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Working drawing and record copy of design for gate and lodges, 1781 (2)

Stained and worn, drawing 1 was obviously used on site; its neat economy and generous scale is appealing and was later taken up by the architects of the Arts and Crafts movement. Drawing 2 is by the same hand which is not Soane's. Soane's early notebooks show that he was on the move a great deal of the time, visiting sites and meeting clients and builders. He must have relied on ad hoc help with drawing up his schemes, and it is known that he employed Robert Baldwin (fl.1762-c.1804) for the large elevations of competition and Royal Academy exhibition drawings. However, the drawings catalogued here are not by Baldwin. Soane's office Account Book (1778-1797, p.11) has an item under Hammels: 'Fair drawing of the Lodges 1.1.0' that seems like a payment but to whom is not stated.

Again, Soane's notebook (SNB 6) has an entry for 17 January 1783 that records receiving 10 guineas from Thomas Malton. This was in repayment of a loan made by Soane (Account Book (1778-1797, p.42 that notes another loan of 5 guineas - both promptly repaid). An entry in the office 'Accompt book / from 1781' has an entry (23 March 1785) 'Maltons Perspective 0.15.0' together with the costs of 'Office Pens' and drawing paper. Malton was a student at the Royal Academy at the same time as Soane, and though he exhibited occasional architectural designs he later distinguished himself as a topographical artist. Soane seems to have employed him on an ad hoc basis, for example, Note Book 6 has an entry for 17 January 1783 referring to Thomas Malton being paid 10 guineas for measuring joiners' work in the Borough. Further references occur in Soane's specification for work to 'New Cavendish Street / the Honble Philip Yorke / 1781-3',that includes (at the end) items for the Hamels lodges such as lamps and of some further items for the dairy.

Pierre du Prey (op.cit., pp.251-2) wrote that the gate lodges 'occupied Soane during the winter of 1780/1 ... [and] cost only £400 plus the architect's 5 percent fee and travelling expenses.' The plans owe something to Henry Holland's design for lodge houses for Mr Brand (see Sketchbooks catalogue:' Miscellaneous Sketches 1777', largely by Henry Holland, SM volume 38, 12-13)

Ptolemy Dean (op.cit) notes: "Lodges: Completed in 1782, these are Soane's earliest surviving buildings. A beer cellar was added under one of them in 1786 (SM Ledger A, p.146). Square in plan, both lodges were extended in the nineteenth century, respecting the symmetry of the composition. The original iron gates survive, with rendered piers and cast-iron lamp-holders between them.'
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