St. Paul's Parish Church, Brighton, by Richard Cromwell Carpenter (1812-1852) (original) (raw)
St. Paul's Parish Church
Richard Cromwell Carpenter (1812-1855), with help from A. W. N. Pugin
1846-48; restored 1996
Flint, white limestone, and wood
West Street, Brighton
This church in the Decorated or Middle-Pointed style of Gothic architecture bears out what Reginald Turnor has said about the architect: "although he shared the affectations of the Camdenians with Butterfield, R. C. Carpenter exercised a scholarly restraint and so avoided the worst excesses of inventiveness" (69). The tower and unusual wooden octagon above it were added by R. H. Carpenter, the architect's son, in about 1873. This served for many years as a beacon for sailors along the Sussex coast, and was restored in 1996.
Photograph and text Jacqueline Banerjee
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