Jones, Albert Henry 1887 - 1960

Albert Henry Jones was born on 19 November 1887 and studied at the Architectural Association Schools in London.  By the early 1920s he was practising as an architect in London and was employed by H.M. Office of Works.

A design for a house by him was entered in The "Daily Mail" Ideal Houses Competition for Architects, 1927.

Jones was a Member of the Society of Architects and was admitted a Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects (FRIBA) in 1925.

His address was given as 10, Conduit Street, London in 1923; Victoria Station House, London in 1926 and 1939; and Hazeldene Craw Place, Crawley, Sussex in 1939.  He died on 18 June 1960.  His address at the time of his death was given as Thurmo, 15 West Hill, Sanderstead, Surrey

Worked in
UK
Works

Canteen, workshops and offices at Air Station, Barlow, Yorkshire, for Sir W. G. Armstrong, Whitworth and Co., Ltd., 1915-18; buildings for Canadian Pacific Railway, Brussels, Rotterdam, Berlin, London, 1919-24; War Memorial Building, Wakefield, for E. Green and Son, Ltd., 1920; Canadian Pacific Pavilion at Wembley, 1925; works on various Canadian Pacific liners, 1924-25; domestic work. [Who's Who in Architecture 1926]

Bibliography

Who's Who in Architecture 1926. Edited by Frederick Chatterton. London: The Architectural Press, 1926

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