Silver End: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
| Line 18: | Line 18: | ||
<gallery mode=packed> | <gallery mode=packed> | ||
File:NewFarm-GreatEaston.JPG|New Farm' Great Easton, Essex built as the country residence of W. F. Crittall, the Technical Director of the Crittall Metal | File:NewFarm-GreatEaston.JPG|New Farm' Great Easton, Essex built as the country residence of W. F. Crittall, the Technical Director of the [[Crittall Windows|Crittall Metal Windows Company]] in 1934 by Mssrs & Sir Owen Williams | ||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
Revision as of 11:09, 16 September 2017
SORRY! WE LOVE SILVER END BUT HAVEN'T FINISHED THIS BIT YET!
Would you like to help? If you would like to help compile the Chimni Wiki we would love you to take part in the process. Please email admin@chimni.com.
Francis and his son Walter Crittall, of the Crittall Metal Windows Company, wanted their workers to live in houses with 'elementary rights of every home', amenities such as hot running water, gas and electricity, indoor bathrooms and a proper garden, not a backyard or an allotment half a mile away'<ref>[1] A History of Silver End By Susan King 1996</ref>. As Francis Crittall wrote in his autobiography in 1935<ref>Fifty Years of Work and Play (1935) - An autobiography by Francis Crittall</ref>: ‘In planning the houses we decided to sacrifice traditional design in the cause of light and air and space’.
Prominent Houses In Silver End
-
'Wolverton', Silver End, Essex. Thomas S. Tait. 1928.Photo: @Elain540 Moderne with Art Deco flourishes
Other Related Buildings
-
New Farm' Great Easton, Essex built as the country residence of W. F. Crittall, the Technical Director of the Crittall Metal Windows Company in 1934 by Mssrs & Sir Owen Williams
See Also
References
<references />