James Miller (architect)
James Miller | |
---|---|
Born | 1860 Auchtergaven, Perthshire |
Died | (aged 87) |
Nationality | British |
Occupation | Architect |
Buildings | Glasgow Central railway station Wemyss Bay railway station One Great George Street |
James Miller
Early life
Miller was the son of a farmer, and was born in Auchtergaven, Perthshire, in 1860.[3] He spent most of his childhood in Little Cairnie, Forteviot, and was educated at Perth Academy.[4]
In 1877, he was articled to the Perth architect Andrew Heiton, and on completion of his apprenticeship, he worked in Edinburgh at the office of Hippolyte Blanc[3] before joining the engineering department of the Caledonian Railway, initially in Perth.
Career
In 1888, Miller was transferred to the Caledonian Railway's drawing office in Glasgow, and designed a number of railway stations in the West of Scotland under the supervision of the engineer-in-chief, George Graham, and Donald Alexander Matheson, who was to become his successor. Notable designs from this period include the English-domestic style stations at Fort Matilda (1889), Troon (1892) and West Kilbride (1900), and the interchanges between rail and steamer at Gourock Pier (1889) and Greenock Princes Pier (1893). In 1892, having won the competition to design Belmont Church in Hillhead, he set up in full-time practice on his own account and rented an office at 223 West George Street, Glasgow. He continued to design for the Caledonian and other Scottish railway companies, including the distinctive "chalet style" stations on the West Highland Railway in 1894, and the Scottish Jacobean-style St Enoch subway station for the Glasgow District Subway Company.
During the following 40 years, he won competitions and commissions for a wide variety of buildings including for the 1901
In 1910, he won the competition to design the headquarters of the Institution of Civil Engineers at One Great George Street in London's Westminster, together with the adjacent matching extension to the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, which were built of Portland stone in a neo-Baroque style.
An American influence began to appear in Miller's work following a 1902 fact-finding visit to the USA by Matheson. An early example was Olympic House (1903), a plain rectangular speculative office development in Glasgow's Queen Street, followed by the Anchor Line Building (1905–07) on St Vincent Place. The façade of this building is of white faience tiles, the first time that a Scottish architect had used this material.[6] It developed further following the appointment in 1918 of Richard M Gunn as chief draughtsman and designer, which resulted in designs such as the McLaren warehouse (1922) in George Square, and the massive classical Head Office for the Union Bank of Scotland (1924) in St Vincent Street.
Miller's later commercial architecture during the 1930s featured hints of Egyptian revival decoration and Art Deco, as seen in the Commercial Bank of Scotland (1930–1) at the corner of Glasgow's West Nile and West George streets; and the last of his bank buildings, also for the Commercial Bank of Scotland, at 30 Bothwell Street (1934–35). Both these buildings used white Portland Stone to combat the effects of Glasgow's polluted atmosphere at the time.
Major commissions beyond Scotland included Wyggeston Grammar School for Boys (1927) in Leicester, and the neo-Georgian style Dining Hall and 'Cocoa Block' (1929) for Cadbury at Bournville. His final designs were for long, low buildings such as the Glasgow & West of Scotland College of Commerce (1933) in Pitt Street, Glasgow.
Miller's domestic work spanned his architectural career. Much of his early work, such as "Dunloskin",
In 1937 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Magnus Mowat, Sir Thomas Hudson Beare, Sir Thomas Henry Holland, John Barber Todd and Sir Alexander Gibb.[7]
Miller died on 28 November 1947 at Randolphfield, Stirling, which had been his home since 1911.
Family
He was married to Emilina Henrietta Crichton.[8]
They had three children. Muriel (1901-1999) George (1903-1940) and Mabel (1904-2001) His son George James Miller joined the architectural practice in the mid-1930s but died in 1940, at which point James retired.
Gallery
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Fort Matilda railway station (1889)
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Rannoch railway station (1894)
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St. Enoch subway station (1896)
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Glasgow Central station(1899-1906)
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Sunlight Cottages (1901)
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Clydebank Town Hall and Public Library (1902)
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Wemyss Bay railway station (1903)
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Olympic House on the corner between George Square and Queen Street, Glasgow (1903)
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Turnberry Hotel (1904)
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Anchor Line building, Glasgow (1905–07)
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Headquarters of the North British Locomotive Company in Springburn (1909)
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Institution of Civil Engineers, One Great George Street, London (1910)
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"Kildonan", Barrhill, Ayrshire (1915-1923)
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Commercial Bank of Scotland, Glasgow (1930-1)
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McLaren warehouse, George Square, Glasgow (1923)
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Union Bank of Scotland, Glasgow (1924)
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Commercial Bank of Scotland, Glasgow (1934–35)
References
Notes
- ^ Paton (2006) "Design worthy of the city". Chapter 4 In: Cameron (2006).
- ^ Walker (1986), p 146.
- ^ a b Sloan & Murray (1993), Introduction.
- ^ Dictionary of Scottish Architects – James Miller
- ^ "Car park to replace landmark church". Herald Scotland. 4 April 1994. Retrieved 5 July 2016.
- ^ Frew, Brian J. (1988). The commercial architecture of James Miller: influences from Glasgow and abroad. (Unpublished BA dissertation, Mackintosh School of Architecture).
- ISBN 0-902-198-84-X. Archived from the original(PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 15 September 2017.
- ^ "Dictionary of Scottish Architects - DSA Architect Biography Report (September 29, 2022, 2:18 pm)".
Sources
- OCLC 80155887.
- Frew, Brian J (1988). The commercial architecture of James Miller: influences from Glasgow and abroad. (Unpublished BA dissertation, Mackintosh School of Architecture).
- Gomme, Andor and Walker, David (1987). Architecture of Glasgow (2nd ed.). London: Lund Humphries. ISBN 0853314721.
- OCLC 6091133.
- McKean, Charles; Walker, David and Walker, Frank A. (1989). Central Glasgow: An Illustrated Architectural Guide. Edinburgh: The Rutland Press. ISBN 1-87319-022-0.
- Sloan, Audrey; with Murray, Gordon (1993). James Miller: 1860–1947. Edinburgh: ISBN 1-87319-015-8.
- Walker, Frank Arneil (1986). The South Clyde Estuary: An Illustrated Architectural Guide to Inverclyde and Renfrew. Edinburgh: ISBN 0-7073-0476-8.
- Williamson, Elizabeth (1990). Glasgow. London: Penguin Books. ISBN 9780140710694.