Henry Saxon Snell
Architect
1831 – 1904
Who was Henry Saxon Snell?
Henry Saxon Snell was a noted architect who specialised in health facilities and designed many London hospitals and other public buildings. He was the author of two significant architectural books: Hospital Construction and Management and Charitable and Parochial Establishments.
Educated at University College London. He was admitted a fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects on 20 February 1871. One of his proposers, David Brandon, was a specialist in London hospitals. He worked as an assistant to James Pennethorne, Joseph Paxton and William Tite, and from 1860–64 was the chief draughtsman to Francis Fowke.
He made his name in the later 1860s with innovative designs for workhouses and quickly extended his practice to hospitals and infirmaries in which he became one of the leading specialists in the 1890s and early 1900s, his main clients being the London guardians.
In 1886, he designed the Montrose Asylum
In 1887, he designed the Aberdeen Royal Infirmary
In 1889, he designed the Leanchoil Hospital
In 1893, he designed the Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal.
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