Amyas Phillips | |
---|---|
Born | 1891 Hitchin, Hertfordshire |
Died | Feb 1962 (aged 70) Clophill, Bedfordshire |
Years active | 1910 - 1962 (antique dealer) |
Notable work | Bailiffscourt (architect) |
Spouse | Mary Olwen Wade-Evan (married 1931) |
Children | Francis Jerome Phillips |
Parent |
|
Relatives | Hugh Phillips (brother) |
Amyas Phillips (1891-1962) was an English antique dealer and architect based in Hitchin, Hertfordshire. [1] [2] Amyas operated Phillips of Hitchin antique dealers (previously known as F. W. Phillips, and later H. & A. Phillips) for much of his life. [3]
Amyas was born in 1891 in Hitchin, Hertfordshire to Frederick W. Phillips (1856-1910) and Margaret Sturrock Cable (who died in 1937). [1] [2] [4] His father, Frederick W. Phillips, founded the antique dealership F. W. Phillips in 1884 which operated out of The Manor House in Hitchin, a Grade II* listed Georgian house. [2] [5] Amyas read at Oxford University, and soon took over F. W. Phillips with his elder brother Hugh Phillips (1886-1972) following the death of their father in 1910. [6] [7]
Soon after Amyas and his elder brother took over the dealership they changed the name from F. W. Phillips to H. & A. Phillips. [3] Amyas went on a business trip to New York early on in his antiques career in 1920, and met many notable interior decorators and antique dealers of the period, like Arthur Stannard Vernay. [7] He also visited the Paul Revere House in Boston, a 17th century colonial home belonging to American Patriot Paul Revere, and later reproduced the wallpaper in his own home in Bedfordshire. H. & A. Phillips were well known for reproducing interior decorations, as well as being hired to furnish properties. [3]
An early major project undertaken by Hugh and Amyas was the dismantling of 35 St Martin's Street in Westminster (currently the site of Westminster Reference Library), which was the residence of Isaac Newton from 1710 to 1725. [8] [9] The original intention was to re-build Newton's house elsewhere but this never occurred. [10] A room from Newton's house was eventually reconstructed in the 1930s in The Manor House in Hitchin, with the panelling and mantelpiece later being sold to Babson College. [11] [12] H. & A. Phillips would regularly display their antique furniture and interior decorations 'in situ' in The Manor House, creating period settings that customers could recreate if they purchased their antiques. [13]
After his brother retired from the antique dealership in 1935, Amyas and his wife Mary took over the business. [6] They renamed the business Phillips of Hitchin, the name which it continued to operate under until its closure in 2014, when Amyas' son Jerome retired. [14] Phillips of Hitchin has sold antiques to many well-known collectors, including Irwin Untermyer and Henry Ford II, and many museums like The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Victoria & Albert Museum, The National Gallery of Victoria and Temple Newsam House. [3] [6] [15] [16]
Due to the interest in 'period style' furnishings in the early 20th century, some antique dealerships, including Phillips of Hitchin, started to focus more on older English furniture like that of the Tudor period. [17] At Phillips of Hitchin, this focus also extended to furnishing and architecture, with customers requesting them to furnish their houses in period styles or build them new 'ancient' houses with recycled historic building materials. [6]
In the 1920s, Amyas showed Allethaire Ludlow Crummer, who was married to Samuel P. Rotan (then the District Attorney of Philadelphia), around different English country houses. [2] [18] Crummer was looking to replicate a country house in the United States as her own place of residence and she chose Sutton Place, a Tudor manor house in Guildford built by Sir Richard Weston, to be reproduced. Robert Rodes McGoodwin was the architect for this house, entitled "Lane's End" (now the Guildford Estate) in Wyndmoor, Pennsylvania. [19] [20] Amyas was originally chosen to build "Lane's End", however he likely sent historical building material (from demolished English houses) to be used in the construction.
Phillips of Hitchin also undertook restoration work, including the restoration of Prior Castell's Clock at Durham Cathedral in the 1930s, which was funded by the Friends of Durham Cathedral. [7] [21]
Bailiffscourt is a Grade II* listed 'ancient' manor house in Climping, West Sussex which currently operates as a hotel and spa. [22] [23] Lord Moyne had purchased the Bailiffscourt estate in 1927 and commissioned Amyas to build a new house. [24] Bailiffscourt was Amyas' only full architectural commission, and was completed in 1935. [25] Bailiffscourt was built in a Medieval style, while also taking inspiration from Cotswold houses, and used primarily material salvaged from demolished historical stone houses. [2] The only remaining property on the estate prior to Lord Moyne's purchase was Bailiffscourt Chapel (and a moat), so he was inspired to continue the historic 'atmosphere' of the property. [26]
In 1931, Amyas married Mary Olwen Wade-Evans in Wandsworth, London. [27] [28] Their son, Francis Jerome Phillips, was born in 1939 in Cambridge and took over the family business following Amyas' death in February 1962 in Clophill, Bedfordshire. [2] [29] [30]
Guildford is a town in west Surrey, England, around 27 mi (43 km) southwest of central London. As of the 2011 census, the town has a population of about 77,000 and is the seat of the wider Borough of Guildford, which had around 143,650 inhabitants in mid-2019 est.. The name "Guildford" is thought to derive from a crossing of the River Wey, a tributary of the River Thames that flows through the town centre.
Harewood House is a country house in Harewood, West Yorkshire, England. Designed by architects John Carr and Robert Adam, it was built, between 1759 and 1771, for Edwin Lascelles, 1st Baron Harewood, a wealthy West Indian plantation and slave owner. The landscape was designed by Lancelot "Capability" Brown and spans 1,000 acres (400 ha) at Harewood.
