Peter Atkinson (1735–1805) was an English architect.
Biography
He was born at or near Ripon and started work as a carpenter.[1] He later became an assistant to John Carr and was employed at Buxton, Harewood and elsewhere. In 1786 he became responsible for maintaining York's corporation property, and subsequently took over Carr's extensive works in Yorkshire and further north.
The Atkinson family of York architects continued after Atkinson's death. His son, Peter, himself had sons John Bownas Atkinson (1807–1874) and William Atkinson (architect, born 1811).[2]
Before their father's death, the two sons had taken over and for the next thirty plus years they were the most prolific of the city's architects. In 1877 William took James Demaisne (1842–1911) as partner.
Enlargement of the Female Prison in York Castle by adding the end bays to match John Carr's Assize Courts, 1802 (the Female Prison is now part of York Castle Museum)[4]
Additions at Ormsby Hall, South Ormsby, Lincolnshire, for Charles Burrell Massingberd, 1803
York, 51 Bootham, for Sir R. V. B. Johnstone, now a school, 1803[5]
Gateway and farm buildings at Harewood House, West Riding, for the 1st Earl of Harewood, c. 1803