Augustus Frederic Scott | |
|---|---|
| | |
| Born | Augustus Frederic Scott 1854 |
| Died | 1936 (aged 81–82) Norwich, England |
| Occupation | Architect |
| Practice | A F Scott and Sons |
Augustus Frederic Scott (1854–1936) was a Norwich-based architect and Primitive Methodist. [1] His work included both civic and ecclesiastical buildings, in addition to several large hotels and many private commissions.
Scott was born in the Breckland village of Rockland St Peter, Norfolk. His father was Primitive Methodist minister Jonathan Scott. [1] Following the completion of his training he settled in Norwich where he opened up his own practice. His two sons joined him in the business in 1912. [1] Scott was a very principled man. He was a practising Primitive Methodist and a strict teetotaller. He was also a strict vegetarian for ethical reasons and a Sabbatarian. [1] He disagreed with paying the part of his local government rates which funded Church of England schools and when bailiffs removed his paintings, he would buy them back again. [1] As a Primitive Methodist he also became a local preacher and enthusiastic cyclist, he travelled thousands of miles by bicycle and even cycled to London for business on several occasions. [1] He also, at his own expense, maintained a Chinese missionary in Western China. [1] In 1920, he became embroiled in a dispute with Percy Carden, the minister at Scott Memorial Church. As a result of the dispute Scott and his family permanently severed relations with the church that was named after his father.
In 1877 following the arrival of the railway to the North Norfolk town of Cromer. Scott operated a practice in Cromer to exploit the building boom on the North Norfolk coast at that time. He designed many of the now listed and important unlisted buildings in Cromer such as the Baptist and Methodist Chapels, the Cliftonville Hotel, Eversley Hotel, the churchyard wall and a number of shops and houses on Church Street and Cliff Avenue.
This list is incomplete
Cromer
Ecclesiastical
Private
Public
Ecclesiastical