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See Francis Johnson (architect) for English architect of similar name. Francis Johnston (1760–1829) was an Irish architect, best known for building the General Post Office (GPO) on O’Connell Street, Dublin.
[edit] LifeJohnston was born in Armagh, Ireland, son of William Johnston, also an architect. He studied architecture and practised in Armagh for some years before moving to Dublin about 1793.[1] In 1805 he was appointed to the Board of Works as an architect. In 1824 he was made president of the Royal Hibernian Academy of Arts which had been founded the previous year, and he provided headquarters for the Academy in Lower Abbey Street at his own expense[2]. [edit] WorksTwo early projects were the completion of Rokeby Hall and Ballymakenny Church, Co. Louth, to the designs of Thomas Cooley in whose office he first trained. Townley Hall, 5km west of Drogheda, built 1794-98, is considered his finest work[3]. He was responsible for the design of Armagh Courthouse built between 1806 and 1809.[4]
His work is interesting from an architectural point of view, in that it spans both the Neo-Classical and Neo-Gothic styles. His Chapel Royal in Dublin Castle (1807-1814) is a fine example of an early Gothic revival church in Dublin. On this project (as on many others) he worked closely with the stuccodore George Stapleton, son of the better-known Michael Stapleton. The chapel proved a seminal building for later Gothic revival architects in Ireland, with the Cork architect Thomas Deane using the detailing from the windows as a model for those of the Aula Maxima of Queens College Cork. Among his other most notable projects were the construction of St. George’s Church on the North side of Dublin (1802), overseeing the conversion of Parliament House into the Bank of Ireland (1803) and the construction of the Tudor Gothic gateway to the Royal Hospital, Kilmainham. This gateway originally stood beside the river Liffey at Bloody Bridge (now Rory O'More Bridge), but had to be moved after the arrival of the railway in 1844 increased traffic congestion (obviously not new to Dublin!). He had placed his personal coat of arms above the arch, concealed by a piece of wood painted to match the stone, his idea being that his arms would be revealed to future generations after the wood became rotten. However, his little trick was uncovered when the gateway was taken down for removal. The coat of arms at present on the gateway is that of the Royal Hospital.[5] In 1813 he began work on Richmond Gaol as a prison to relieve the pressure on Newgate Prison, Dublin, which had been designed by his teacher Thomas Cooley.[6] He played a major role in designing Nelson's Pillar in Dublin, the construction of which was started in 1808. The original plans for the Pillar were submitted to the organising committee by William Wilkins, a London architect, Fellow of Caius College, Cambridge, and accepted by them in 1808. However, for some reason, the committee wrote later that they were incapable of "executing his design precisely as he had given it." Johnston "afforded the necessary assistance with his acknowledged ability, which...he did with the utmost cheerfulness."[7] He made several drawings, one of which met the approval of the committee sufficiently for construction to start.[8] Curiously, the table of expenditure for the Pillar does not include an architect's fee. The Pillar was destroyed by a bomb in 1966.[9] He was also responsible for the design of Charleville Forest Castle in Tullamore, County Offaly, considered one of the finest of its type in the country.[10] [edit] References
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