Thomas Penson
Thomas Penson, or Thomas Penson the younger was the county surveyor of Denbighshire and Montgomeryshire. An innovative architect and designer of a number of masonry arch bridges over the River Severn and elsewhere. He was the son of Thomas Penson the older,, who had been the county surveyor for Flintshire from 1810 to 1814, but had been dismissed when the bridge at Overton-on-Dee collapsed. Thomas Penson the younger, completed its replacement. Thomas Penson the younger had two sons: Thomas Mainwaring Penson and Richard Kyrke Penson, both of whom were architects and both practised in Chester
Training and career
Thomas Penson the younger, was a pupil of the architect and bridge designer Thomas Harrison of Chester. He became a fellow of the RIBA in 1848 and an associate of the Institution of Civil Engineers in 1839. He was appointed Montgomeryshire County Surveyor in 1817, a post in which he continued until 1859.He was also the surveyor for the Montgomeryshire Turnpike Trusts and was responsible for the design of many new roads in the county. He became county surveyor for Denbighshire around 1820. He had married Frances Kirk, daughter of the Wrexham iron master Richard Kirk in 1814, and initially lived at Overton-on-Dee, but by 1823 he had moved to Oswestry, where he set up his office, known as "Penson's Chambers" at 35 Willow Street; while he lived at 19 Willow Street. In 1839 his wife inherited from her father Gwersyllt Hall or Hill near Wrexham, which Penson re-modeled in Neo-Jacobean style, which they then used as their main residence. Among Penson's pupils was J W Poundley, who was to become the Montgomeryshire County Surveyor 1861: and the Welsh poet John Jones. Penson was Mayor of Oswestry in 1840 and was appointed Deputy Lord Lieutenant for Denbighshire in 1852. Thomas Penson died at Gwersyllt on 20 May 1859.
Bridges
Penson's work as a bridge builder in Montgomeryshire has been surveyed in detail by C R Anthony Anthony lists 62 bridges built to Penson's designs in Montgomeryshire.He relied on contractors to build his bridges, such as David Davies, who built the approach roads to Llandinam Bridge in 1846.
In February 1852, the Severn flooded, damaging a number of bridges for which Penson went on to design replacements.
Penson designed a two-span cast iron arch bridge at Caerhowel in 1858 to replace a timber structure destroyed by floods. Against his advice, a suspension bridge designed by James Dredge had been built in 1854, only to collapse four years later under the weight of three lime wagons, killing one man.
Other bridges credited to Thomas Penson include:
- Caersws Bridge, at Caersws, 1821, three elliptical masonry arches
- Long Bridge, at Llanidloes, 1826, three-span masonry arch bridge which replaced a wooden bridge
- Long Bridge, at Newtown, 1827, masonry arch widened by Penson with cast iron arches in 1857
- Felindre Bridge, at Mount Severn, 1848, segmental or elliptical masonry arch bridge
- Short Bridge, at Llanidloes, 1849, masonry arch bridge
- Brynderwen Bridge, at Abermule, 1852, 33m span cast iron arch bridge,
- Cilcewydd Bridge, 1861, masonry arch bridge
- New Bridge over the river Dee
- Llanymynech Bridge over the River Vyrnwy.
- Sontly Bridge, Wrexham. Dated 1845. Ironwork cast R & W Jones of the Ruabon Foundry.
Architecture
Penson was an early and leading exponent of Romanesque Revival architecture and he developed a distinctive style based on the French Romanesque and the earlier Romanesque of the German and Flemish Brick Gothic. Penson built at least six churches in this style. Romanesque Revival architecture had been introduced in Wales by Thomas Hopper’s ‘‘Neo-Norman’’ or ‘’Norman revival’’ designs for Penrhyn Castle, which were executed between 1822-37., The style of Romanesque adopted by Penson contrasts with the Italianate Romanesque of other architects such as Thomas Henry Wyatt, who designed Saint Mary and Saint Nicholas Church, Wilton in this style at Wilton which was built between 1841 and 1844 for the Dowager Countess of Pembroke and her son, Lord Herbert of Lea.
The source for Penson’s terracotta appears to have been the brickworks associated with the Oswestry coalfield between Trefonen and Morda which were to come into the ownership of the railway engineer Thomas Savin. Terracotta was being promoted as cheaper alternative to costly carved stonework for decorative work on churches. The terracotta was produced by casting, which was then fired. Similar designs on the columns and arches can be seen on the porch of the Llangedwyn church and Llanymynech, and these are presumably designs prepared by Penson.
