Alexandra Wedgwood


Lady Alexandra Mary Wedgwood FSA is an English architectural historian and expert on the work of Augustus Pugin. She is the patron of the Pugin Society and the former architectural archivist of the House of Lords.

Early life and family

Alexandra Wedgwood was born Alexandra Mary Gordon Clark in July 1938, the daughter of the judge and crime writer Alfred Alexander Gordon Clark, who wrote under the pseudonym Cyril Hare, and Mary Barbara Lawrence. She has a brother, the clergyman Charles Philip Gordon Clark, and a sister Cecilia Mary Gordon Clark. She was educated at Guildford High School and received her advanced education at the Courtauld Institute of Art.
In 1963, she married Martin Wedgwood, later Sir Hugo Martin Wedgwood, the stockbroker and linguist. They had one son, Ralph and two daughters, Julia and Frances.

Career

In 1966, Wedgwood was named as joint author with Nikolaus Pevsner of the Warwickshire volume in his The Buildings of England series after Pevsner began to use collaborators to speed the completion of the series. Wedgwood did the initial research for the volume, and then completed significant parts of the work, including the whole of the section on Birmingham.
In January 1980, she was appointed architectural archivist to the House of Lords on the recommendation of Sir Robert Cooke, member of Parliament and adviser to the Secretary of State, who wished to ensure the historically accurate restoration of the Palace of Westminster. Her expertise in the works of Augustus Pugin made her particularly suited to the job and she sought out material worldwide by Pugin, Charles Barry and others related to the Parliamentary estate. She retired in 1998. She revised the Palace of Westminster entry for The Buildings of England volume London 6: Westminster.
She was elected a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London in 1983.
She is also the painting curator at Dorking Museum, and is the patron, and former president, of The Pugin Society.

Selected publications