Ormrod Maxwell AyrtonFRIBA (1874 – 18 February 1960), known as Maxwell Ayrton, was an Englisharchitect. He spent most of his adult life working in London and designed houses, public buildings, and bridges.
Early life
Maxwell Ayrton was born in Chester to William Frances Ayrton, a wealthy wine-merchant who was a partner and co-founder of the firm of Ayrton & Groome,[1] and his second wife Pauline. Two of Maxwell's full brothers also gained prominence. The eldest, William Ayrton (1861–1916), was an artist based in Suffolk.[2][3]Randle Ayrton was a leading actor of stage and screen.
The Ayrton family originated in Yorkshire. Maxwell's forebear Edward Ayrton was mayor of Ripon in 1760, and laid the foundations for the family's subsequent prominence.
Ayrton was in practice on his own from 1899, and in 1903 was at 14, Belsize Park Gardens, London. One of his early buildings was a house called Hall Ingle, at Heath End, Checkendon (1902), "...by Mr. O. Maxwell Ayrton, for, and decorated by, Arthur Hacker, Esq., ARA".[6] Hacker painted Ayrton's wife and exhibited the portrait at the Royal Academy in 1902.[7]
In 1905, Ayrton joined John William Simpson's practice, and from then on he carried out most of the firm's design work. He became a partner in the firm in 1910 and was elected a Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects in 1920, having been proposed by his old master Lutyens and by Sir Aston Webb, who at the time was President of the Royal Academy.[5][8]
Ayrton's most notable public building from his years with Simpson was the old Wembley Stadium, a simple structure in reinforced concrete which they designed together, built between 1921 and 1923 for the British Empire Exhibition at Wembley Park of 1924 to 1925.[10][11] It had echoes of the Olympic stadium of 1908 at White City.[10] Simpson received a knighthood for their Exhibition work, while as a result of it Ayrton came into an association with the project's civil engineer, Owen Williams, and this led to their working together on the design of Williams's bridges in Scotland.[5]
In 1928 Ayrton's partnership with Simpson was dissolved. Although by then over seventy, Simpson continued his practice, taking into partnership Frank W. Knight and Henley Cornford, while Ayrton returned to private practice.[5] His work was also part of the painting event in the art competition at the 1928 Summer Olympics.[12]
Ayrton was still in practice when he died in 1960 at the age of eighty-five. The Journal of the Royal Institute of British Architects reported that "Mr R. Courtenay Theobald, following the death of his partner Mr Maxwell Ayrton in February 1960, will practise under his own name from 9 Church Row, Hampstead, London NW3 and 21A Heath Street, NW3."[13]
Family
Maxwell's son, Tony Ayrton (1909–1943), followed the vocation of his uncle rather than his father and became an artist, before serving as a distinguished camouflage-officer in World War Two, but died on active service in 1943.[14] Maxwell's granddaughter, Tessa Beaver (1932–2018), also became an artist; she was the daughter of Maxwell's daughter, Virginia, and of Courtenay Theobald, his last practice partner as well as his son-in-law.
^ abSutcliffe, Anthony London: An Architectural History (Yale University Press, 2006,
ISBN0-300-11006-5), p. 172 online at google.com, accessed 4 February 2009