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Pages in category "Architects from Bedfordshire" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. E.
Victor John Frederick Farrar was born in Bedford, England in 1930. [2] He was educated at Bedford Modern School between 1940 and 1946 where he excelled at cross country running for which he would later represent Bedfordshire. [2] Farrar’s success at the sport was such that he became an Honorary Life Member of the English Cross Country Union. [2]
Richard Fuller, Member of Parliament for Bedford and Kempston 2010-2017; Patrick Hall, Member of Parliament for Bedford and Kempston from 1997 to 2010; Sir William Harpur, Lord Mayor of London in 1561; Dave Hodgson, former directly elected mayor of Bedford; Alfred Mitchell-Innes, diplomat, who also served on Bedford Town Council for 23 years
The Old Town Hall is a municipal building in St Paul's Square in Bedford, Bedfordshire, England. The building, which was the headquarters of Bedford Borough Council from 1892 to 2009, is a Grade II listed building. [1]
The facilities were further augmented when the 19th century Cowper Building, located to the west of the shire hall and named after the former Lord Lieutenant of Bedfordshire, Earl Cowper, was acquired in 1938: it had been designed by Basil Champneys and had previously formed part of Bedford Grammar School. [10]
Herbert Baker (1862–1946) (South Africa, though he returned to England in 1913) James Barnet (1827–1904) (Australia) Edward Bartley (1839–1919) (New Zealand)
Bedford Museum was formed in the 1960s from the collections of Bedford Modern School and Bedford Borough Council. Its social history, archaeology, natural history and ethnography collections tell the stories of the people and places that have shaped Bedford and its relationship with the wider world, from prehistory to the present day.
The prison has been on its current site since 1801 and was designed by the architect John Wing (1756-1826), who also designed the Bedford town bridge, the Infirmary and the House of Industry. The previous site was on the corner of the High Street and Silver Street, then known as Gaol Lane.