1883 – New Church, Pilling, Lancashire
Largely built as designed and illustrated, the church is still existing as St. John the Baptist.
Largely built as designed and illustrated, the church is still existing as St. John the Baptist.
Illustration published in The Building News, March 14th 1884.
Grade II listed. For some years, used as an annex to the municipal building,
Caroe probably obtained the commission through his father, who was then the Danish Consul in Liverpool,
The chief stone of a new asylum for idiots of the six northern counties of England has been laid with Masonic ceremonial by the Earl of Zetland as Grand Master.
Thomas Beecham, born in Oxfordshire in 1820, began selling his pills and cures as a travelling salesman in the 1840s.
Described in The Irish Builder, “This church, the foundation stone of which was laid by the Bishop of Salford on the 3rd of May,
Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - shows location of buildings on this page.