Thomas Cooley (architect)

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Born1742
London
DiedMarch 1784(1784-00-00) (aged 41–42)
Anglesea Street, Dublin, Ireland
OccupationArchitect
KnownforCity Hall, Dublin, Ireland
Thomas Cooley
Born1742
London
DiedMarch 1784(1784-00-00) (aged 41–42)
Anglesea Street, Dublin, Ireland
OccupationArchitect
Known forCity Hall, Dublin, Ireland

Thomas Cooley (1740–1784) was an English-born Irish architect who came to Dublin from London after winning a competition for the design of Dublin's Royal Exchange in 1768.[1]

18th-century view of Cooley's Royal Exchange building

Cooley was born to William, a master mason, and Mary Cooley in London, and was baptised on 11 July 1742.[2] He began his career as a carpenter apprenticeship in 1756 with interest in architecture[3] under George Wright at first, then the master joiner in the office of works, William Greenell.[2]

Cooley worked as a draughtsman and clerk to the architect and engineer Robert Mylne (1733–1810), while the latter was building Blackfriars Bridge in London, between 1761 and 1769. In 1769, he won the competition to design a new Royal Exchange in Dublin, and the building, now the City Hall, was completed in 1779. The design shows the influence of Mylne's work, which in turn derived from French neoclassical architecture,[4] with some accusations that Mylne refined the design or otherwise influenced the choice of Cooley as the winner.[2]

Architecture career and Ireland

Arriving in Ireland in 1768, Cooley built several public buildings in Dublin in the neoclassical style, with the Royal Exchange the first building built Dublin in this style.[2] Together with James Gandon (1743–1823), Cooley was part of a small school of architects influenced by Sir William Chambers (1723–1796).[4]

Cooley also designed Newgate Prison (demolished 1893), the Royal Hibernian Marine School, and a chapel, all in Dublin.[5] He was appointed "state architect" in 1775.[6] In 1768 he began another public building in the city, but on his death at the age of 44 in Dublin, the project was handed over to Gandon, who completed it, to his own design, as the Four Courts.[4]

Outside Dublin, Cooley built a number of country houses including Caledon (1779), for James Alexander, later Earl of Caledon.[7] He designed several buildings in Armagh, including the Archbishop's Palace (now the town hall),[7] and the public library.[8]

List of buildings designed or built by Cooley

This is an incomplete list of buildings from Cooley:[9]

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References

Sources

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