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Glasgow Savings Bank, 177 Ingram Street, Glasgow (1896) John James's father retired from the practice in 1889 or 1890 at the age of seventy-five. The younger JJ Burnet and Campbell took the practice in a more adventurous direction, looking towards the London architectural scene to keep abreast of fashion and to increase their chances of winning ...
Queen's Cross Church Glasgow (1896) Saracen Tool Works, Gallowgate, Glasgow (1896) Shop at 401 Sauchiehall Street Glasgow (1896) Glasgow School of Art with MacKintosh as project architect (1896) Miss Cranston's Tea Rooms ("The Willow Tearooms") on Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow (1896) Kilmadock Parish Manse near Doune (1897) 11 Margaret Street ...
William Somerville Edmiston (November 10, 1857 – July 24, 1903) was an architect and politician in present-day Alberta, Canada. He was a member of the Edmonton Town Council and for two terms, the mayor of Edmonton. Originally a native of Scotland, Edmiston came to Canada to settle in Clover Bar, Northwest Territories in the early
Glenlee is a steel-hulled three-masted barque, built as a cargo ship at Port Glasgow under that name in 1896 for Glasgow owners. With later owners she was named Islamount and Clarastella . [ 1 ] From 1922 she was the sail training ship Galatea in the Spanish Navy.
August 31 – Alice Strike, Canada's last surviving female World War I veteran (d.2004) November 3 – Madeleine Fritz, paleontologist (d.1990) November 7 – Henry Botterell, World War I fighter pilot (d.2003)
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James Miller FRSE FRIBA FRIAS RSA (1860–1947) was a Scottish architect, recognised for his commercial architecture in Glasgow and for his Scottish railway stations. Notable among these are the American-influenced Union Bank building at 110–20 St Vincent Street; his 1901–1905 extensions to Glasgow Central railway station; [1] and Wemyss Bay railway station on the Firth of Clyde. [2]
Only a hundred copies of this massive tome were printed in 1896, and it is likely that Pinnington was commissioned to write and edit it. Between 1896 and 1912, he produced a formidable stream of books and articles and was an art critic for several Scottish newspapers. It appears that around 1912, the family moved to Argentina.