John Clacy

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John Berry Clacy (1810–1880) was a Victorian architect whose practice was centred on Reading and Wokingham in the English county of Berkshire.[1]

Born1810[1]
Died1880[1]
OccupationArchitect
PracticeReading, Berkshire (1868)[1]
Quick facts Born, Died ...
John Berry Clacy
Born1810[1]
Died1880[1]
OccupationArchitect
PracticeReading, Berkshire (1868)[1]
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Family

John's paternal grandfather and his ancestors were long resident around Barkham in Berkshire.[2] John was brother-in-law of the Australian travel writer Ellen Clacy.

Career

Most of Clacy's significant works are Gothic Revival buildings, but the Corn Exchange in Reading that he designed with F. Hawkes is in a style that Nikolaus Pevsner described as "free, debased Renaissance".[3] Clacy's son had joined him in his practice by 1862.[4] In 1868 Clacy and Son's practice was recorded as being in Reading.[1]

Work

References

Sources

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