
Francis Greenway

Hyde Park Barracks, designed by Francis Greenway; Old Colonial Georgian architectural style; drawing by
Hardy Wilson in 1914
'Francis Howard Greenway' (
20 November 1777 – September
1837) was an
iconic Australian colonial
architect.
Greenway was born at
Mangotsfield[1], near the
English city of
Bristol, where he became an architect "of some eminence" in Bristol and
Bath. In 1809 he became
bankrupt, and in 1812 he pleaded guilty "under the advice of his friends", of
forging a financial document and was sentenced to death; this sentence was later commuted to 14 years
transportation. Why he pleaded guilty is not now ascertainable; he may have been told it was the only way to save his life. He had been friendly with
Admiral Arthur Phillip who was living in retirement at Bath, and Phillip wrote to
Lachlan Macquarie recommending Greenway to him.
He arrived in
Sydney,
New South Wales on the transport ''General Hewitt'' in February 1814 to serve his sentence.
Between 1816 and 1818, whilst still a convict, Greenway was responsible for the design and construction of the
Macquarie Lighthouse on the South Head at the entrance to
Sydney Harbour1. After the success of this project he was
emancipated by the
Governor of New South Wales,
Lachlan Macquarie, and in the role of
Acting Civil Architect and Assistant Engineer responsible to Captain J. M. Gill, Inspector of Public Works, went on to build many significant buildings in the new colony.
His works include
Hyde Park Barracks,
St. James Church and the new
Government House. There are still 49 buildings in central Sydney attributed to his designs.
Greenway fell into disrepute when Macquarie accused him charging high fees whilst on a government retainer, and he was dismissed by the next governor,
Thomas Brisbane, in 1822
1. He continued to follow his profession with little success. Although he got his grant of land, he does not appear to have received the promised cattle.
In 1835 he advertised that "Francis Howard Greenway, arising from circumstances of a singular nature is induced again to solicit the patronage of his friends and the public". In other words, he was destitute.
He died of
typhoid near
Newcastle in
1837, aged 59. The exact date of his death is not known. He was buried in the East
Maitland Cemetery on
25 September 1837, but his grave is unmarked.
Posthumous tributes
Greenway's face was shown on the first
Australian decimal-currency $10 note (1966-93), making him probably the only convicted forger in the world to be honoured on a banknote.
He is the
eponym of a
NSW Federal electorate, a
suburb of Canberra, a
suburb of Newcastle, and a high school in
Beresfield.
The Vaucluse home of the renowned Australian architect
Leslie Wilkinson (1982-1973) was named "Greenway" in honour of Francis Greenway.
List of Works
A list of Greenway's surviving designs would include:
★ Windsor Court House
★ Government House, Sydney (partly designed by Greenway)
★ St Matthew's, Windsor
★ Supreme Court, Sydney
★ Judge's House, Sydney
★ St James's, Sydney
★ Hyde Park Barracks, Sydney
★ Obelisk, Macquarie Place
★ St Luke's, Liverpool
★ Conservatorium of Music, Sydney
★ Liverpool College (formerly Liverpool Hospital)
★ Government House, Parramatta (timber portico only)
★ Hobartville, Richmond (uncertain)
★ Cleveland House, Surry Hills (uncertain)
References
1. Greenway entry in Australian Dictionary of Biography
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