Robert Alexander Bryden
Robert Alexander Bryden (7 July 1841 – 14 April 1906) was a Scottish architect, prominent in the second half of the 19th century.
Robert Alexander Bryden | |
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Bryden towards the end of his life | |
Born | 7 July 1841 Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland |
Died | 14 April 1906 64) Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland | (aged
Nationality | Scottish |
Early life
Bryden was born in Glasgow, Scotland, on 7 July 1841, the son of Robert Bryden and Margaret Ramage.[1]
He was educated at Arthur's Academy in Dunoon, Argyll, and Kirkcaldy Grammar School.[1]
Career
In the 1860s, he was an apprentice to Clarke & Bell.[1] He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects in 1878.[1]
Selected works
- Burgh Hall, Dunoon (1873)[2][3][4]
- St Cuthbert's Church, Dunoon (1874; now demolished)[5]
- St John's Church, Dunoon (1876)
- Dunoon Infants' School (1880)
- Broughton Parish Church (rebuilding; 1886)
- Seafield Children's Hospital (rebuilding; 1888)
- Lanarkshire Regimental Drill Hall, Glasgow (1894)[6]
- Dunoon Pier and offices (rebuilding; 1896)
- Sir Charles Cameron Memorial Fountain, Glasgow (1896)
Personal life
Bryden married Elizabeth Robertson, daughter of Alexander Robertson. They had at least one child, a son named Andrew Francis Stewart Bryden (21 October 1876 – 23 February 1917), who also became a noted architect and a Fellow of RIBA.[7][1][8] For the final few years of Bryden Sr.'s life, the two worked as partners.[1]
Death
Bryden died in Glasgow on 14 April 1906, aged 64.[9] He is interred in Dunoon Cemetery,[1][5] half a mile to the north of Burgh Hall, one of his designs.
References
- Specific
- Robert Alexander Bryden at ScottishArchitects.org.uk
- "Jenny Hunter: Halls worth restoring for good of the community" - The Scotsman, 3 August 2017
- "Robert Mapplethorpe show heads to remote Scottish town of Dunoon" - The Guardian, 24 March 2012
- Dunoon Burgh Hall - Page Park architectural practice
- Hooray - Dunoon Burgh Hall, June 2017
- Lanarkshire Regimental Drill Hall, 21 Jardine Street, Glasgow - Historic Environment Scotland
- Andrew Francis Stewart Bryden at ScottishArchitects.org.uk
- Page 872 of the The Edinburgh Gazette, 17 August, 1906
- RIBA Journal, Volume 13 (1906)
- General