Lockwood & Sons 1892 - 1906

Lockwood & Sons [also known as T. M. Lockwood & Sons] was an architectural partnership formed in Chester, England in 1892 by Thomas Meakin Lockwood (1829-1900) and his sons William Thomas Lockwood * (1863-1942) and Philip Henry Lockwood (1864-1939). The practice principally designed residential properties in Cheshire, Shropshire and North Wales. The partnership was dissolved in 1906

* Note It would seem that William Thomas Lockwood was also known as Thomas William Lockwood. Under the name Thomas William Lockwood he had a considerable reputation as a rugby player in the 1880s

Worked in
UK
Works

Architectural projects by the practice included a bank at 2 City Road, Chester (1892); St Mark's Church in Chester (1892-93); Campbell Memorial Hall in Chester (1894-97); Old Bank Buildings at 2–6 Foregate Street, Chester (1895); Working Men's Institute in Chester (1895); six houses at 38–48 Park Road in Port Sunlight (1895); the organ case, St John the Baptist's Church in Chester (1895); 10–18 Foregate Street, Chester (1896); a rectory in Eccleston, Cheshire (c.1896); extension to Lloyds Bank at 8 Foregate Street, Chester (1897); a rectory at Aldford, Cheshire (1897); Chester Town Hall (1898); 81–87 Bebington Road in Port Sunlight (1899); restoration of Bishop Lloyd's House in Chester (c.1899); 9–15 Eastgate Street, Chester (1900).

See also Thomas Meakin Lockwood

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