Edward Holmes  | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1832 | 
| Died | 1909 | 
| Nationality | British | 
| Occupation | Architect | 
| Buildings | St Mary's Church, Selly Oak | 
Edward Holmes (1832–1909) was a British architect from Birmingham, England.
Family
He was the son of Edward Holmes and Elisa Henrietta Roulet, christened on 7 September 1832 in St Mary's Church, Moseley.
He married Mary Ann Briggs on 7 October 1856 at St Mary's Church, Moseley. Mary Ann was the daughter of Samuel and Elizabeth Briggs. There were three children: Elizabeth Henriette Holmes (1857 - 1944), Edward Briggs Holmes (1858 - 1920) and Gertrude Fanny Holmes (1861-1938).
There is a brass plaque in St Mary's Church, Selly Oak to the memory of Mary Ann Holmes aged 31 years, wife of Edward Holmes (Architect of this Church) who died 5 November 1861 and is buried in the Family Vault at St Mary's Church, Moseley.
Holmes married Mary Lavinia Hemming on 27 May 1863 in Alvechurch. They had a further 11 children.
He contracted pneumonia just before Christmas 1909 and died at Wyndcliffe, School Road, Moseley on 30 December 1909[1] and his funeral was held in Moseley parish church on 3 January 1910. Mary Lavinia died in 1921.
Buildings designed

- Lodge and twin mortuary chapels, Belper Cemetery. 1858
 - All Saints' Church, King's Heath with Frederick Preedy, 1860
 - St Mary's Church, Selly Oak. 1861
 - Moseley Independent Congregational chapel. 1862[2]
 - St James' Church, Shirley. New roof. 1862.
 - Exchange Building, 1865. Enlarged 1877. Demolished 1965.[3]
 - Immanuel Church, Broad Street, Birmingham. 1865
 - Former Masonic Hall, Ethel Street, Birmingham, 1865-69[3]
 - Midland Bank, New Street, Birmingham. 1867-69 (now Apple retail store)[3]
 - Former Medical Mission, River Street, Birmingham, 1880[3]
 - Lady Chapel addition to St Paul's Church, Moseley Road, Balsall Heath. 1865.
 - Freemasons' Hall, Grand Lodge of Ireland, Molesworth Street, Dublin. 1866.
 - St John The Divine, Horninglow, Burton upon Trent. 1867
 - St Mark's, Winshill, Burton-on-Trent, 1869
 - Kings Norton Workhouse. 1870
 - St Paul's Church, Dosthill. 1872
 - George Wilkinson and Co, Ashted Steam Brewery, Ashted Row, Birmingham. 1874
 - 37 Bennetts Hill, Birmingham. Date unknown.
 - Chadwick Manor, Balsall, Solihull[4]
 
References
- ↑ "Funeral of Mr. E Holmes". Birmingham Daily Gazette. England. 4 January 1910. Retrieved 6 February 2018 – via British Newspaper Archive.
 - ↑ Birmingham Daily Post - Tuesday 17 June 1862. p.2. 'New Independent Chapel at Moseley'
 - 1 2 3 4 Pevsner Architectural Guides - Birmingham, Andy Foster, 2005, ISBN 0-300-10731-5
 - ↑ Birmingham Daily Post 21 April 1883
 
External links
- Irish Architecture site entry on Grand Masonic Hall
 - Derwent Valley Mills entry on Belper Cemetery
 - Institutions.org.uk entry on Kings Norton Workhouse
 - Project Gutenberg entry on Showells' dictionary of Birmingham
 
