Alfred Rimmer (1829 - 1893)

RA Collection: People and Organisations

Artist and author, (born Liverpool 1829) and educated at Liverpool college under the Rev. J. S. Howson (afterwards dean of Chester). He was articled to a Liverpool architect named Cunningham, and followed the profession until 1858, when he went to Canada. There he engaged in trade and became consul-general for Denmark and justice of the peace in Montreal. He returned to England in 1870 and settled in Chester, devoting himself to artistic and literary pursuits. Before he went to Canada he had published Ancient Halls of Lancashire, from Original Drawings, (Liverpool, 1852), and contributed two papers on ancient domestic architecture to the ‘Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire’ (1800-1852). For the same journal he wrote in 1871 a paper on ‘Peculiarities of the Gothic Architecture of Chester and its Neighbourhood.’ In conjunction with Dean Howson he produced in 1872 Chester as it was,’ and in 1875 illustrated the dean’s work River Dee: its Aspect and History. His other works, all illustrated by himself, were: Ancient Stone Crosses of England, (1875); Ancient Streets and Homesteads of England, (1877); Pleasant Spots around Oxford, (1878); Our Old Country Towns, (1881); Rambles about Eton and Harrow, (1882); Early Homes of Prince Albert, (1882); About England with Dickens, (1883); Stonyhurst Illustrated, (1884); Summer Rambles round Manchester (reprinted from the Manchester Guardian), (1890) and Rambles round Rugby (1892). [From: Wikisource]

Profile

Born: 9 August 1829 in Liverpool

Died: 27 October 1893

Nationality: British

Gender: Male

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