Frederick S. Waller

British architect and antiquarian


title: "Frederick S. Waller" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["19th-century-antiquarians", "english-antiquarians", "1822-births", "1905-deaths", "19th-century-english-historians", "19th-century-english-male-writers", "19th-century-english-architects", "architects-from-gloucestershire", "english-male-non-fiction-writers"] description: "British architect and antiquarian" topic_path: "people/1820s" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_S._Waller" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary British architect and antiquarian ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox architect"]

FieldValue
nameFrederick Sandham Waller
nationalityBritish
birth_date1822
death_date22 March 1905
death_placeWestgrove Barnwood, Gloucs.
practiceGloucester
::

|name=Frederick Sandham Waller |image= |nationality=British |birth_date=1822 |birth_place= |death_date=22 March 1905 |death_place=Westgrove Barnwood, Gloucs. |practice=Gloucester |significant_buildings= |significant_projects= |awards=

** Frederick Sandham Waller** (1822 – 22 March 1905) was a British architect and antiquarian of Gloucester, where he was the resident architect to the Dean and Chapter of Gloucester Cathedral.

Career and family

Waller was articled to the civil engineer and county surveyor for Gloucestershire, Thomas Fulljames (1808–74), who proposed him as a Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects in 1856. Waller worked in partnership with Fulljames from 1846–70 and with Walter Bryan Wood from 1852. One of Waller's sons, Frederick William Waller (1848–1933), was articled to his father and was in partnership with him from 1873.

Another of Waller's sons, Samuel Edward Waller, became an artist. Waller's grandson Noel Huxley Waller (1881–1961) also became an architect.

Waller and his wife Annie lived for several years at the Moors, Barnwood Road. He retired in 1900 and died at Westgrove, Barnwood, Gloucestershire, on 22 March 1905. He was buried at St Bartholomew and St Andrew, Churchdown, on 25 March.

Architecture

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/24/North_House,_69_Eton_Avenue,_Belsize_Park,_July_2023.jpg" caption="69 [[Eton Avenue]] in [[Belsize Park"] ::

Most of Waller's architectural commissions were in Gloucestershire. He also designed a Tudor Revival extension that was added to the house at Great Tew Park in Oxfordshire. In London's Belsize Park he designed the house at 69 Eton Avenue for the artist John Collier.

Antiquarianism

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/8d/ShiltonBarn_drawings.tif" caption="Plan, transverse section and incomplete longitudinal section of a barn at [[Shilton, Oxfordshire]] drawn by Waller in about 1848"] ::

Waller applied his architectural training to antiquarianism. In 1848 he drew a plan and sections of an historic barn at Shilton, Oxfordshire, that had stone walls and an aisled timber frame. Later the barn was reputedly gutted by fire and at the foot of his drawings Waller added "All now destroyed". However, in 1971 the probable remains of the barn at Shilton were identified with the help of Waller's drawings.

References

References

  1. {{harvnb. Brodie. Felstead. Franklin. Pinfield. 2001
  2. Heyworth, 1971, plate IX

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19th-century-antiquariansenglish-antiquarians1822-births1905-deaths19th-century-english-historians19th-century-english-male-writers19th-century-english-architectsarchitects-from-gloucestershireenglish-male-non-fiction-writers