By about 1862, Rogers had set up his own architectural practice in Dublin. In 1863 he appeared in Irish professional directories, working from 20 Upper Mount Street, his father's house. By 1864, his office was at 205, Great Brunswick Street (now called
Pearse Street), and on 15 December 1864 he was elected a
fellow of the
Royal Institute of the Architects of Ireland, before joining its Council in 1868. From 1870 to 1876, he shared a building at 179, Great Brunswick Street, with
James Franklin Fuller and William Stirling. Most of his work was for the
Church of Ireland. He designed and altered churches in the
Diocese of Dublin and Glendalough and the western counties of Ireland and was formally the
Diocese of Meath architect until 1869, when the Church of Ireland was disestablished by the
Irish Church Act 1869. Many of his landscapes are of scenes in Germany and the Netherlands. Macmillan published two illustrated books of nursery rhymes by Rogers,
Ridicula Rediviva (1869) and
Mores Ridiculi (1871) and also an edition of
Dinah Craik The Fairy Book in 1870. More of his colour lithographs were used in
Present Pastimes of Merrie England (
Cassell, Petter, & Galpin, 1873). On 26 January 1874, Rogers was elected a fellow of the
Royal Institute of British Architects, proposed by
James Joseph McCarthy,
Thomas Newenham Deane, and James Franklin Fuller. In 1876, Rogers moved from Dublin to London, but he went on exhibiting work at the Royal Hibernian Academy until his death. While living in England, he probably did not practise as an architect at all, and in 1877 he resigned from the Royal Institute. He exhibited paintings at the
Royal Academy from 1881, and in 1888 at the Irish Exhibition in London. In 1889, Rogers and his friend J. P. Mahaffy worked together on
Sketches from a tour through Holland and Germany. The next work he illustrated was
Troubadour-Land: A Ramble in Provence and Languedoc (1891) by
Sabine Baring-Gould. ==Private life==