Penson's Churches and Terracotta Detailing
Churches
- Holy Trinity, Oswestry, Salop Street. 1835-7. Now much altered by Eustace Frere in 1893-4, who added the tower and spire. Penson's church was much plainer with lancet windows and crocketed pinnacles on the nave parapet.
- St David's Denbigh. A Commissioner's Church. The tower was completed in 1858, while the nave was pulled down and re-built later.
- Christ Church, Welshpool 1839–1844.
- St David's Newtown 1843–47. A Commissioner's Church.
- St Agatha's Llanymynech, Shropshire, 1845
- St Cedwyn, Llangedwyn, Penson added a porch with Romanesque decorative terracotta in the 1840s. -attributed to Penson in listing text
- Holy Trinity, Gwersyllt, Wrexham 1850–51
- Rhosllanerchrugog, Wrexham 1852
Public buildings
- Llanfyllin Union Workhouse, 1838, 250 pauper workhouse
- Newtown & Llanidloes Union Workhouse at Caersws, 1838–40
- The Flannel Exchange, Newtown, 1832
- Newtown, High Street. If this is correct, these buildings were completely replaced by Walker.
- The Montgomeryshire County Gaol, Montgomery
- Montgomery Town Hall – upper storey rebuilt in 1828 to provide more spacious accommodation for the quarter sessions
- Oswestry The Cross Market,1848-9.
- Oswestry The Powis Market, Bailey Head
- Wrexham. The Butchers Market, Wrexham 1848
- Wrexham. The Militia Barracks, Regent Street. Built for the Denbighshire Militia Regiment as a barracks in 1857 by Penson. Built from Cefn sandstone. The barracks moved to a new headquarters on Kingsmill Road in 1877 and the Regent Street premises were converted into a police station and law court. The police vacated the premises in 1976 and the courts in 1977 following the completion of their new buildings in Bodhyfryd. The building served then served as part of the art college for twenty years before being taken over as Wrexham Museum in 1996.
Public Buildings and Workhouses by Penson
Schools
- Gwersyllt, Church School.
- Llanwnnog National School, 1850,
- Newtown National School, Canal Road, 1857
- Newtown National School, Kerry Road 1843-7. Now demolished.
- Welshpool National School, Berriew Road. 1821. Now demolished.
- Wrexham, British School, 1844.
- Oswestry National School, Park Avenue 1841.
Houses
- Aberhafesp Old Rectory 1828–29.
- Pentreheylin, Fourcrosses. Brick, Neo-Jacobean House, built for John James Turner c1830.
- Vaynor Park, Berriew, Montgomeryshire. Neo-Jacobean alterations to existing brick house for J Lion Winder 1840–53.
- Llandyssil Rectory, Montgomeryshire 1858. Alterations to interior, new brick wing and two bay windows
- Llanrhaiadr Hall, Denbighshire for W Price, 1842.
- Gwersyllt Hall or Hill. Penson's own house. Neo-Jacobean, dated 1841.
Penson and the Cottage Ornée">Cottage orné">Cottage Ornée village at Berriew
Penson appears to be an important innovator in developing rural Tudor picturesque architecture and his son Thomas Mainwaring Penson further developed Black-and-white Revival architecture from 1852 onwards in Chester. A pupil of his John Wilkes Poundley, also built estate housing in the Cottage Ornée style for Naylor Estates at Leighton Hall and Kerry in Montgomeryshire.
Cottage Ornée">Cottage orné">Cottage Ornée village at Berriew
Literature
- Anthony C. R.Penson's Progress: the work of a 19th-century county surveyor, Montgomeryshire Collections, 1995, Vol 83, 115–175
- Colvin H. A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects 1600–1840. Yale University Press 3rd ed 1995,748-49
- Jenkins D. E. "The Penson Dynasty: Building on the Welsh Border 1822–1859, Oswestry and District Civic Society, 2002, 24pp.
- Hubbard E, The Buildings of Wales: Clwyd, Penguin/ Yale 1986, 146–147
- Newman J & Pevsner N. The Buildings of England: Shropshire, Yale 2006
- Scourfield R and Haslam R The Buildings of Wales: Powys; Montgomeryshire, Radnorshire and Breconshire, Yale University Press 2013.
- Stratton T The Terracotta Revival: Building Innovation and the Industrial City in Britain and Northern America'' Gollancz, London 1993,