| Watson Fothergill’s Right-Hand Man, Lawrence G. Summers: a man of unsung talent |
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The man in Fothergill’s office whose undoubted skills and abilities contributed greatly to the firm’s output for many years is largely unknown and his praises unsung. This man was Lawrence George Summers about whom surprisingly little has been written. His building designs won many medals and prizes, including a silver medal for the design of a Town Hall, later published in an article in the influential Victorian magazine The Building News. His talents were such that he was asked to give lectures on Building Geometry at the Mechanics’ Institute in Nottingham. He passed the RIBA proficiency examination in 1880, allowing him to proudly advertise as ‘L. G. Summers A.R.I.B.A., architect, Pelham Chambers, Angel Row, Nottingham’.
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Around 1882, Summers started to work with Fothergill, and from that time modestly dropped the letters from after his name, and listed himself in the trade directories as ‘architect’s assistant’. He was never made a partner in Fothergill’s business, but worked for him until the older man retired. Summers then continued to practice from the George Street offices that Fothergill had built in 1895 until he himself retired in about 1935. He died in a Forest Road nursing home on 11 th September 1940, leaving behind his widow Louise Martha at their family home in Edwards Lane, Sherwood. Lawrence Summers seems to have been a man of great talent and ability, certainly his obituaries give glowing accounts of a man much appreciated by those in the building industry. They talk of his contribution to the output of Fothergill’s office in preparing plans and building specifications, and refer to him as a quiet, unassuming man. Perhaps it was this retiring personality which lead to him being so overshadowed by the more outgoing Watson Fothergill. |
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Whatever the reasons, Summers’ contribution to the Victorian architecture of Nottingham has been greatly undervalued. Fothergill certainly had great talent and created some wonderfully striking buildings, but one wonders quite how much of this style and distinctiveness was due to the quiet, unassuming and almost unknown Lawrence Summers .Lawrence Summers seems to have been a man of great talent and ability, certainly his obituaries give glowing accounts of a man much appreciated by those in the building industry. They talk of his contribution to the output of Fothergill’s office in preparing plans and building specifications, and refer to him as a quiet, unassuming man. |
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LG Summers standing outside Fothergill's Offices, George Street, Nottingham c.1895 |
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