Paul de monchaux biography of william hill
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In this second article about Coventrys cycle heritage, Peter James tells us about William Hillman. Peter writes.
William Hillman was born in Lewisham on 30th December the son of William a Cab master and his wife Mary Taylor. He was brought up at Lewis Grove in Lewisham with his five sisters. After moving to Greenwich he trained at the engineering works of John Penn & Sons. Its where he had the good fortune to meet James Starley who was employed there as a gardener. James ability to invent gadgets and repair watches etc. had been recognised while he worked for John Penn.
Cycling Pioneers
Josiah Turner and James Starley set up Coventry Machinists in King Street Coventry in and William Hillman joined them there soon after. They were the first British manufacturer of velocipedes. The cycles were based on a French design modified bygd James Starley.
c William Hillman and James Starley left Coventry Machinists and set up as partners in St. Johns Street Covent
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London Art Schools
A prominent feature of London’s art schools in this period has been cross-fertilisation among them. Significant faculty often taught in several institutions either sequentially or simultaneously, and art students frequently progressed between schools – necessarily so in the case of those institutions that only taught postgraduates. Institutional identities nevertheless persist; our contributors have created outline histories from c for those schools of particular interest to this publication. While these profiles are by no means comprehensive, the division of each institutional history into elements such as qualifications, building location and faculty means that significant details can be compared.
Camberwell
DEPARTMENTS AND QUALIFICATIONS
In the early s Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts was organised into three departments: Painting and Sculpture; Design and Crafts; and Printing and Bookbinding. An Art History Department was formally establis
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Basilica by Paul De Monchaux
Basilica by Paul De Monchaux
In Much Park street, in front of the Coventry Crown Court, is a long pedestrian ramp to the front doors. On the left at the beginning of the ramp is a statue that has a hint of a Judges wig in its design. It is called Basilica by Paul De Monchaux.
The stone comes from three different quarries and from four different beds. It is arranged in the sculpture in approximately the same order it lay in the ground. The top four tiers are Purbeck Limestone from the Thornback and Wetsom beds; the second tier is from the Purbeck Spangle bed and the first course is Portland basebed. There is thin drainage course of grey Indian Granite between the sculpture and brick base. Each layer is slightly moved inwards and shaped backwards giving a shaped like a arch or a large Judges Wig.
The artist, described his work the sculpture uses the displacement of two stacks of identical (in plan) triangular slabs to produce