Scott was born in London on 8 October 1839. He was the eldest son of
George Gilbert Scott and his wife, Caroline Oldrid. After a scholarship at
Eton College, he began training at his father's office. He was admitted to
Jesus College, Cambridge, in 1863, taking a first-class degree in moral sciences in 1866 (graduating
B.A. 1867,
M.A. 1870). During the 1860s and 1870s, he worked in his father's architectural practice. He married Ellen King Sampson in the 1870s. He founded
Watts & Company in 1874 along with two other leading 19th-century architects:
George Frederick Bodley (the architect of
Washington National Cathedral) and
Thomas Garner. Bodley, Garner, and Scott all lived in
Church Row in London's
Hampstead district in the 1860s and '70s and would regularly meet to discuss ideas. Among the buildings he designed was
St John the Baptist Church, Norwich, which became a
Roman Catholic cathedral. He was also responsible for buildings in three of the
University of Cambridge's colleges:
Christ's,
Pembroke and
Peterhouse. He masterminded the main buildings of
Dulwich College in South London. Some of his finest works, the churches of All Hallows, Southwark (1877), and
St Agnes, Kennington (1880) were destroyed by
Second World War bombing. His best remaining residential work, in a Queen Anne revival style, is found in the
Avenues area of Kingston upon Hull. Much of his work was in the Queen Anne style, or in imitation of later Gothic architectural styles. After his father died in 1878, he became distant from the architectural business, and was supported by his inheritance. In 1880 Scott became a
Roman Catholic, to the astonishment of his family. The later part of his life saw his mental stability questioned, and in 1883 he was placed in
Bethlem Hospital. A petition of his brothers and wife resulted in his being found of unsound mind in a public examination in 1884. He escaped to
Rouen in France but, returning to England in 1885, he was confined to hospital again in 1885 and 1891–1892. Scott died on 6 May 1897 from
cirrhosis of the liver whilst in residence in the
Midland Grand Hotel, St Pancras, which had been designed by his father, and was buried on 11 May 1897 at
St John-at-Hampstead. He had six children, four of whom survived past childhood. Two of his sons,
Sir Giles Gilbert Scott and
Adrian Gilbert Scott, went on to become noted architects. ==References==