The University of Surrey is a public research university in Guildford, Surrey, England. The university received its royal charter in 1966, along with a number of other institutions following recommendations in the Robbins Report. The institution was previously known as Battersea College of Technology and was located in Battersea Park, London. Its roots however, go back to Battersea Polytechnic Institute, founded in 1891 to provide further and higher education in London, including its poorer inhabitants.
Climping is a village and civil parish containing agricultural and natural sandy land in the Arun District of West Sussex, England. The parish also contains the coastal hamlet of Atherington. It is three miles (5 km) west of Littlehampton, just north of the A259 road.
Worplesdon is a village 3.1 miles (5.0 km) NNW of Guildford in Surrey, England and a large dispersed civil parish that includes the settlements of: Worplesdon itself, Fairlands, Jacobs Well, Rydeshill and Wood Street Village, all various-sized smaller settlements, well-connected by footpaths and local roads. Its area includes Whitmoor Common, which can be a collective term for all of its commons.
John Henry Whitley, often known as J. H. Whitley, was a British politician and Georgist. He was the final Liberal to serve as Speaker of the House of Commons, a role he held from 1921 to 1928.
Sir Richard Garth PC QC was Member of Parliament for Guildford from 1866 to 1868 and Chief Justice of Bengal from 1875 to 1886.
Lucius Frederick Moses Bottomley Smith was the inaugural Bishop of Knaresborough from 1905 to 1934.
Bailiffscourt Chapel is a deconsecrated chapel in the grounds of Bailiffscourt Hotel, a luxury hotel near the hamlet of Atherington in West Sussex, England. Originally associated with the Norman Abbey of Séez, it was founded in the 11th century and rebuilt in its present simple Gothic form in the 13th century. It later fell out of use, but after Atherington's former church was destroyed by coastal erosion it was used again for public worship for a time—and as late as 1952 the building was again in use as a chapel of ease. Situated outside Bailiffscourt—a mock-medieval mansion built in 1935 by Lord Moyne on the site of an ancient manor house—on the only stretch of open seafront land for miles in each direction, the chapel is now used principally for wedding and civil ceremony blessings. English Heritage has listed it at Grade II* for its architectural and historical importance.
Thomas Edward Wilkinson (1837−1914), known as Edward Wilkinson, was an Anglican bishop, legionnaire and travel writer in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The sixth child of a gentleman farmer, he was born at Walsham Hall, Walsham le Willows, Suffolk. Before he was ordained, he joined the French Foreign Legion and travelled around Europe.
West Park United Reformed Church is located in the West Park area of Harrogate, England, and is a Grade II listed building. It was designed in Nonconformist Gothic style as West Park Congregational Church by Lockwood & Mawson and completed in 1862 for around £5,000. Along with Belvedere Mansion across the road, it was intended as part of the prestigious entrance to the Victoria Park development. For the Congregationalists it was meant to house an increasing congregation of visitors brought to the spa town by the recently-built railways. It became a United Reformed church in 1972.
Mariquita Jenny Moberly, néePhillips, was an English artist, working in oil paints and watercolours.
Benjamin Payler, , was a sculptor, stone and marble mason. He was apprenticed to Catherine Mawer, alongside fellow apprentices Matthew Taylor and Catherine's son Charles Mawer. He formed a business partnership at 50 Great George Street with Charles Mawer in 1881. There is no known record of Charles after that. Payler continued to run the business there under his own name. In his day, he was noted for his 1871 bust of Henry Richardson, the first Mayor of Barnsley, his keystone heads on the 1874 Queen's Hotel in the same town, and his architectural sculpture on George Corson's 1881 School Board offices, Leeds. Payler was a member of the Mawer Group, which included the above-mentioned sculptors, plus William Ingle.
Alfred Hill Thompson, ARIBA was an English architect in the Gothic Revival and Arts and Crafts styles, who specialised in small schools and chapels in the Yorkshire area. In partnership with Isaac Thomas Shutt he co-designed the Church of All Saints, Harlow Hill, completed in 1871.
Felicia Dorothea Kate Dover was an English woman who was tried for murder and convicted of manslaughter in 1882 following the death of Thomas Skinner from arsenic poisoning. She was trained as an artist at Sheffield School of Art and was skilled in drawing flowers. She was popularly known as the Queen of Heeley due to her artistic interests and her standard of dress.
The Willson Group of artists was an English Quaker family of about seven landscape, portrait and caricature painters. Members included John Joseph Willson, his sister Hannah Willson, his wife Emilie Dorothy Hilliard, and their four children, Michael Anthony Hilliard Willson, twins Margaret Willson and E. Dorothy Willson, and Mary Hilliard Willson.
Louise Wright was a fashion illustrator. Four of her six siblings were also professional artists. They were all born in Leeds, and almost all of them later moved to London.
William Gott, was a British wool merchant, mill owner, philanthropist towards public services and art collector from Leeds, West Riding of Yorkshire, England.
William John Seward Webber was an English sculptor who created civic statuary, and busts of national heroes and local worthies, in marble. He sculpted the statue of Queen Victoria for the Jubilee Monument in Harrogate, North Riding of Yorkshire, England in 1887. An early success was his Warrior and Wounded Youth group of 1878, executed while he was still a student. His busts include portraits of the Duke of Clarence, John Charles Dollman, Henry Phillpotts, John Bowring, John Ruskin, Richard Jefferies, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Charles Darwin, Walter Scott, Thomas Carlyle, Robert Burns and Thomas Holroyd.
The University of York Library is the library service for students and staff at the University of York, UK.