1860 - 1920 (60 years)
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Name |
PHILIP COLDWELL THICKNESSE |
Born |
1860 |
Deane, Lancashire |
Gender |
Male |
Occupation |
1881 Census:, 1891 Census:, 1901 Census: Architect |
Died |
1920 |
Eastham, London |
Person ID |
I2228 |
Coldwell |
Last Modified |
3 May 2016 |
Father |
FRANCIS HENRY COLDWELL (THICKNESSE), b. 1829, Stafford, Staffordshire , d. 1922 (Age 93 years) |
Mother |
ANNE THICKNESSE, b. 1831, Beech Hill, Wigan, Lancashire , d. 1886, Bournemouth, Dorset (Age 55 years) |
Married |
3 Jul 1855 |
Clitheroe district, Lancashire |
STAT |
Married |
Family ID |
F685 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
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Notes |
- Born 28 Jan 1860
1861 Census: aged 1
1871 Census: aged 11
1881 Census: aged 21 at 38 York Place (Private House), Portman, London with brother Ralph
1891 Census: aged 31 at 7 Pelham Green, Toxteth Park, Lancaster (single)
1901 Census: aged 41 at 2 Albert Park Road, Toxteth Park, Liverpool No children present
1911 Census: aged 51 at Toxteth Park District, Liverpool
Philip Coldwell Thicknesse
Designation: Architect
Born: 28 January 1860
Died: 23 February 1920
Bio Notes: Born on 28 January 1860 at Deane Vicarage, Bolton, Lancashire, Philip Coldwell Thicknesse was the third son of the Right Rev Francis Henry Thicknesse DD (né Coldwell)) who had changed his name by royal license on 29 March 1859, following his marriage to Ann Thicknesse in Clitheroe on 3 July 1855.
Francis Henry Coldwell (1829- 1921) was ordained in 1853 and was Vicar of Deane, from 1855 until 1868. In 1875 he became archdeacon of Northampton and Canon Residentiary of Peterborough Cathedral, a post he held until 1920. Between 1888 and 1903 he was the inaugural Suffragan Bishop of Leicester. Ann Thicknesse, (1831-1886) was the daughter and sole heir of Ralph Anthony Thicknesse, MP for Wigan, and a supporter of Villiers and Cobden in the Free Trade Movement of 1848. She was the last surviving member of the Thicknesse family who had held the same manor at Balterley on the borders of Cheshire and Staffordshire for over 500 years before its sale in the mid-seventeenth century, when the family moved to Lancashire.
Philip Thickness was educated at Marlborough School before entering the office of Richard Norman Shaw. In 1884 he entered into partnership with William E Willink and remained so for nearly thirty-six years, until the time of his death. The practice developed strong connections with the expanding shipping companies and an increasingly large proportion of their work was in the design of ship’s interiors, over twenty liners being fitted out beginning with RMS Franconia in 1910. In 1911 Willink and Thicknesse were appointed architects for perhaps their most significant building - the Cunard Building, on Liverpool’s waterfront. Professor S D Adshead described it as “one of the finest buildings erected in this country for many years. It is an instance of a building of extraordinary scientific attainment combined with the highest artistic quality.” Willink also remarked about Philip Thicknesse “To him and not me is to be attributed the greater part of such credit as belongs to this structure.”
On 28 April 1891 at St Mary Abbots, Kensington, he married Clara Margaret (Daisy) Oakley, daughter of John Oakley, Dean of Manchester and sister of Frank Page Oakley, architect of Manchester.
Philip Coldwell Thicknesse died of pneumonia on 23 February 1920 at his residence, The Cottage, Eastham, where he had lived for several years prior to his death. and was buried at the parish church of St Mary, Eastham on 24 February 1920. He was survived by his wife and father.
Eastham church contains two memorials to Philip Thicknesse. His tombstone, in the form of an Italian sarcophagus (and in concept taken from a sketch for a tombstone made by Philip Thicknesse himself some years earlier), was cut from a solid block of Portland stone; the lettering sunk with a " V " cut and enamelled black. The memorial tablet, on the north wall of the Stanley Chapel, is of white alabaster, the lettering again sunk with a V " cut and gilded. The architect for both was Harold A. Dod, MA, ARIBA. Following training at Liverpool University, Harold Dod joined Willink & Thicknesse in 1912 as an assistant architect, but in 1914 he was commissioned in the King’s Regiment, serving in France. At the end of the war he returned to Liverpool and rejoined Willink and Thicknesse in their new offices in the Cunard Building. In 1920 on the death of Philip Thicknesse he was invited to partnership with Willink, the style of the practice changing to Willink and Dod. On the death of William Edward Willink four years later, Dod became the sole partner.
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