Savage was born in
Hoxton, London, on 10 April 1779. He was educated at a private school in Stockwell and then articled to
Daniel Asher Alexander, architect of the London Docks, for whom he worked for several years as clerk of the works. He became a student at the
Royal Academy in 1796. In 1815 Savage won a competition to design a river-crossing at Tempsford in Bedfordshire with another three arched bridge. Savage originally intended the tower to have an open spire, like that of Wren's
St Dunstan-in-the-East, but this was forbidden by the Board of Trade. In 1836, having unsuccessfully entered the competition to design the new
Houses of Parliament, he published a pamphlet entitled
Observations on Style in Architecture, with suggestions on the best mode of procuring Designs for Public Buildings and promoting the improvement of Architecture, in which he criticised the stipulation of a particular style for competition entries, and more generally attacked the slavish imitation of historical styles: The architect and his patron are not aware that this piecemeal copying of details is quite compatible with an entire ignorance and neglect of all the more essential qualities for which the antique examples have been admired. They owe their effect to their singleness of intention, simplicity of means, beauty of proportion, and the all-pervading harmony of the totality, to which the details are most profoundly subordinate; for the perfection of the work is, when the parts are nothing and the totality everything. The end is felt, not the means. Much of Savage's practice involved arbitration cases and the investigation of architectural and engineering questions in court. Among these was the protracted
Custom House case of the
Crown v. Peto, in which the defendant
Henry Peto attributed his success mainly to Savage's evidence. He was a member of the Surveyors' Club, and, for many years, member and chairman of the Committee of Fine Arts of the Society for the Promotion of Arts, Manufactures, and Commerce. He was a founder member of the Graphic Society, a member of the
Institution of Civil Engineers, a member of the Architectural Society, and, briefly a fellow of the
Institute of British Architects, from which he resigned after a disagreement. He exhibited at the
Royal Academy from 1799 to 1832. He died on 7 May 1852 and was buried in St, Luke's, Chelsea. ==Works==