Dublin Core
Title
Chapel of St. Mary and St. George - Exterior Gothic Features
Subject
Anglican, Anglicanism, buttress, Cecil Oliverson, chapel, Church of England, collegiate chapel, ecclesiastical building, gothic features, gothic revival, Guildford, Guildford Grammar School, heraldic shield, heraldry, hood moulding, lancet arch, neo-gothic, Perth, Reverend Percy Henn, Saint George, Saint Mary, Sir Walter Tapper, St. George, St. Mary, tower, tracery, WA, Western Australia
Description
Images of neo-gothic features at the Anglican Chapel of St. Mary and St. George, including lancet arches, hood moulding and traceried windows.
About the Chapel of St. Mary and St. George:
The Chapel of St. Mary and St. George was constructed for, and continues to be used by, Guildford Grammar School. It was designed by prominent English gothic revival architect Sir Walter Tapper and is built in a Gothic Perpendicular Revival style. Plans to build a chapel to service the school were proposed shortly after the appointment of headmaster Reverend Percy Henn in 1909. Penn appealed for funds and managed to secure the benefaction of London businessman and Philanthropist Cecil Oliverson, which covered the costs of building and furnishing the chapel. Building began in 1912 and the chapel was completed and consecrated in 1914. The replication of a ‘village green’ setting, in which the chapel is situated on a flat expanse of grass and framed by the school’s other buildings, is notable.
About the Chapel of St. Mary and St. George:
The Chapel of St. Mary and St. George was constructed for, and continues to be used by, Guildford Grammar School. It was designed by prominent English gothic revival architect Sir Walter Tapper and is built in a Gothic Perpendicular Revival style. Plans to build a chapel to service the school were proposed shortly after the appointment of headmaster Reverend Percy Henn in 1909. Penn appealed for funds and managed to secure the benefaction of London businessman and Philanthropist Cecil Oliverson, which covered the costs of building and furnishing the chapel. Building began in 1912 and the chapel was completed and consecrated in 1914. The replication of a ‘village green’ setting, in which the chapel is situated on a flat expanse of grass and framed by the school’s other buildings, is notable.
Creator
Carter, Bree
Date
2010
Rights
No Copyright
Format
Digital Photographs
Still Image Item Type Metadata
Original Format
Digital Photographs