Richard Ingleman


Richard Ingleman was a surveyor and architect of Southwell in Nottinghamshire, England. Initially his architectural practice was based on the Southwell area, but he won widespread respect for his designs for the Southwell House of Correction. This led to his gaining major commissions for prisons and mental hospitals, particularly in Wiltshire and at Oxford.

Career

Richard Ingleman was the son of Francis Ingleman, a surveyor and builder of Southwell, and the grandson of Richard Ingleman, a mason who repaired Southwell Minster after a lightning strike in 1711. Richard Ingleman is first noted as a Surveyor to the fabric of Southwell Minster, a position he held from 1801 to 1808. In 1807 he designed the Southwell House of Correction, a prison which was seen as a model for other prisons. This operated the silent system which required the prisoners to work in groups and to remain silent at all times. This was to give him an interest in prison and institutional design. He entered unsuccessfully the competition in 1812 for the design of the Milbank Penitentiary which was to be built on the present site of the Tate Gallery. However he was successful in two other large prison projects, the rebuilding of Devizes New Bridewell and the Fisherton Anger House of Correction in Salisbury. The Devizes New Bridewell was started in 1810 and at the same time Ingleman started supervising the building of the Nottingham Lunatic Asylum. It was not until 1817 that he started on the Fisherton Anger House of Correction, but by this time he had been approached to design the Warneford Mental Hospital at Oxford. This was built between 1821 and 1826. In 1826 Ingleman wrote to the Trustees of the Warneford Hospital saying that he was now incapacitated by illness and asked for the final payment of £50 for the completion of the hospital. Ingleman does not appear to have undertaken any further architectural work after this date and he died at Southwell in 1838 at the age of 51.
Howard Colvin notes that Ingleman's asylums were classical buildings of no special distinction, but the unexecuted plans he submitted for the re-building of Shelton Church, Nottinghamshire, were an essay in Early English style which were quite creditable for the time. He undertook some country house building and favoured the use of Ionic columns for porches and porticos. This is seen at Conock House near Devizes and at Ordsall Rectory in Nottinghamshire, while he used massive Ionic columns for the portico to the Lawn Asylum in Lincoln.

Architectural work

Literature