Page:The Building News and Engineering Journal, Volume 22, 1872.djvu/16

 Supplement to the Vill leumee NEWS, July 19, 1872. Schools of Art, continued :— ham, 75; Salisbury, 89; South Kensing- ton, 247; Stourbridge, 75 ; Windsor and Eton, 327 Scientifle building, 29, 62, 108, 127, 147, 169, 189, 214, 225, 232, 250, 309, 331, 35), 365 Scottish ecclesiastical architecture, 478, 533 Scott's sewage process, 362, 384, 416, 495 Scrolls, 138 Sculptor, suicide of a, 327 Seacox Heath, 356 Sea-water: for making bread, 227; in London, 406 Secret deliberations, 531 Securing windows, 347 Selection of building stone, 127, 147, 202, 225, 243, 284 Selenitic mortar, 269 Semi-detached towers of churches, 512 Separate system for the disposal of sew- age, a new, 20, 45 Bevonoess cottage hospital competition, Sewage question, the, 19, 20, 45, 83, 100, 225, 245, 296, 346, 362, 384, 387, 416, 495 Sewer ventilation and flushing, 4, 44, 60, 79, 124, 162 Sewerage: Bill, Birmingham, 205, 449, 491, 512; Commission, Thames, 146; London, 236, 296; scheme for Liverpool, 20; works at Norwich, 188 Sheepshanks collection of pictures, 386 Shoe, adjustable, 143 Short theory of the truss, 129 Shrine of St. Alban’s, the, 144, 242 Sick Asylum, Poplar, 471 Simone Pollaiuolo, 350 Sink-traps, James's patent, 489 Sinking of a town, 65 Sir G. Bowyer's asphalte tramways, 8 Sites for dwellings, healthiest, 247 Skating-pond for Glasgow, 46 Sky outlines, 112 Small-pox, 536; small-pox and fumigation, 144 Smith's patent stoves, 304 Smoke Nuisance Act, the, 164 Snow-melting apparatus competition, 75 Society of Amalgamated Engineers, 24; Society of Arts, 435; Society of Biblical Archeology, 21, 161, 404; Society of Carpenters and Joiners, Amalgamated, 60; Society for the Encouragement of the Fine Arts, 46,57, 80, 97, 132, 164, 267, 342, 396, 434, 500 Softening frozen ground, 264 Solid geometry, 181 Sone practical hints on house-building, 5 Something novel in brewery-building, 383 Sompting Church, Sussex, 68 South Kensington: land at, 286 ; District School of Art, 247; Museum, 24, 61, 167, 247, 407, 493 South London: cemetery, new, 536; Gas Bill, 246; tramway extension, 124 Southleigh Church, 242 Southport Townhall competition, 20, 34 Spalding Mechanics’ Institute, 489 Spire blown down, a, 24 Spires of Sussex, the, 458 Spring hinge and adjustable shoe, 143 Squares of Paris, the, 247 Staff for the Bishop of Hereford, 80 Stage, travelling, St. Pancras Station, 41 Stained Glass :—Perkeley, 80; Bigby, Lincolnshire, 102; Birmingham, 633; Exeter, 245; Henley-on-Thames, 102; “Lewisham, 436; London, 366; Madding- ton, 24; plain glazing, 96, 119; Ply- mouth, 491; quarries for glazing, 96; Salisbury, 470; Savoy Chapel, 80; Silverton, 80; Southampton, 366; stained glass, its application to domestic archi- tecture, 96, 119, 131: stained glass in the International Exhibition, 451; Sutton zuocls 533 ; Upton, 24; Wood Green, Staining, 128, 139, 149, 171, 190, 213, 231, 251, 271, 311 Standard lock, Samels’, 276 Staplehurst School Board, 507 ‘Statue in Leicester-square, 327 Statues, Memorials, &c.:—Albert Memorial, the, 385; Archbishop Longley, 24; Bishop Lonsdale, 24; Charles's monument, Bala, 489; Duchess of Sutherland, 80; Dunkeld, 283; George ‘Grote, 265; Glasgow, 245; Henry Bell, 80, 406; King Robert the Bruce, 164, 245; Leicester-square, 327; Lord Derby, 103; Mazzini, 406; New