1903 – Royal Archway, Wellington Place, Belfast
A triumphal arch at Wellington Place, Belfast, erected by the Linen Industry in honour of a visit by King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra.
A triumphal arch at Wellington Place, Belfast, erected by the Linen Industry in honour of a visit by King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra.
Drawings published in The Building News in 1901. Buildings completed by 1903. The range consisted of 17 wards off a connecting corridor –
Constructed on a site provided by Sir Hugh .H. Smiley, who also paid for the construction of the building.
An attractive and eclective small post office building from the early twenthieth century when many similar buildings were built across the country.
Unlike many stations on the Great Northern Railway, Victoria Bridge station was of wood and not the polychromic brick used by Mills.
Unusual station layout with main building lower than the line and platforms. The last major work of Berkeley Deane Wise who retired in 1906 due to ill-health.
English sculptor Sydney March created the sculpted figures of Death, War, and Victory on the memorial in Omagh to the Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers who died during the Boer War.
Built as the Scottish Temperance Building in 1904, this is an imposing if eclectic building in a vaguely baronial style.
A fine example of Wise’s work for the Belfast and Northern Counties Railway is this signal cabin on the island platform at Ballymena railway station.
The St. Mary’s Hall was completed 1904 for concerts and assemblies and also contained a billiard hall.