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Return Front towards the End of the Portico, House of Lords; and Return Front towards Fleet Street

This drawing contains elevations by Henry A. Baker for the returns to a terrace of seven five-storey houses on the west side of Westmoreland St, extending from the Portico of the House of Lords to Fleet St. Baker’s final elevation for the Westmoreland St. façade of this terrace was approved by the Wide Streets Commission on 27 February 1800. (See WSC/Maps/195/2). These elevations for the returns to the terrace were executed by Baker in July 1800. The principal designs for the returns are placed side by side on a single sheet of paper. (Fig. a; neg. no. 13). These designs are similar to the final elevation approved for Westmoreland St. especially in the shop windows at ground level. The arched recesses and decorative panels are, however, reminiscent of Baker’s first design for Westmoreland St, which had been rejected in 1799. (See WSC/Maps/194). An alternative design is supplied for each return on overlapping sheets of paper. (Fig. b; neg. no. 1). The alternative for the return facing the House of Lords Portico (on left) supplies a variation on the positioning of decorative mouldings. The alternative elevation for the return facing Fleet St. (on right) is in a pencil sketch, on a slightly larger scale than the principal elevation. In the alternative elevation, the building has been divided into two separate premises. The architect’s note, dated 8 July 1800, indicates his preference for the alternative design. On reverse: “Elevation of the front of Fleet Street”. Scale: 30’ : 6 ½ “ Size: (a) : 18 ¼ “ x 22” - 46 cms x 61 cms (b) : 8” x 10 ¼ “ - 20 ½ cms x 26 ¼ cms (c) : 12” x 17” - 30 ½ cms x 43 ½ cms Paper (3 sheets, no watermark); ink; watercolours

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CONTRIBUTOR

Dublin City Library and Archive
Baker, Henry Aaron
Henry Aaron Baker

DATE

1800-01-01 - 1800-12-31

LANGUAGE

eng

ITEMS

1

INSTITUTION

Dublin City Library and Archive

PROGRESS

START DATE
TRANSCRIBERS
CHARACTERS
LOCATIONS
ENRICHMENTS

Generating story statistics and calculating story completion status!

METADATA

Creator

Baker | Henry Aaron

Contributor

Dublin City Library and Archive
Baker, Henry Aaron
Henry Aaron Baker

Publisher

Dublin City Library and Archive

Type

Image

Rights

Dublin City Council

Language

eng
English

Identifier

#90205n26f

Country

Ireland

DataProvider

Dublin City Library and Archive

DatasetName

615_615_Dublin_City_Library_and_Archive

Begin

1800-01-01

End

1800-12-31

Language

ga

Created

2021-11-30T11:19:59.087Z
2022-03-17T12:24:53.018427Z
2022-03-17T12:24:53.019121Z
file:///home/vcap/app/#1800

External Record ID

/615/_90205n26f

Record ID

/615/_90205n26f

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Elevation of Westmoreland Street from the Portico of the House of Lords to Fleet Street

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Elevation of Westmoreland Street (West side), extending from the Portico of the House of Lords to Fleet Street

1 Item

Including design for New Shops by A. Baker, Architect,1799. Approved 30 Jan 1800. General information: This is the fourth and final item in a series of designs for the west side of Westmoreland St. which was prepared for the Wide Streets Commission by Henry A. Baker during 1799 and 1800. This final design was approved by the Commission on 27 February 1800 and is the completed version of a sketch which had been approved by the Commission the previous January. (See WSC/Maps/195/1 b). The completed version follows the sketch in featuring an elevation for a terrace of seven five – storey houses with plain fenestration in all upper storeys. In each design, there is a range of shops at ground level with rectangular windows and separate business and residential entrances. However, whereas in the sketch the door-cases and windows are without adornment, in the completed version pilastered doorcases have been added, together with an ornamental frieze above. The buildings which were erected on the west side of Westmoreland St. correspond to this final design by Baker. Lots were set on 7 April 1800 with the stipulation that all stonework should be of Golden Hill or Glencullen granite. As building progressed, two separate minor modifications were introduced. On 10 July 1800, the Commission agreed that the ornamental frieze could be made of artificial rather than mountain granite, since this would be considerably less expensive. At its meeting of 17 July, the Commission further decided to add an architrave and cornice to the windows of the first, or drawing-room, floor corresponding to the Ballast Office which was then being built on the corner of Westmoreland St and Aston Quay. It was agreed that the architrave and cornice should be executed and erected at the Commission’s expense. On reverse: ‘Elevation of Westmoreland St.’ Architect: Henry A. Baker (Signature in red ink, faded) Copied by: Thomas Sherrard Scale: 5’ : 1” Size: 18.3/4” x 33.1/2”(Scale bar) - 47cms x 86cms Paper ( 2 sheets, backed onto canvas and bound with ribbon); ink; watercolours.

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Laurence Marriott and his return from the dead

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Photograph of Laurence convalescing from his first wound gained at Hellfire Corner Marriott family portrait Photograph from Laurence's wedding day (Laurence and Mary are on the left and he has a bandage on his head from his second wound) Portrait of Laurence in uniform || Laurence’s story is worthy of Hollywood! After enlisting underage, Laurence joined the 41st Field Artillery and won a good conduct stripe for his bravery. Sadly, he was caught in an explosion at the infamous Hellfire Corner (in the Ypres Salient). His horse took the brunt of the blast and saved his life, but his identity tags were lost in the confusion. They were found after he’d been moved, and so Laurence was presumed dead and his name was written on the Menin Gate. If this wasn’t enough, Laurence joined up a second time only to be wounded again. This second wound brought him to Bury to convalesce where he met Mary, the woman he would marry in 1918. || || Photograph || Laurence Marriott in uniform || || Laurence and Mary Marriott's wedding photograph, 1918 || Photograph || || Photograph || Marriott family portrait || || Photograph || Laurence convalescing from his first wound, gained at Hellfire Corner

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