John Baird I (1798-1859)
Portrait of John Baird I by James MacLehose

John Baird (17991859) was a Glasgow architect of the 19th century, also called John Baird Primus[1] by Thomas Gildard (from the book An Old Glasgow Architect on some Older Ones) in order for people to be able distinguish him from a second John Baird (1816-93). He was an influential figure in the development of Glasgow’s late Georgian and early Victorian Architecture. He was responsible for around 40 projects and worked in the "background" compared to other Glasgow architects.

Life and work

John Baird was born in the village of Dalmuir, Dunbartonshire (now part of the town of Clydebank). He was the son of Thomas Baird, a Wright, and Agnes Baird, and he was the elder brother of another architect with the name of Anthony Baird (practised, 1834-5).

At the age of 15, he started training as an architect with a relative of his named John Shepherd, of John Shepherd & Co., which was a firm that consisted of architects and property agents and was located at 636 Argyle Street. While he was an apprentice, the firm completed the west terrace of Carlton Place for Peter Nicholson. In 1818, when he was 20 and barely out of his apprenticeship and after Shepherd’s death, he took over the business.

Baird's design style was similar to Greek and Roman architecture with slight modifications and it also leans slightly towards the Tudor and early British Renaissance architecture styles. After his design of the Greyfriars United Presbyterian Church on North Albion Street, it began his public career in 1822. He never participated in architectural competitions, calling them "a species of professional speculation - to use a mild epithet - which he consistently protested against to the last" and he managed to progress his career significantly. Despite this, he was due to act as a judge on the necropolis competition with David Hamilton. Baird designed a total of twelve churches, more than any other building type he has designed. These churches were fashionable to the time period, yet not quite of a Gothic style.

Baird’s most important contribution to the city of Glasgow’s architecture was his spearheading use of the cast iron in his buildings’ constructions. The earlier use of the cast iron was for the roof trusses in the Argyll Arcade, in 28-32 Buchanan Street (1827).[2]

Baird designed the lands of Claremont,[3] the numerous houses and grounds that needed to be replaced. He worked with the design of George Smith from Edinburgh for the adjacent lands of South Woodside and this consequently increased the value of both of these properties. Baird also designed Claremont House, which is now the centre of Claremont Terrace though it used to be a sole property. This house is an excellent example of Baird’s domestic design as it is a large and neatly arranged town house that has a frontage of 58 feet. 

Argyll Arcade from the outside in 2015

Later in 1828, Baird was appointed by an organisation called the Merchants' House to work together with David Hamilton[4] in figuring out and devising the layout of the Necropolis which is Glasgow's finest cemetery, but their plans were put aside and he was, not long after that, relegated as an advisor in approving George Milne as its eventual designer.

In 1836, Baird took on his first apprentice, Alexander Thomson, who then became his assistant until 1849 when he went into partnership with a second John Baird, Alexander's brother-in-law, not related to Baird.

In 1840, Baird designed generous business premises for Sir James Campbell on Buchanan Street, known as the Prince's Buildings. Campbell then hired him to design his warehouse that sits on the corner of Ingram and Brunswick Streets and then the elevations were drawn up by the author of "Baronial and Ecclesiastical Antiquities of Scotland.", Mr Billings. He designed the simple Princes Square which has since been re-designed and upgraded.

One of Baird's largest architecture projects would have been his Jacobean design for the new University of Glasgow building that was to be built on Woodlands Hill which is right by Kelvingrove Park. However, the plans were abandoned after the land was bought to build Park Terrace and Circus. The design for this was shown at the International Exhibition of 1862. Later the University decided to move their College buildings to Gilmorehill and they used Baird for the design of the buildings.

Early in 1853 he was accounted for the design of the pink granite sarcophagus for James Ewing of Strathleve] in the Necropolis, an eye capturing work of art, which featured four bronze relief panels by Mossman.[5]

In Baird's later life his knowledge of different kinds of properties allowed him to also work as a property valuator. He was known for his attention to detail and he was honest in his opinions.

Personal life

Baird married Janet McKean from Bonhill, in 1837 and he had two daughters Flora, in 1838 and Agnes in 1841. He was a freemason, attending Lodge Glasgow St John. His appearance and character is described by a portrait of him by Daniel Macnee, now in Glasgow Art Gallery. It pictures Gildard's description of him as 'a large well-built man' who 'had a presence of one that ought to be in authority'. The portrait was reproduced in Memoirs and Portraits of One Hundred Glasgow Men by James MacLehose in 1886.

