Thomas Hamilton (architect)

The Dean Orphanage (now Dean Gallery) from the SW
Burns Monument, Edinburgh by Thomas Hamilton
Martyrs Monument, Calton Hill

Thomas Hamilton (11 January 1784 24 February 1858) was a Scottish architect, based in Edinburgh where he designed many of that city's prominent buildings. Born in Glasgow, his works include: the Burns Monument in Alloway; the Royal High School on the south side of Calton Hill (long considered as a possible home for the Scottish Parliament); the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh; the George IV Bridge, which spans the Cowgate; the Dean Orphan Hospital, now the Dean Gallery; the New North Road Free Church, now the Bedlam Theatre; Cumstoun, a private house in Dumfries and Galloway; and the Scottish Political Martyrs' Monument in Old Calton Cemetery, Edinburgh.

He was the leading Greek Revivalist in Scotland "more imaginative than his peers and more refined in his detailing".[1] He was a favourite of the church for his Gothic designs, being commissioned to design many Free Churches after the Disruption of 1843. He also designed shops and banks, many of which survive.

Life

He was born on 11 January 1784 in Glasgow. His father, also Thomas Hamilton (1754-1824), had trained as a carpenter but was also an architect, most notable for remodelling the north-west corner of St Giles' Cathedral in 1796. He was presumably watched by young Thomas who was then 12 years old. His father married Hamilton's mother, Jean Stevenson, in the Canongate Church in 1783.

In 1791 his father substantially altered a building on the Royal Mile in Edinburgh to make it their family home. This was at the head of Old Assembly Close at 166 High Street. It is notable for its arched windows on the first floor, all visible from the street and unlike the other rectangular windows in the block. The Hamiltons occupied all three upper floors, the ground floor being occupied by William Vair, a stocking maker.

Hamilton's father received many City commissions between 1796 and 1803 allowing young Thomas to attend the Royal High School in High School Yards from 1800 to 1801. The rector at the time was Alexander Adam.

In 1803 the family moved to the fashionable address of 47 Princes Street. Thomas was by now apprenticed to his father. His mother Jean died roughly at the time of this move or shortly before.

In 1804 his father remarried, his new spouse being Margaret McAra, but by this time young Thomas was 20 and no longer in need of maternal care. By this time he seems largely to have been working under the wing of his uncle John, helping with building projects such as Heriot Row. During this time he acquired considerable knowledge of stone masonry.

In 1812 his uncle John died and left the bulk of his estate to Thomas, then 28 years old. This included several houses on Heriot Row and Dundas Street, built by them both. Shortly before he had married Ann Richardson Dickson (1790-1855) who was also named in John's will, giving her financial independence. This implies some other family connection; she was possibly a cousin.

Centenary plaque commemorating the building of the new Royal High School in Edinburgh

Since the move to Princes Street, however, his father's affairs had been in disarray, with Thomas junior possibly supporting him to some degree. In 1813 his uncle James Hamilton of Springhill agreed to pay £40 towards his father's debts to fend off creditors, but this was never paid. His father was then pursued through the courts from 1818-1822, resulting in the poinding of his goods. His father removed to Currie where he died in June 1824.

Hamilton's earliest known architectural drawing, dated 1813, is a plan requested by the Dean of Guild for a scheme by Robert Burn (architect) (1752-1815) to remodel a house on St Andrew Street.

Hamilton was a founding member of the Royal Scottish Academy in 1826.

In the 1830s he is listed as living at 57 York Place, on the eastern edge of the Edinburgh New Town.[2]

The architect John Starforth trained under Hamilton in the 1830s.[3]

He is buried in a vault in Old Calton Cemetery, a few yards south of the Martyrs Monument. Originally unmarked, the pupils of the Royal High School placed a commemorative wall plaque inside the vault in 1929 (to mark the school's centenary).

The Martyrs' Monument

The Scottish Political Martyrs' Monument is a 90-foot (27 m) tall obelisk which is a prominent feature on the Edinburgh sky-line. It was funded by public subscription raised by the radical MP Joseph Hume. The monument bears the following inscription:

To The Memory Of Thomas Muir, Thomas Fyshe Palmer, William Skirving, Maurice Margarot and Joseph Gerrald. Erected by the Friends of Parliamentary Reform in England and Scotland, 1844.

It includes the following quotation:

I have devoted myself to the cause of The People. It is a good cause - it shall ultimately prevail - it shall finally triumph.

(Speech of Thomas Muir in the Court of Judiciary on 30 August 1793.)

Hamilton also designed the Doric column for the statue of John Knox (1825) in the Glasgow Necropolis (see Glasgow's public statues).

Burns Monuments (Edinburgh and Alloway)

Hamilton's monument to Robert Burns, on the Calton Hill, Edinburgh, is based on the Choragic Monument of Lysicrates in Athens.[4]

The building of a mausoleum on the grave of Robert Burns in Dumfries in 1815 was followed by a general move to erect memorials and statues of the bard in other Scottish towns and cities. In October 1817 a competition was announced in Ayrshire seeking designs for a monument at Burns' birthplace at Alloway. Hamilton had been working on just such a project. His design is based on the Monument to Lysicrates in Athens, Greece, a form often associated with poets and poetry. Hamilton won the competition and the foundation stone was laid in 1820, but the project was shelved and debated for years. It was resumed in 1825 and completed in 1828. A bust of Burns by Patrick Park was added in the memorial in 1854. This was replaced in 1884 by a bust donated by the prominent Scots sculptor Sir John Steell.

Following a large subscription in 1817 from Scottish expatriates in India[1] a monument in Edinburgh was funded and after a debate lasting over a decade Thomas Hamilton won this commission in 1831. While largely repeating the design of the Alloway monument, he designed the Edinburgh monument to contain a full sized statue of Burns by John Flaxman. The statue was later removed to the Scottish National Portrait Gallery where it remains on display.

Whilst the Alloway monument is accessible all the year round, the Edinburgh monument is accessible only on special occasions such as Doors Open Day (usually one weekend in late October in Edinburgh). As part of the Edinburgh Art Festival it was opened daily between the dates of 28/07/16 and 28/08/16.

List of architectural works[5]

Gallery of architectural works

References

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