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Art
& Architecture > John Francis Bentley Si monumentum requiris... John Francis Bentley, the architect of Westminster Cathedral, was born in 1839 in Doncaster and died on 2 March 1902. However, the occasion was marred by the fact that, when Bentley was due to address the visitors, he "discovered that his tongue was powerless", and had to ask Canon Johnson to step in. This was the second attack of the paralysis caused by cancer of the tongue, which was to kill him. Soon after the visit, a deputation from the RIBA called on Bentley to ask if he would accept nomination for its highest honour, the Royal Gold Medal. Because of the death of Queen Victoria in January of the next year, no medal was awarded, but in February 1902 it was announced that Bentley was to receive it. Always a loner, he had never even been a member of the RIBA, but he appreciated the honour since it came from "my confrères whose opinion I value...especially the men of thought, and those who are endeavouring to make architecture a living, not a dead, art." In November 1902 The Daily Chronicle reported that the RIBA was intending to erect a silver tablet in the Cathedral to commemorate Bentley. Its Secretary wrote (rather churlishly) to deny this, but Leonard Stokes explained that such a project was on foot among architects, and he thought it "an excellent idea." Stokes (1858-1926), who was himself to be President of the RIBA in 1910-12, was a Catholic, and his masterpieces include what is now the All Saints Pastoral Centre at London Colney. (His son David was also a member of the Cathedral Art Committee.) Nearby at Mortlake are buried Henry Clutton, the architect to whom he had been articled in 1857-60, and who had made the first designs for a new cathedral for Cardinal Manning, and Fr H A Rawes, Superior of the Oblates of St Charles who, when Parish Priest of St Francis, Pottery Lane, had given Bentley his first independent commissions, enabling him to set up his own practice. Closer still are his eldest daughter Winefride, author of the magnificent two-volume "Westminster Cathedral and its Architect", and her husband Count Rene de lHôpital, member of a distinguished Huguenot family, and painter of the portrait of Bentley which hangs in Cathedral Clergy House. Sir Richard Burton, whose marble tent is the best-known feature of the graveyard, is a neighbour about whom Bentley might have felt more ambivalent. Peter Howell Mr
Howell is a member of the Cathedrals Art and Architecture Committee. First
published in Oremus, the magazine of Westminster Cathedral September 2000 Enjoy more articles from the Cathedrals magazine by subscribing to Oremus.
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