York, 512; Nice, 406 ; Salt, Sir Titus, 347; Sir John Herschel, 24; Sir Walter Scott, 283; statuary for the Bradford Town-hall, 385, 447; statue of the Queen for Bom- day, 265; statue of the Queen for St. Thomas's Hospital, 164; Trevelyan ‘Goodall, Mr., 387 Steam road-rolling, 173 Steel, testing, 173 Stench-traps, 347 Stepney and Poplar Asylum, 471 Steyning Church, oak bench at, 152, 184 Stone, 127, 147, 202, 225, 243, 284, 325, 344, 365, 406, 488, 518; stone: absorption of moisture by, 160; artificial, 309, 345; decay in, 98, 118; monuments, rude, 157; preserving, 109 Stourbridge School of Art, 75 Stoves, patent, 304 Strasburg, the Temple Neuf, 236 Street, Mr., on the New Law Courts, 34 Street: accidents, 144; architecture, 256; architecture in Glasgow, 436; scaveng- ing, the law of, 43 Strike in the London building trades, 395, 454, 486, 505, 532 Struck by lightning, 44, 67, 403 Structures, dangerous, 267 Studentship, Pugin travelling, 158 Stuffing for cushions, 327 Style: for London architecture, 251, 305; a new, 321, 343 St. Alban’s Abbey. 144, 242, 509; St. Augustine's Church, Dublin, 132; St. Austell Schools, 402, 500; St. Columba, Haggerston, 52; St. Helen's Town-hall competition, 241; St. James's Park, 226, 449; St. John’s Church, Hull, 522; St. Lo, Normandy, 194; St, Louis, new bridge at, 163; St. Pancras Station roof, 41; St. Paul's, completion of, 124, 163, 286, 871, 401, 427, 448, 453, 469, 471, 491; St. Paul's’ Church, Sandgate, 275; St. Paul’s Church, Wood-green, Staf- fordshire, 276; St. Paul's Churchyard, improvements at, 247; St. Peter's Church, Bury, 90; St. Stephen's Chapel, 365 Substitute for wood, 347 Suburban cemeteries, 316 Suicide of a sculptor, 327 Sun-street, Bishopsgate, 164 Sunderland: model dwellings, 34; work- men’s dwellings competition, 139 Superstitions of the British builder, 367 Supply of: gas to Leeds, 327; gas to Lon- don, 80, 194, 246; water to London, 143, 184, 306, 342, 386, 407, 410, 536 Surrey Chapel Competition, 236; Surrey theatre, the, 387 Survey, the Ordnance, 120, 512 Surveyor, the :—Bicentrolinead, the, 336, 345; dilapidations, lay, 23, 44, 101; district surveyors’ charges, 315, 470; Ecclesiastical Dilapidations Act, 1871, 449; employment of surveyors, the, and the Institute of Architects, 256, 291, 498 ; gradienter surveying, 255; in- closures, 512; Institution of Surveyors, 47, 80, 111, 206, 327, 458; interference by district surveyor, 246; land survey- ing, 23; London Ordnance Survey, 347; notes on earthwork, 249, 270, 291, 330, 352, 872, 451, 485, 505; Ordnance Sur- vey, the, 120, 347, 512: road-rolling in Paris, steam, 173: rubble-roads, 367; taking-out quantities and measuring works, 18, 256, 291, 498, 510; value of land in London, 268, 427 Survival of Gothic, the, 62 Sussex towers and spires, 458 Swimming baths for the metropolis, 192 Synagogue for Liverpool, new, 20 System of glazing, improved, 236 TAKING-OUT quantities, 18, 256, 291, 498, 510 Taste in the Temple, 306 Teachings of Turner, the, 302, 394 Temple of Diana at Ephesus, the, 159, 475; Temple, the Middle, 306; Temple Neuf, Strasburg, the, 236 Tenderness, professional, 515 Terra-cotta, 214, 512 Testimonial Fountain, the Bryant & May, 458 Testing: building stone, 147 ; steel by the microscope, 173 Thames: bridges, freeing the, 536; Em- bankment, 79, 246, 247, 325, 366, 386, 536; Sewerage Commission, 