An A-Z of Architects of Loughborough
For a complete list of the A-Z posts
please head over to the bloglist.
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Okay, I’ll come clean – Frederick Webster Ordish may well have designed some buildings for Loughborough, but if he did, I have not discovered any! The closest we have is Leicester, Shearsby, Rearsby, and Syston. There, I’ve said it! I will, however, share the story of Frederick with you …
Frederick was baptised on 9 January 1821, and was the son of Ralph Ordish, who in 1854 was an hotel keeper, and his wife, Elizabeth. The baptism took place at All Saints church in Derby.
In 1841, when Frederick was 20, he was listed on the census returns as an architect’s pupil at 16 Full Street, Derby. It’s likely his architect master was Edward Stevens, who was an architect at the same property.
By 1851, Frederick was an architect working in London, and living alone at 9 John Street in St Martin-in-the-Fields. On 20 December 1854, Frederick married Isabella Kilby. Frederick, as we know, was an architect based in London at the time, and Isabella was living in Derby, but the couple married in Queniborough, as this was where Isabella’s father was living. The service was conducted by the Reverend Charles March Lisle Phillips, an ancestor of the de Lisle family, late of Garendon Hall. I believe Frederick then set up his architectural practice in Leicester, firstly with John Johnson, and in 1870 with John Charles Traylen.
In 1856 Frederick became a member of the Leicestershire Architectural and Archaeological Society, and at the time of his death was one of its most long-standing members. On the night of the 1861 census, Frederick and Isabella were visiting chemist, Thomas Buck, who was living at 18 Marlborough Place, Lambeth.
In 1865, Frederick was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA). In 1871, architect, Frederick and his wife, Isabella are recorded as living in Queniborough, where they are helped by two servants.
An 1877 directory suggests that Frederick Webster Ordish was living at the Lower Hall, Queniborough; another suggests it was called the Old Hall. On the 1881 census return, the home of Frederick and Isabella is referred to as Bottom Hall, Queniborough.
Sadly, whilst still a practising architect, Frederick died in an accident on 23 September 1885. An account of his accidental death appeared in the Loughborough Herald and North Leicestershire Gazette in September 1885:
“SHOCKING ACCIDENT AT SYSTON STATION
A LEICESTER ARCHITECT DECAPITATED
A dreadful accident was witnesses at Syston Railway Station last evening, by which Mr Ordish, a well-known architect of Leicester, met with his death. Mr Ordish lived at Queniborough, and went home from Leicester by a late train. On arriving at Syston it is stated that he attempted to leave the carriage before the train had stopped, missing his footing, and fell between the platform and the footboard on to the metals.
The last carriage passed over his head and inflicted the frightful injuries, the jaws being broken, and the head reduced almost to a pulp. His arms were also much lacerated and broken, and other parts of his body were injured.
Death, of course, was instantaneous. His remains were conveyed to the Railway Hotel, where they lie awaiting the coroner’s inquest. As may be imagined, the accident caused a good deal of consternation among the passengers, and Mr Ordish’s untimely death will be much lamented.”
At its meeting on 28 September 1885, Reverend J.H. Hill, who was chair of the Leicestershire Architectural and Archaeological Society, suggested that the sudden loss of Mr Ordish would be keenly felt by members of the Society, and it was agreed to send a letter of condolence to his widow. At the time of his death, Frederick had just completed a brass memorial in St Martin’s Church (now Leicester Cathedral) to Thomas North, FSA.
Frederick’s
will is one of the shortest I have ever come across:
“At my decease I, Frederick Webster Ordish, hereby leave all I possess or am entitled to, to my wife Isabella Ordish absolutely.”
The
will of Frederick of Queniborough Old Hall, was proved on 10 April 1886, and he
left a personal estate of under £260 to his widow, Isabella. Isabella herself
died only 3 years and 1 day after her husband, on 24 September 1888. She left a
personal estate of £331 9s. 6d.
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What follows is a selection of buildings
designed by Frederick Webster Ordish
Note: this is a selective, not a
comprehensive listing.
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Sole Designs
*St Luke’s church, Cheltenham (1853-4)
*Restoration of St Mary Magdalen
church, Shearsby (1856)
*Restoration of St Michael’s church,
Rearsby (1857-8)
*Restoration of St Peter and St Paul
church, Syston (1871 and 1881)
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Designs with John Charles Traylen
*St Peter’s church, Leicester (1870-1)
*St Leonard’s church, Woodgate, Leicester
(1876-7)
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I’m taking part in the April A-Z
Blogging Challenge!
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Posted by lynneaboutloughborough
With apologies for
typos which are all mine!
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Dyer, Lynne (2026). So Who Was Frederick Webster Ordish? Available from: https://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2026/04/so-who-was-frederick-webster-ordish.html [Accessed 13 April 2026]
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