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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Short biography of Anthony David Jacobs
The birth of Anthony David Jacobs was registered in the first quarter of 1927 at Brentford, in Essex. He was the son of David Albert (1892-1969) and his wife, Emma Elizabeth née Kite, who had married on 10 April 1918 at St Mary, in Acton. They already had a son, Richard born in 1919, and a daughter, Betty Diana who was born in 1922. David Albert’s occupation was a commercial traveller.
Shortly after the birth of Anthony David, the family moved to Argentina, and remained there until his retirement, returning to Acton in 1938. By 1939, the family had moved to Holt Drive in Loughborough, and 11-year-old Anthony was attending the Loughborough Grammar School, having been previously educated at St George’s College in Buenos Aires. In 1952, at the age of 25, Anthony married Doris Hewitt, and the couple went on to have three children.
Initially, Anthony had pursued a career in poultry farming, but by 1950 had qualified as an architect, and worked for Francis Haynes, who had continued the architectural practice, A.E. King, after the latter’s death. Around 1954, Anthony opened his own architectural practice, firstly, on Forest Road, and later at No.1 on The Coneries.
Sadly,
Anthony died on 15 October 1966, just a few months after the opening of John
Storer House, a building which he had designed. He was aged only 39, and was
living at Barrow Road, Burton-on-the-Wolds at the time of his death. He was
outlived not only by his wife and three children, but also by his father, who
died in 1969, and his mother, who died in 1975.
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What follows is a selection of
buildings designed by Anthony David Jacobs
Note: this is a selective, not a
comprehensive listing.
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Sole Designs
*House on Chaveney Road, Quorn (1954)
*House on Moscow Lane, Shepshed
*Observatory for the Limehurst Natural
History Society (1961)
*John Storer House (1966)
*Shops on Biggin Street (opposite The
Rushes)
*Mormon Church, Alan Moss Road
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John Storer House
The opening of John Storer House by Princess Margaret on 29 April 1966 was widely reported in the local press. The Nottingham Evening Post had the following to say:
“Bright sunshine greeted Princess Margaret when she visited Loughborough to open John Storer House, a multi-purpose centre for social services, today. Thousands of people lined the route, including schoolchildren in organised parties, and they cheered when her car slowed down to walking pace while passing them.”
She had arrived at East Midlands Airport, and travelled through Castle Donington, and Kegworth, and into Loughborough along Ashby Road, Snells Nook Road, and Forest Road. Once she had arrived at JSH:
“The National Anthem was played on the town’s famous War Memorial carillon in nearby Queen’s Park. A civic welcome was given by the Mayor (George Sharpe), who said Loughborough had looked forward to the Princess’s first visit to the town.”
Princess Margaret toured the building, and she:
“visited every room and spoke to dozens of people, including those who will be using the building and others who will give voluntary service, from schoolchildren to members of many local organisations."
| The ground-floor windows of JSH pictured in 2013 |
Bird Observatory
A description of the new observatory for Limehurst Natural History Society, which was to replace the earlier one that had burned down on the island on the River Soar, appeared in the Leicester Mercury and suggested that the striking building wouldn’t be out of place at an airport.
“The ground floor incorporates two double bunks and a galley. The glazed “promenade” deck and railed-in roof some 32 feet long give the observatory the air of an airport building …”
Whether
or not this structure was ever actually built, I’m not sure.
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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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