Rawlins Gould
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Rawlins Gould (1821 – 18 March 1873) was an English architect.
Gould completed an apprenticeship as an architect, in the office of George Townsend Andrews. In 1855, Andrews made him a partner. Andrews died a few months later, and Gould took over the practice.[1]
Gould died in 1873, and in his will he left £500 to the York Charity Trustees, to be invested in stock, the dividends to be used to buy bread, to be distributed annually to ten poor widows.[2]
Gould's buildings include:
- St Margaret's Church, Huttons Ambo (1856)[3]
- 1 Museum Street, York (1860)[4]
- Holy Trinity Church, King's Court, York (1861; demolished)[2]
- Hornsea railway station (1864)[1]
- Bootham Park Hospital Chapel, York (1865)[4]
- East Riding Bank, Malton (1866)[5]
- York Lodge, Heworth (1869)[4]