An A-Z of Architects of Loughborough
For a complete list of the A-Z posts please head over to the bloglist.
Short
biography of Edward Thomas AllcockEdward
Thomas Allcock was born in Eastwood, Nottinghamshire, on 1 July 1871, to parents
Thomas, a joiner, and his wife Martha (Nee Reeve). The couple were married in
1868, and Edward Thomas was their second child, and first son. Sometime between
1871 and 1881, Thomas changed occupation and moved house, so in 1881 he was a
coal merchant employing four men and two boys, and was now living at 1-2 Green
Close Lane in Loughborough.
Between
1885 and 1888, Edward Thomas attended the Loughborough Grammar School. Also
during this time the family moved to No.1 Broad Street, another child was born,
but Thomas was still a coal merchant at Regent Wharf. In 1889, Edward Thomas
went into partnership with George Henry Barrowcliff, although was listed on the
1891 census as Barrowcliff’s assistant, along with Charles Frederick Grundy.
Edward Thomas was also registered as an architecture student with the Royal
Institute of British Architects (RIBA), at the time the family were living at
the Elms in Hathern. By 1896, Edward Thomas was elected an associate of RIBA,
and the following year, Barrowcliff and Allcock designed the Rosebery Board
School, now the Rosebery Medical Centre.
Together,
in 1898, Barrowcliff and Allcock won the competition to design the King James
Grammar School in Knaresborough, and installed a heating system by the
Loughborough firm, Messengers. Also in this year, they designed a belltower for
the bellfoundry, to replace a clock tower that had been damaged in a fire in
1892. They were also responsible for the design of the town swimming baths in
Queen’s Park, Loughborough, now the Charnwood Museum.
Also
in 1898, Edward Thomas married Mary Sampson Handley, the daughter of Thomas
Handley, in Loughborough, and their first child, Annie, was born in 1899, the
same year that Barrowcliff and Allcock designed the manse for the recently
constructed Wesleyan Schoolroom on the corner of Ashby and Radmoor roads.
On
the 1901 census return, Edward Thomas, wife Mary, and children Annie, and baby
Gerard Thomas aged month one, along with one servant, were living at 11 Burton
Street, while Edward Thomas’s father, Thomas, and his family were still at the
Elms in Hathern. Also in 1901, Barrowcliff and Allcock worked with architect
Alfred William Newson Burder, on the design for the children’s convalescent
home in Woodhouse Eaves for Rev. Cooper of Burleigh Hall. Also this year, the
foundation stone for the Ashby-de-la-Zouch Girls’ Grammar School was laid in
June. The architects were Barrowcliff and Allcock, and the Loughborough
construction firm of Moss were the builders.
In
between design work, Edward Thomas and Mary welcomed another son in 1903 –
Richard Percival. This event was
followed in 1904 by Barrowcliff and Allcock winning the competition to design
the Carnegie Public Library for the town of Loughborough, which would be built
in 1905. One of the advisers on the committee was Mr George Hodson M.I.C.E.,
F.G.S. Later that same year, the Cobden Street Board School was damaged by
fire, and Barrowcliff and Allcock were the architects behind the new school
building, and Loughborough’s Corah and Son were the builders. Also in 1904
Barrowcliff and Allcock designed the Dudley Upper Standards School, a building
of red brick, with buff terracotta detailing, in a Jacobean style, and in 1905
designed the open carillon tower at the Taylor Bellfoundry, which was the first
carillon to be built by an English bellfounder.
With
the birth of Margaret Mary in 1905, the family was growing, so by 1908 they had
moved to 55 Park Road, a larger house with 10 rooms. Also that year,
Barrowcliff and Allcock designed the United Reformed Church on Frederick
Street, which originally opened as a Congregational Chapel, to replace the one
on Orchard Street. This was followed in 1909 by an extension to Emmanuel
Church.
In
1911, Edward Thomas’s father, Thomas had moved to 145 London Road, Coalville
with his wife and two daughters, while Edward Thomas, Mary, and their four
children continued to live at 55 Park Road. On the night of the 1911 census,
Mary’s father, Thomas Handley aged 69 and widowed, a retired chemist, and her
sister Edith Handley, single and aged 36, were also listed at the property,
along with servant, Hannah Mary Abell.
