Herbert Bartlett
Sir Herbert Henry Bartlett, 1st Baronet (30 April 1842 – 23 June 1921) was a civil engineer and contractor responsible for many landmark buildings in London.
Life
Born at Hardington Mandeville, he was chairman and managing director of Perry & Co., with which he was associated with for 59 years. He was made a Baronet in 1913.[1]
He married Ada Charlotte Barr, and had several children.
He is buried in the family grave, which lies in the western half of Highgate Cemetery in north London on one of the main central paths.
On his death his baronetcy passed to his grandson, Basil, as his two eldest sons had predeceased him (Herbert Evelyn Barlett, 1875-1917, and Hardington Arthur Bartlett 1877-1920, lost at sea).
Memorials
The Bartlett, the Faculty of the Built Environment at University College London is named after him, as is the Bartlett Building at University College London. It was opened on 4 June 1920 to house Karl Pearson's Galton Eugenics Laboratory.
Notable works
Bartlett's contracts and designs included:
- 30 St Mary Axe
- the rebuilt Waterloo Station
- St Thomas' Hospital (his 1896 building was rebuilt in the 1970s)
- improvements at Somerset House
- various stations on the London Underground between Baker Street and Waterloo
- part of Tower Bridge
He also assisted Ernest Shackleton fitting out his first expedition to the South Pole and was a keen yachtsman, being commodore of the Royal London Yacht Club.
References
- ^ "No. 28703". The London Gazette. 21 March 1913.
Sources
- The Times Obituary 4 Jul 1921
- The Peerage: Sir Herbert Henry Bartlett, 1st Bt. Retrieved 2012-11-08
- Leigh Rayment's list of baronets