Crossland was born in 1835 to a family living in Huddersfield.[nb 1] He was the younger son of Henry Crossland, who is recorded in the 1851 census as being a farmer and quarry owner, and his wife, Ellen (née Wilkinson).[4] He had an elder brother, James, born in 1833.[5][6]
Crossland enrolled at Huddersfield College, where he excelled in writing and drawing.[7] In the early 1850s Crossland became a pupil of George Gilbert Scott at his architectural practice in London.[6] He worked with Scott on the design of the model villageAkroydon, near Halifax, West Yorkshire, commissioned by the worsted manufacturer, Edward Akroyd.
Crossland's three most important commissions, all now Grade I listed, were:
Rochdale Town Hall, which was built 1866–71 and is still in use as a municipal building in Rochdale, now in Greater Manchester, where it functions as the ceremonial headquarters of Rochdale Metropolitan Borough Council. Architectural historian Nikolaus Pevsner described the building as possessing a "rare picturesque beauty".[12] Its stained glass windows are credited as "the finest modern examples of their kind".[13] Historic England describe it as "an important early departure from High Victorian heaviness"[14] and say it is "widely recognised as being one of the finest municipal buildings in the country".[13] Following a fire, Crossland's original clock tower was replaced in 1887 by a stone clock tower and spire designed by Alfred Waterhouse in the style of Manchester Town Hall.
Holloway Sanatorium at Virginia Water, Surrey,[3] which was built 1873–85.[15] This was a project commissioned by the entrepreneur and philanthropistThomas Holloway.[16] Historic England describe it as "the most elaborate and impressive Victorian lunatic asylum in England, because it was the most lavish to be built for private patients... The quality of the external design and the decoration of the principal spaces is exceptional". It is the only example of a Sanatorium to be listed at Grade I.[15] It was restored in 1997–98 and converted to luxury homes as part of a gated residential estate known as Virginia Park.[17]
Royal Holloway College, Egham, Surrey, which was built 1879–87. A short distance away from the Sanatorium, it was also commissioned by Thomas Holloway.[18] Now known as Founder's Building, it is the main building of a major college of the University of London; its cafe/bar is named "Crosslands".[19] Crossland's main floor plan for the college is on display in the Royal Holloway College Picture Gallery.[20]
Holloway Sanatorium, now a private residential estate
South Quadrangle, Founder's Building, Royal Holloway University of London, Egham, Surrey
North Quadrangle, Founder's Building, Royal Holloway
Other significant works
In her biography of Crossland, published in 2020, Sheila Binns provides the most complete list yet of his architectural commissions, drawing on and supplementing earlier work by John Elliott,[21] itself based on a compilation by Edward Law.[3] Those that are listed by Historic England, many of them in Yorkshire, are included here.
Crossland designed the memorial chapel to Thomas Holloway (whose funeral had taken place at the church) and also the rebuilding of the vestry and chancel.
Sheila Binns quotes a contemporary account in The Ecclesiologist as saying that in basing his design on that of the 14th-century church Crossland treated it "with much dignity".
Designed by Crossland and Edmund Beckett Denison (later 1st Baron Grimthorpe), the church was built on land given by the Beckett family of Kirkstall Grange who paid £10,000 towards it.
According to Binns, "the church was built largely due to the efforts and at the personal expense of the incumbent at the time, the Reverend Robert Jackson French".
This rebuilding of a property built in the 1860s was commissioned by Sir John Ramsden as a house for his family; it became a school in the 1920s. Crossland also drew up plans for alterations to Longley Old Hall, on a nearby site.
This church building was declared redundant in 1975. The Victorian Society included it on a list in 2017 of the top ten endangered Victorian or Edwardian buildings in England and Wales that have been neglected and are now at risk.
One of Crossland's earliest commissions, the church building was declared redundant in 1975. Historic England say that the church "is notable for the vitality of detail typical of the decade" and "is carefully sited on sloping ground, with asymmetrical south tower and spire placed so as to maximise the effect of its silhouette".
Historic England say that "its eclectic C19 Queen Anne styling displays a strong level of architectural flair, incorporating French and Flemish Renaissance influenced detailing to successful effect... it has strong group value with nearby listed buildings, a number of which were also designed by Crossland".
Historic England describe the church building as "unfinished". Cuts to the budget meant that its exterior was not completed to Crossland's original designs.
Crossland's last entry in the RIBA's records was in 1894–95. There is no record of him undertaking any work after 1900, when he ceased to be architectural adviser to Royal Holloway.[73]
Personal and family life
On 1 October 1859,[3][74] Crossland married Lavinia Cardwell Pigot (who died in Boulogne, France on 17 January 1876).[75][nb 2] They had one child – a daughter, Maud, who was born on 10 July 1860[76] and died on 8 March 1900.[77] Crossland also had an illegitimate son, Cecil Henry Crossland Hatt (born 1877), with his second (common-law) wife, (Eliza) Ruth Hatt (née Tilley; 1853–1892). She became a well-known actress, using the stage name Ruth Rutland,[78] and they lived together in a bungalow on the Royal Holloway site, designed by Crossland and built in 1878 as a home for himself and his family while he oversaw Holloway College's construction.[79][80]
Crossland died at 57 Albert Street, Camden, London on 14 November 1908 following a stroke.[2][3][81] His wife Lavinia, his brother James Crossland, his common-law wife Eliza Ruth Hatt,[nb 3] his daughter Maud Lart, his parents-in-law and his stepson Benjamin Tilley Hatt are buried in a family vault at Highgate Cemetery. Although Crossland's will specifically stated that he and his son should be interred there, neither of them is in the family vault.[82] Crossland's place of burial is unknown.[82][83]
Crossland was survived by his son Cecil (by then known as Cecil Hatt Crossland) and two granddaughters – Maud and her husband William Lart's daughter Dorothea Maud (born 1881),[84] and Cecil and his wife Lucy's daughter Beryl Joan (born 1905).[85]
Notes
^Edward Law points out that as "despite extensive searches no record can be found of his baptism" his precise date and place of birth remain unknown. Law, Part 1. Retrieved 18 February 2021.
^Although other sources claim that Crosswell's wife Lavinia died in 1879, Sheila Binns' research demonstrates that this date cannot be correct. The family plot in Highgate Cemetery (at Grave no. 23287, Square 70) was not bought until 1879 and Binns concludes that she must have been interred temporarily elsewhere. Binns, p. 159.
^Although there is no evidence that Crossland married Hatt, the inscription on her grave reads "Ruth, wife, companion, friend of W H Crossland...". Law, Part 3. Retrieved 18 February 2021.