Richard Lane (3 April 1795 – 25 May 1880)[1] was an English architect of the early and mid-19th century. Born in London and based in Manchester, he was known mainly for his restrained and austere Greek-inspiredclassicism. He also designed a few buildings – mainly churches – in the Gothic style.[2] He planned and designed many of the houses in the exclusive Victoria Park estate.
Early life and education
Not much is known about Lane's early life, but he was born and educated in London, was a Quaker[3] and in 1817 began studying at the famous École des Beaux-Arts in Paris. He was a pupil of the French architect Achille Leclère,[4] who made a noted restoration of the Pantheon in 1813.[5]
Work and professional life
After Paris, Lane moved to Manchester in 1821, set up practice and was appointed Land Surveyor to the Police Commissioners of Chorlton Row (as was).[6][7] Much of Lane's work was on civic and governmental buildings, and he was commissioned to design a town hall just off Chapel Street for the Salford local government in 1825.
In 1830, the Chorlton Row Police Commissioners – essentially the administrative body of the Chorlton Row township – commissioned Lane to design a town hall on Cavendish Street. The Chorlton Town Hall was built by David Bellhouse;[8] Lane and Bellhouse would later work together on other projects. Indeed, Lane had a close connection with the Bellhouse family, and transferred his share in the Portico Library to David Bellhouse's son, Edward Taylor Bellhouse, in 1834.[9] The old town hall is now used by Manchester Metropolitan University.
Lane's notable ecclesiastical structures include the Royal Chapel of St John the Baptist, St John's, Isle of Man – built after Lane's design won an architectural competition set up by the church authorities[10] – which is the national church of the Isle of Man,[11][12] and functions as the seat of parliament for one day of the year;[13] St George's Church, Chester Road (with Francis Goodwin); the Church of St Mary with St Peter, Church Street, Oldham; and appropriately, the Friends' Meeting House, Mount Street, Manchester.
Lane was one of the defendant architects in the landmark case Foss v Harbottle (1843) 67 ER 189, which established the precedent that where a wrong is alleged to have been done to a company, the proper claimant is the company itself.
Manchester Architectural Society
By the 1830s, Lane was Manchester's most prominent architect and in 1837, was one of the founders – and the first president – of the Manchester Architectural Society,[14] the city's first architectural learned society.
Church of St John the Evangelist – Murray Street, Broughton, Salford (1836–1839. Grade II listed.)
Friends' Meeting House – Mount Street, Manchester (1828–1830. Grade II listed.)
Governmental and civic
Salford Town Hall – Bexley Square, Salford (1825–1827. Grade II listed. Formerly housing Salford Magistrates' Court, the building was sold and redeveloped as flats c. 2010.)
Great Bolton Exchange and Library – Victoria Square, Bolton (1825–1829. Grade II listed. Has been a museum of natural history and is now offices and a branch of the Nationwide Building Society.)
Manchester Royal Lunatic Asylum – Wilmslow Road, Cheadle Hulme (1848–1849. Grade II listed. Still a psychiatric hospital, renamed as Cheadle Royal Hospital. It is an important early example of the Victorian asylum system, designed in the Elizabethan style.)
Henshaw's Blind Asylum – Stretford Road, Old Trafford (1837. Demolished in 1972 to make way for Greater Manchester Police's headquarters.)
Residential
Victoria Park estate – Rusholme, Manchester (1830s 'gated community'. Lane laid out the roads and sewers and designed many of the residences. The area is still residential, but all of the mansions have now been converted to hotels, educational establishments and nursing homes.)
Bowden Hall – Bowden Lane, Chapel-en-le-Frith (1844. Grade II listed. A country hall.)
—— (2007), "Manchester and the Golden Age of Pericles. Richard Lane, Architect", in Hartwell, Clare; Wyke, Terry (eds.), Making Manchester, Lancashire & Cheshire Antiquarian Society, ISBN978-0-900942-01-3