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F. H. Pownall

Frederick Hyde Pownall was a British architect. He was County Surveyor for Middlesex for about 45 years, and designed both Anglican and Roman Catholic churches.

Life
He was the son of John George Henry Pownall (1792–1880), a magistrate, landed proprietor and philanthropist, and his wife Amelia Sophia Pownall (née Waterhouse). He was educated at Stanmore and Rugby, before being articled to the architect Samuel Daukes. This was later demolished to make way for the present building of 1912–13 by J. S. Gibson, now housing the Supreme Court. Pownall was also responsible for alterations to the Sessions House, Clerkenwell, the rebuilding of Coldbath Fields Prison, and the erection of Banstead Lunatic Asylum. Amongst the churches he designed were St Peter's, London Docks, Corpus Christi, Maiden Lane, Covent Garden and Sacred Heart Church and School, Holloway, all in London, and St Dunstan's at Cheam. He exhibited six works the Royal Academy between 1852 and 1867. ==Family==
Family
He married Jane Todd in 1856, by whom he had six sons and three daughters. Jane Pownall died in 1883 and F. H. Pownall had a son and two daughters by his second wife. His eldest son was the Very Rev. Canon Arthur Hyde Pownall (1857–1935) and a younger son, Gilbert Pownall, designed much of the mosaic work in Westminster Cathedral. His youngest son, Hubert Joseph Pownall (b. 1891), was killed in France in 1916 ==Works==
Works
• St Mary, Carleton-in-Craven, Yorkshire (Anglican), 1858–59. • Alterations to the Sessions House, Clerkenwell, • St Philip and St James, Whitton, Twickenham (Anglican), 1862. • Expansion of Coldbath Fields Prison, in two phases between 1863 and 1870. Closed in 1885 and demolished. • St John Evangelist, Cononley, Yorkshire (Anglican) 1864. • St Peter's, London Docks (Anglican), consecrated 1866. • Sacred Heart Convent, Hove, 1870–72; now Cardinal Newman Catholic School. • Sacred Heart Church and School, Holloway, London (Roman Catholic) 1870. • Corpus Christi Church, Maiden Lane, Covent Garden (Roman Catholic), 1873–74. • Most Holy Trinity Monastery, Notting Hill, St. Charles Square (carmelite monastery), 1877–1878. • Church and school of St Thomas of Canterbury at Grays, Essex (Roman Catholic), 1886. • Middlesex Guildhall, Parliament Square, London, 1893; demolished. • Banstead Lunatic Asylum, 1877; demolished. ==References==
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