146 Theatres: Parisian, 144; Surrey, 387 Theory of: the arts, 126, 210, 269, 412; the truss, a short, 129 Thomas Bewick, 267 Thumbscrews, architects as, 409 Timber: American, 406 ; cutting, 303; Queensland, 390; strength of, 433 ; trade of, 1871, 33 Timbers, framed, 471 Toombs: Chaucer's, 80; Athenian, 120 Tower for sewer ventilation at Eltham, 124 Towers : Martello, 306 ; semi-detached, 512; and spires of Sussex, 458 ; St. Martin, Birmingham, 54 Town: dwellings for the working classes, 52; sinking of a, 65 Town-halls: Chorley, new, 139, 205, 402, 426, 469, 490; Southport, 20, 34; St. Helen's, new, 241 Trade news, 25, 47, 60, 81, 103, 124, 144, 165, 186, 206, 228, 247, 287, 30, B47 367, 387, 408, 427, 450, 471, 492, 512, 536 Tramway phalte, 8; London street, 124, 164, 226, 536 Transatlantic municipal government, 346, 350 Transparent painting on muslin window shades, 138 Traps, patent, 489 Travelling stage used for the St. Pancras roof, 41 Travelling studentship, the Pugin, 158 ‘Treatment of doorways, 290 Trent Cathedral, 256 Travelyan-Goodall memorial, the, 387 Trio of painters who practised architec- ture, 146 Truss, theory of the, 129 Tumulus, the Kelleythorpe, 471 Tunnels : the Detroit, 307; the Mersey 282 Tunnelling machinery. 180 Turner: and Gillott, 286; and his teach- ings, 394 Turner's: “Liber Studiorum,” 302, 394; works, 407 INDEX OF CONTENTS. UNANIMITY, professional, 529 Union infirmary, Leeds, 304; union neces- sary between artists and architects, 390 ; Union Workhouse, Ross, 304, 402 United States’ Government Architect, 427 Universal; foul air purifier, 316; outside blind, 406 University College, London, 47 Useful cement, 315 Utilisation of sewage, 19, 225, 245, 296, 346, 387, 416 MESSE | (Metropolis) Act, 1869, Value of land in London, 268, 427 Varnish: keeping, 138; for leather, 315; for metallic bodies, 185 Varnishing and painting, 138 Veneers, colouring, 281 Ventilation: of factories, 263; of sewers, 4, 44, 60, 79, 124, 162; and warming, 191, 243, 285, 305, 347 Vents in stone, 147 Vermilion, 139 “Vested interests” and pig-keeping, 205 Vestry Hall, Camberwell, 52 Vestrymen, sagacious, 205 Viaduct Station, Holborn, 46 Victoria Park, 46, 205, 227, 512 Views, perspective, 262, 285 Vignola, 179 Visits: East India Museum, 500; Leices- ter Waterworks, 515; Messrs. Cubitt's works, 495 Voluntary Architectural Examination, 151, 158, 216, 294, 474 WAGES, «4 good way of raising, 268 Wages Movement: — Aberdeen, 124, 186, 228; Airdrie, 347; Alloa, 144, 471; Alnwick, 144; Altrincham, $27, 347; Alyth, 287, 307; Auchterarder, 248; Ayr, 124, 165, 186, 471; Barnsley, 144, 307, 367; Barrow, 81, 347; Bath, 327; Berlin, 327, 367, 408; Berwick, 228; Birmingham, 124, 186, 228, 248, 307, 327, $28, 347, 367; Bishop Auckland, 165, 228; Blackburn, 347, 367; Bolton, 471; Bradford, 25; Bridgwater, 307; Bristol, 228, 471, 492, 536; Bromsgrove, 248, 268; Brussels, 81; Cambridge, 165, 268, 347, 367; Cardiff, 347; Carlisle, 124; Celebration of the ‘nine hours” at the Crystal Palace, 536; Chicago, 536; Clackmannan, 471; Coupar Angus, 287; Coventry, 287, 307; Cradley, 512; Croydon, 427; Cupar-Fife, 408, 427; Dalbeattie, 186 ; Darlington, 186; Dar- wen, 408; Deptford, 103; Dispute in the pottery trade, 268; Doncaster, 387; Dublin, 367; Dudley, 47, 124, 268, 387; Dumfries, 247, 867; Dundalk, 248; Dundee, 144, 206, 228, 492; Dunse, 