Kitson, Parish, Ledgard & Pyman was an architectural partnership formed in Leeds, Yorkshire, England, in 1929. The practice originated in 1914 when Sydney Decimus Kitson (1871-1937) took his chief assistant, James Parish (1875-1933) into partnership. William Armitage Ledgard (1889-1963) joined the firm in 1919 and Noel Pyman (1904-1970) became a partner in 1929, thus forming Kitson, Parish, Ledgard & Pyman.
The firm was active until at least 1962. A photograph of a country house designed by Kitson Parish Ledgard & Pyman is illustrated in 'Decorative Art' 1935 (p.19).
The Clock cinema in the Leeds suburb of Roundhay (1938); Leeds General Infirmary, Calverley Street, Brotherton Wing (1940); Moortown Estate Church, Leeds (1954); Methodist Church in Beeston, Leeds (1957); the Church of St. Cyprian with St. James in Harehills, Yorkshire (1959); the Martin Wing and laboratories for the General Infirmary in Leeds (1961); and the Church of St. David in Beeston, Yorkshire (c.1962).