For the shoe manufacturers William Botterill & Son, see Bozeat Boot Company.
William Botterill & Son
Industry
Architectural design
Headquarters
Kingston upon Hull
William Botterill and Son was a prominent Kingston upon Hull architectural practice.
The practice was founded by William Botterill (1820–1903), who worked with his son William Henry Botterill (1851–79), and after 1881 with John Bilson (1858–1943) as Botterill and Bilson.
History
William Botterill came to Hull in 1848 as clerk of works for the new Royal Station Hotel and set up an architectural practice in 1851.[1] His son William Henry (1851–79) was also a partner in his practice.[2]John Bilson,[note 1] trained at the practice and became a partner in 1881.[1] Botterill's son William Henry died early in 1879 and Bilson subsequently became the main partner in the practice, taking over the business when Botterill retired in 1899.[3]
The firm's commissions included chapels, houses, banks, offices, industrial buildings:[4][5] commissions included the schools for the Hull School Board, with Botterill initially producing gothic revival designs, and later designs in the Queen Anne revival style by Bilson.[6] Botterill designed the Newland Park Estate in Hull in 1877, though most of its houses were developed after his death.[7]Oriel Chambers (now the home of the Wilberforce Institute for the study of Slavery and Emancipation[2]) were built in 1879.[8] Bilson's work included the Jacobean style Hymers College (1893),[9] the Boulevard Higher Grade School (1895),[10] and classically styled buildings for the Hull Savings Bank built in the 1920s and after.[11]
William Botterill, Botterill, Son & Billson, and Botterill & Billson works
Stepney railway station house, Hull. 1853
Centenary Methodist Chapel, Market Rasen. 1863
Methodist Chapel, Alford. 1864
Midland Bank, Hull. 1869–70
Tower Hill Methodist Church, Hessle. 1875-6
Oriel Chambers, Hull. 1879
Newington primary school, Hull. 1885
Hymers College, Hull. 1893
Boulevard Higher School, Hull. 1893
Hull Savings Bank (Derringham Bank branch), Hull. 1936
^Bilson is better known for his work as an historian of medieval architecture and is considered one authority on Cistertian architecture. (See main article John Bilson (architect))