206 ; Edinburgh, 124, 144, 165, 186, 206, 228, 248, 328, 367, 492; Exeter, 165, 287; Gateshead, 472; Glasgow, 206, 268, 287, 427, 492, 536; Gloucester, 248, 287; Gosty Hill, 367; Great Bridge, 248, 307; Greenock, 186, 450; Guildford, 408; Hartlepools, 268, 328; Hawick, 144, 328, 427; Hereford, 512; Hinckley, 268; Huddersfield, 367; Hull, 25; Inverkip, 124, 186; Ipswich, 144, 165, 268, 328, 367, 408, 427, 450, 472; Irvine, 248; Isle of Man, 450; Jedburgh, 268, 472; John- stone, 144, 328; Kirkcaldy, 248; Leam- ington, 165, 228, 248, 408; Leeds, 307, 387, 388, 408, 472, 492; Leicester, 287, 528; Leslie, 247; Liverpool, 268, 328; London, 25, 47, 103, 144, 206, 347, 368, 387, 395, 405, 428, 454, 472, 486, 492, 505, 512, 536; Maidstone, 186, 408; Man- chester, 247, 328, 347; Markinch, 248; Middleton, 492; Morley, 60, 248; New- castle-upon-Tyne, 81, 472; North Staf- fordshire, 287, 388; Northampton, 228, 307; Norwich, 828; Oldham, 328; Organ-builders, the, 472, Ormskirk, 328; Oxford, 186, 228, 248; Perth, 450; Ply- mouth, 408; Port Glasgow, 206; Port- land, 472; Redditch, 287; Rochester, 307; Rotherham, 492; Rothesay, 248; Sheffield, 47, 60, 348, 367, 388, 408, 450, 513; Shrewsbury, 228; Sittingbourne, 328; Southwark, 165; Staffordshire potteries, 287; Stourbridge, 47, 367; St. Andrews, 287; St. Helen's, 388; Sudbury, 408; Sunderland 206, 307, 328; Tillicoultry, 471; Tunstall, 348; Walsall, 124, 408; Warrington, 328, 348; Waterford, 388; West York- shire, 268; Whitby, 206; Wishaw, 124; Wolverhampton, 165, 206, 368; Worcester, 124; Worksop, 888; York, 206, 228, 408, 492 Walk of Cloisters, Westminster, north, 296 ° Walls, 62, 108, 127, 147, 169, 189, 214, 232; walls: defacement of, 268; hospital, 281 Walters, the late Mr. Edward, 68 Warehouses, Dowgate Hill, City, 194 Warming and ventilation, 191, 243, 285, 305 Warwick Castle, 24, 27, 103, 284 Waste of water, preventing, 347, 351 Watcombe terra-cotta, 512 Water: closet regulators, 351; famine in Bermondsey, for the Use of the Fire Brigade, 97; and gas mains and lightning, 67,150; mains, wooden, 471, 490; in Victoria Park, the, 227; waste- preventer, 347, 351; works, Leicester, 515 age oe NEWS, Vor. XXII- January to June. 1872. ] i Water Supply and Sanitary Matters: — Aberdeen, 346, 427; Appleby, 346; Bermondsey, 536; Bir- mingham, 205, 449, 491, 512; Cam- bridge, 449, 470; clean drains, 495; closets, 365; conservancy of rivers, 236, 310, 365, 386; constant water supply, 227, 246, 410; Coventry, 326; Doncaster, 346; drain-pipes, taps, &c., 45, 59, 78; earth closets, 351; economising the sewage, 225; fixed wash-stands, 365; Fleet sewer, the, 470; fumigation after small-pox, 144; General Scott's sewaga process, 362, 385, 416, 495; Glasgow, 45, 225, 227, 449; Hallington, 184; Halesworth, 102; Hawes, 267; healthiest sites for dwelling-houses, 247; house drainage and ventilation of drains and soil-pipes, 22, 23, 45, 59, 78, 79, 448, 469, 490; how small-pox is spread, 536; im- pure water in South Londo 24, 227; infected bank notes, 307; inter- ception of London sewage from the Thames, 236; James's patent sink-traps, 489; Leeds, 184, 204; Leicester, 515; Leigh, 24; Leyton, 326; lime process, the, considered with reference to the present state of the sewage question, 83; London, 184, 236, 470; London wells, 458; Margate, 470; metropolitan water supply, 143, 184, 227, 246, 306, 342, 