Thomas Chambers Hine (31 May 1813 – 6 February 1899) was an architect based in Nottingham.[1]
Thomas Chambers Hine | |
---|---|
Born | St Michael, London | 31 May 1813
Died | 6 February 1899 25 Regent Street, Nottingham | (aged 85)
Occupation | Architect |
Practice | Associated architectural firm[s] |
Projects | The Park Estate |
He was born in Covent Garden into a prosperous middle-class family, the eldest son of Jonathan Hine (1780–1862), a hosiery manufacturer and Melicent Chambers (1778–1845).[2] He was articled to the London architect Matthew Habershon until 1834.
In 1837 he arrived in Nottingham and formed a partnership with the builder William Patterson. This business relationship was dissolved in 1849. He worked from 1857[3] with Robert Evans JP until early in 1867 and thereafter with his son George Thomas Hine until his retirement around 1890.
He was nominated as a Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects in 1878, but this appears to have been voided.[4]
He married Mary Betts (1813–1893) in 1837 and together had seven children surviving to adulthood. Their eldest child, Mary Melicent Hine (1838–1928) became a nurse and founded the Nottingham Children's Hospital on Postern Street in Nottingham.
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