William Smith (architect)


William Smith was a Scottish architect. He was a son of John Smith, also an architect, and his mother was Margaret Grant. A partner in the Aberdonian firms J & W Smith, W & J Smith and W & J Smith and Kelly, and employed as Aberdeen's superintendent of works, he designed a large number of buildings in north east Scotland.

Ancestry and early life

Smith was the fourth child of the Aberdeen architect John Smith and the grandson of builder/architect William Smith. He attended Aberdeen Grammar School and James Giles tutored him in watercolouring and sketching. He worked with his father and Robert Kerr before spending 18 months in London assisting and receiving further training from Thomas Donaldson. Between the summer of 1842 and early 1845 Smith spent almost two years travelling around Greece and Italy.

Career

Smith entered his father's firm as a Senior Assistant, becoming a partner in 1845. His first principal commission in Aberdeen was Trinity Hall on Union Street for the Seven Incorporated Trades of Aberdeen. The foundation of this Tudor Gothic style building – the first of this style built on Union Street – was laid on 9 June 1846.
A prolific designer of manses, including those at Peterhead, Tarland, Methlick, St Fergus and Woodside, some of his other major commissions include Fraserburgh Prison, King Street Iron Works, Aberdeen, Badentoy House, Drumside House, Balmoral Castle, Alexander Scott's Hospital, Huntly, Miller's Institution, Thurso and the Anderson Institute, Lerwick.
As his father's health deteriorated, Smith assumed greater responsibility within the company and on his father's death in 1852 also took over his father's position of Aberdeen City Architect.

Death and legacy

On 27 September 1826 Smith married Mary Blaikie, the daughter of a prominent Aberdeen family. The couple had 16 children but only eight survived. Their eldest son, John also became an architect.
Smith died of bronchitis at his home in King Street, Aberdeen, on 22 December 1891. His manner was described in his obituary as "quiet and retiring" and "reticent to the point of shyness".