386, 407, 410; Mitcham, 386; Morrell’s patent sanitary closet, 536; Native Guano Company's works, 296; new plan for dealing with sewage, 184; Norwich, 188; Oldbury, 427; old cess- pools of London, the, 193; our water supply and protection from fire, 255; pig-keeping and ‘vested interests,” 205; pollution of rivers, 346, 365, 386, 449; Pontefract, 267; pressure of gas in drains, sewers, and _ soil-pipes 45, 59, 78; preventing waste of water, 347, 351; public health, the, 120, 164, 246, 386, 470, 533, 536; purification of the Thames, 102; purifying sewage, 387; regulators for water-closets, 351; Roath, 386; Ruthin, 386; sanitary, 23, 117; Sanitary Commission, 342; sani- tary engineering, 345, 365; sanitary im- provements applied to dwellings, 24, 117, 331; sanitary work in the City of London during 1871, 396; scavenging, Mr. Ruskin on, 7; sea-water in London, 406; sea-water for sewer-flushing, 267 ; separate system for the disposal of sewage, new, 20, 45; sewage experi- ments at Bloxwich, 205; sewage ques- tion, the, 154, 246; sewage utilisation, 19, 225, 245, 346, 387, 416; sewer venti- lation and flushing, 4, 45, 60, 78, 79, 124, 162; sewerage scheme for Liverpool, new, 20; Shoreham, 427; stench-traps, 347; swimming baths for the metro- polis, 192; Swindon New Town, 533; Thames Sewerage Commission, 146; Thetford, 24; Truro, 387; universal foul air purifler, 316; ventilation and purification of factories, 263; ventila- tion and warming, 191, 243 ; ventilating rooms, 347; water companies v, local boards, 846; water for the use of thee Fire Brigade, 97; water in Victoria Park, the, 227; Wath and West Melton waterworks, 326; wealth and dirt, 314; West Riding of Yorkshire, 449; Wey- mouth, 24, 102, 306, 470; Whitwood, 449; Windsor, 205; wooden water-mains, 471, 490; Yarmouth waterworks, 102 Wealth and dirt, 314 Wells: the deepest in the world, 512; London, 458 Wells Cathedral clock, 24 Wesleyan Chapel, Chester, 402 Westminster: Abbey, 80, 296, 567, 404, 423, 443, 477, 534; beacon, the, 246, 471 White marble, colouring, 306 Whitechapel district, health of, 416 Whittlesey workhouse, 52 Wiltshire Archeological and Natural History Society, 103 Windlesham schools, 522 Window: fastenings, 347, 407; shades, painted muslin, 138 Windows, designs for, 412 Windsor and Eton Art Classes, 327 Witney parish church, 242 Woltmann’s “ Holbein and his time,” 28 Wolverhampton School Board, 489 Wood: engraving, 267; pavements, 406, 471; preserving, 422; rendered incom- bustible, 450; staining, 128, 139; sub- stitute for, 347 Wood Green Church, 120, 276 Wooden water-mains, 471, 490 Worcester: Cathedral, 140, 403; Guild- hall restoration, 75; School Board com- petition, 78, 101, 120, 121, 122, 142 Work of the London Fire Brigade, 97 Workmen's: dwellings, 52, 66, 138, 139, 226, 268, 281, 289, 306, 307, 327, 346; In- ternational Exhibition, 24 Workhouses: Ross, 304,402; Whittlesey "2 Works: on architecture in the Kensing- ton Library, 61; of art in black and white, exhibition of, 516; in India, public, 193; measuring, 18; of the Native Guano Company, 296; at Pem- broke College, Cambridge, 125, 203; of Turner and Mulready, 302, 394, 407 Worksop Schools competition, 402 Worthing College, 286 Wren, Sir Christopher, 444 Writing, architectural, 294 YANKEE notion in building, a, 124 York Minster, 161, 224, 468 Yorkshire Architectural Society, 46