Jeptha Pacey (died 1862) was an architect, surveyor and building contractor working in Boston in Lincolnshire. Pacey was working as an architect at 10 Witham Place in Boston in 1826.[1]

Jeptha Pacey
Assembly Rooms, Boston
Born1785?
Died28 June 1862
Skirbeck, Boston
NationalityEnglish
OccupationArchitect
BuildingsBoston Assembly Rooms
ProjectsConstruction of Fenland churches after the Fenland Churches Act.

Works

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The New Assembly Rooms, Boston Lincolnshire in 1856
  • Boston Assembly Rooms 1819-1820. The design of these buildings may be based partly on designs submitted earlier to Boston Corporation by the London architect William Atkinson. The building has a pedimented front with a canted first floor bay supported on Tuscan columns with a lattice balcony. Tall windows light a big assembly room.[2] In 1826 White records the Assembly Rooms as having been built in 1819-20. They were over the poultry house and butter market). The rooms formed a handsome elevation, containing a suite of elegant and capacious assembly and banqueting rooms.[3]

Churches

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Five of six of churches built as a result of the Fens Chapels Act of 1816 have been attributed to Jeptha Pacey by Nikolaus Pevsner.[4] These churches are at Carrington (1816), Wildmore, Langrick, Midville and Frithville and are built in a late Georgian style. The exact reasons for Pevsner’s attribution are unclear, except for some similarity with the church at Whaplode Drove. A sixth church in a similar style at Eastville is known to have been designed in 1840 by the Louth architect Charles John Carter.

  • Whaplode Drove Church 1821. Designed with W Swansborough of Wisbech.[5]
  • Chapel at Chapel Hill, Tattershall, Lincolnshire.
  • Episcopal Chapel (St Aiden’s) High Street, Boston. c.1820. Jeptha Pacey was buried in the crypt of this chapel. Demolished.[6][7]

Houses

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  • Wigtoft Vicarage, Lincolnshire 1817 [8]

References

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  1. ^ White’s Directory of Lincolnshire, 1826, pg 86.
  2. ^ "Antram", (1989), pg.163.
  3. ^ White’s Directory of Lincolnshire, 1826, pg 76.
  4. ^ "Antram", (1989), pg.797.
  5. ^ "Antram", (1989), pg.212.
  6. ^ Old Boston
  7. ^ ”Colvin” (1995), pp. 719-20
  8. ^ "Antram", (1989), pg.798.

Literature

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  • Antram N (revised), Pevsner, N. & Harris J, (1989), The Buildings of England: Lincolnshire, Yale University Press.
  • Colvin H. A (1995), Biographical Dictionary of British Architects 1600-1840. Yale University Press, 3rd edition London, pp. 719–20.
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