Barrowcliff
and Allcock were appointed to be architects to the Loughborough Education
Committee for a period of 3 years from 1 January 1912, terms being a fixed
payment of £7 7s. per annum, with a commission of 5% on all works of repairs
amounting to £20 and upwards, although the erections of new schools, or
structural alterations to existing ones would not be included in the
arrangement. On completion of his studies at Loughborough Grammar School, in
1914 Willliam Frederick Cartwright, who would later go on to design the War
Memorial for the Grammar School, was articled to their practice. A couple of
years later, on 25 March 1919, the Partnership of Barrowcliff and Allcock,
civil engineers, architects, and surveyors at the Town Hall Chambers, was
dissolved by mutual consent, and they went their separate ways. Barrowcliff
would practice on his own account from Town Hall Chambers, and Allcock will
work on his account from 12 Baxter Gate.
1925
must have been a difficult year for Edward Thomas, as on 7 November Mary, his
wife died, and on 21 November his father died. This was followed by the death
of his mother on 14 September 1927, although sandwiched between these sad
occasions, Edward Thomas was elected as a Fellow of RIBA, in 1926. A happy
celebration in 1929 when son, Richard Percival was married to Sophie
Richardson, some beautiful designs for the new Loughborough Echo Press offices
on Swan Street in 1931, and the dedication of the Burton Chapel in November
that year. In February 1934, Edward
Thomas designed an oak chair which was dedicated to the memory of John Brise
Colgrove, headmaster of the Loughborough Grammar School (1875-1893).
It
was around this time that Edward Thomas went into partnership with Robert
Malcolm Hayes Grieves, who had been elected a licentiate of RIBA in 1931, and
they were members of the Leicester and Leicestershire Society of Architects.
Their offices were at 11 Leicester Road, and are still there today, the
practice now called A + G Architects.
It
is unclear when Edward Thomas moved to 12 Burton Street, but he was certainly
there in 1939. It is also unclear when he retired from the architectural
practice. At the time of his death, on 6 February 1958, he was living at 13
Park Road, Beckenham, Kent.
____________________________________
What follows is a selection of buildings designed by Allcock, either alone or with partners.
Note: this is a selective, not a comprehensive listing.
____________________________________
Sole
designs
*Pooh
Bah Lodge (campus) (1936)
*Echo
Offices (1930s)
*Shelthorpe
School (1931, opened 1933)
____________________________________
With
Grieves
(partnered
with Robert Malcolm Hayes Grieves from 1935, now A+G Architectural Practice)
*Trinity
Methodist church 1968
____________________________________
With
George Harry Barrowcliff as
Barrowcliff & Allcock
(partnership begun 1889, dissolved 1918)
*Bellfoundry
additions & carillon 1905
*Charnwood
Museum (1899)
*Public
Library (1903-5)
*Additions
to manor house Normanton on Soar
*Emmanuel
Church chancel lengthening (by 13ft) & choir and clergy vestries re-build
(1909)
*St
Mary’s Catholic Church new nave
*House
in Gidea Park, Romford
*Sir
Gilbert Claughton Centre Dudley (1904 – Dudley Upper School)
*Newbridge
High School Coalville (1909)
*Grammar
School Knaresborough (1897)
*Cooper
Memorial Home for Children, Brand Hill, Woodhouse Eaves (with Alfred William
Newsom Burder)
*Converted
Hodsons’s free library on Green Close Lane to the Technical Institute (1909)
____________________________________
Basic Facts
Architect - Edward Thomas Allcock
Parents: Thomas Allcock, a joiner, and Martha Reeve
Date and place of Birth: 1871, Eastwood, Notts.
Spouse: 1898 Mary Sampson Handley
Children: Annie, Gerard Thomas, Richard Percival, Margaret Mary,
Death: 1958, Beckenham, Kent
Places lived: 1881 – Greenclose Lane, Loughborough; 1885 – Broad Street; 1891 - The Elms, Hathern; 1901 – Burton Street, Loughborough; 1908 – Park Road, Loughborough; Beckenham, Kent
Place of work/Offices: Town Hall (with Barrowcliff); Baxter Gate; 11 Leicester Road (the former manse to the Wesleyan Chapel (which used to be the Army & Navy supply store, and Fern Carpets)
Qualifications:
1896 – Associate of RIBA
1926 – Fellow of RIBA
____________________________________
I’m
taking part in the April A-Z Blogging Challenge 2026!
____________________________________
Posted by
lynneaboutloughborough
With apologies for
typos which are all mine!
_______________________________________________
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