 1977, p. 250.
  11. ^ Hitchcock 1977, p. 256.
  12. ^ a b Hitchcock 1977, p. 269.
  13. ^ Eastlake 1872, p. 368.
  14. ^ source: Miscellanea Geneaologica et Heraldica, 4 Series Vol II (1909) as noted in Alan Teulon's The Life and Work of Samuel Sanders Teulon (2009)
  15. ^ "Famous ancestor built chapel for royal family". www.northamptonchron.co.uk.
  16. ^ Verey 1970a, p. 156.
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Sources

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