Architectural work

The table below shows the principal projects which Baird designed or worked on. Some of these he worked as part of a team on and others were only minor additions.[6]

Date Started Name of Building Location
1820 Greyfriars UP Church Glasgow, Scotland
1823 St Thomas Wesleyan Methodist Church Glasgow, Scotland
1825 UP Church, Wellington Street Blythswood, Glasgow, Scotland
1826 Oakshaw Street UP Church Paisley, Renfrewshire, Scotland
1828 Argyle Arcade Glasgow, Scotland
1830 Layout of the lands of South Woodside and Clairmont Woodlands Hill, Glasgow, Scotland
1831 Glasgow Necropolis Dennistoun, Glasgow, Scotland
1831 Woodside Crescent Woodlands Hill, Glasgow, Scotland
1833 Cambridge UP Church Glasgow, Scotland
1833 Clober House New Kilpatrick, Dunbartonshire, Scotland
1833 Highland Parish Church Campbeltown, Argyll, Scotland
1833 Terraced houses, Athol Place, Bath Street Glasgow, Scotland
1833 West of Scotland Agricultural College Glasgow, Scotland
1834 Union Church Greenock, Scotland
1835 Bonhill Parish Church Bonhill, Scotland
1835 Woodside Terrace Glasgow, Scotland
1837 Caledonia Place Glasgow. Scotland
1838 Woodside Place Glasgow, Scotland
1838 Anderston UP Church Glasgow, Scotland
1839 George Square Congregational Church Greenock, Scotland
1839 Park of Drumquhassle Drymen, Scotland
1840 169 Elderslie Street Glasgow, Scotland
1840 2-4 Clifton Street Glasgow, Street
1840 National Bank of Scotland, Airdrie Branch Airdrie, Scotland
1840 Somerset Place Glasgow, Scotland
1840 Erskine UP Church Glasgow, Scotland
1840 Viewpark House Uddingston, Scotland
1841 Cairnhill House Airdrie, Scotland
1841 Congregational Church, Dunfermline Dunfermline, Scotland
1841 National Bank of Scotland, Glasgow Branch Glasgow, Scotland
1842 Claremont House Glasgow, Scotland
1842 Claremont Terrace an Beresford House Woodlands, Scotland
1844 Stonebyres House Lesmahagow, Scotland
1845 Lynedoch Place and Lynedoch Crescent Glasgow, Scotland
1847 University of Glasgow (proposed new college) Woodlands, Scotland
1847 Wellington Street UP Church, mural monument to John Mitchell Glasgow, Scotland
1849 1-17 Woodlands Terrace Woodlands, Scotland
1850 UP Church, Shamrock Street Glasgow, Scotland
1851 64 Buchanan Street Glasgow, Scotland
1851 Macdonald's Muslin Warehouse Glasgow, Scotland
1851 Premises of Messrs Wilson, Kay & Co Glasgow, Scotland
1852 House in St Vincent Street Glasgow, Scotland
1853 James Ewing Monument Glasgow, Scotland
1853 Church School Campbeltown, Scotland
1854 Houses in Hope Street and West George Street Glasgow, Scotland
1854 Prince of Wales' Buildings Glasgow, Scotland
1854 Sir James Campbell's Warehouse Glasgow, Scotland
1854 Tobacco Warehouse, James Watt Street Glasgow, Scotland
1855 Carbeth Guthrie House Stirlingshire, Scotland
1855 Gardner's Warehouse Glasgow, Scotland
1855 Urie House Fetteresso, Scotland
1856 Smith and Sons' Warehouse Glasgow, Scotland
1858 Birkwood House Lesmahagow, Scotland
1858 Crown Circus Glasgow, Scotland
1859 Commercial Building on 138-140 West George Street Glasgow, Scotland
1859 Gartsherrie Offices Glasgow, Scotland

Death

Baird died peacefully at home in Westfield, Partick on 18 December 1859 and was buried in Glasgow Necropolis. From 1855 he had suffered from a chronic brain disease which then resulted in his death four years later. Some time before his death he took on a partner, James Thomson[7] to help him carry out his business until the illness took over. James carried on the business as Baird & Thomson with his sons and his successors until the 1940s. Most of the work during his sickness period is thought to be that of James Thomson. His wife outlived him and died on 24 April 1887.

References

  1. "Dictionary of Scottish Architects - DSA Architect Biography Report (November 25, 2015, 2:02 pm)". www.scottisharchitects.org.uk. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
  2. Curl, James Stevens (2006). A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture. Oxford,Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-860678-9.
  3. "John Baird - Information on John Baird from Gazetteer for Scotland". www.scottish-places.info. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
  4. McKean, Charles (2004). "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography - Baird, John". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/62890. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  5. "Glasgow - City of Sculpture by Gary Nisbet (January 2002)".
  6. "Dictionary of Scottish Architects - DSA Architect Biography Report (November 25, 2015, 2:35 pm)". www.scottisharchitects.org.uk. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
  7. "John Baird". www.glasgowwestaddress.co.uk. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
  1. "Buildings and Cityscape" by Charles McKean
  2. University of Glasgow
  3. "The Victorian Walk" by New Glasgow Society
  4. Commercial Glasgow Archived 17 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.