Edwin Nash
Encyclopedia
Edwin Nash FRIBA was an English Victorian ecclesiastical architect active in mid-nineteenth-century Kent, England. Most of his commissions were churches. He worked with architect John Nash Round
) on St. John the Evangelist, Penge
(1850). Thereafter he worked alone. He proposed Joseph Fogerty
to be a Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects.
John Nash Round
John Nash Round was an English Victorian ecclesiastical architect active in the mid-nineteenth-century Kent, England. He worked with architect Edwin Nash) on St. John the Evangelist, Penge ; thereafter Edwin Nash worked alone. His name is typically recorded as "J. N. Round."-Works:*St. John the...
) on St. John the Evangelist, Penge
St. John the Evangelist, Penge
Saint John the Evangelist is the Church of England parish church of Penge, Kent, in the Diocese of Rochester, Greater London. It is located on Penge High Street, and was erected 1847 to designs of architects Edwin Nash & J. N. Round. Later in 1861, Nash alone added the gabled aisles, and in 1866...
(1850). Thereafter he worked alone. He proposed Joseph Fogerty
Joseph Fogerty
Joseph Fogerty, CE, FRIBA, was an Irish civil engineer, architect, and novelist active in mid-to-late-nineteenth-century Limerick, London, and Vienna....
to be a Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects.
Works
- St. John the Evangelist, PengeSt. John the Evangelist, PengeSaint John the Evangelist is the Church of England parish church of Penge, Kent, in the Diocese of Rochester, Greater London. It is located on Penge High Street, and was erected 1847 to designs of architects Edwin Nash & J. N. Round. Later in 1861, Nash alone added the gabled aisles, and in 1866...
(1850, with J. N. RoundJohn Nash RoundJohn Nash Round was an English Victorian ecclesiastical architect active in the mid-nineteenth-century Kent, England. He worked with architect Edwin Nash) on St. John the Evangelist, Penge ; thereafter Edwin Nash worked alone. His name is typically recorded as "J. N. Round."-Works:*St. John the...
). Nash added the gabled aisles in 1861, and the transepts in 1866. - All Souls’ Church, Crockenhill, Kent (1851) .
- Restoration (1857) of St. Martin of Tours, Chelsfield, Kent, which “replaced the chancel arch, and rebuilt the northeast annexe as a vestry.”
- Rebuilding of St. James’s Church, North Cray, Kent, nave (1850–1852), northwest tower (1857), and chancel (1871).
- Restoration (1861–1863) of St. Mary’s Church, St. Mary Cray, Kent, which was further restored 1876 and 1895.
- St. John's Cottages, Penge, Kent, on Maple Road, built 1863 as almshouses. As with their predecessors, the cottages are now privately owned homes. On New Years Day 1959 No.8 was destroyed by a gas explosion killing one person. The cottage was rebuilt to closely resemble the original.