Person    | Male  Born 11/2/1882  Died 15/5/1965

James Robb Scott

Categories: Architecture

Countries: Scotland

James Robb Scott

Architect. Born Glasgow. Also designed Richmond station.

In addition to the information contained in his biography on the Scottish Architects website, he was shown in the April 1891 census as a scholar living at 9 Shalcomb Street, Chelsea, with his father Andrew Robb Scott (1850-1914), his mother Mary F. Scott née Fletcher (b.1863), his sister Elizabeth R. Scott (1886-1902) and his brother William Boyd Scott (b.1890). His father was described as an architect's draughtsman. However, on 21 May 1891 he was admitted to the Belleville Road School, Wandsworth, where the school register shows he was living at 75 Webbs Road, Battersea. He stayed at this school until 11 April 1895 when he went to Park Walk School, King's Road, Chelsea.  

In the 1901 census he shown as an architect (apprentice) residing at 5 North Charlotte Street, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland, with his parents, his two siblings and a female servant. His father was now listed as an architect.

Despite the information shown on his Wikipedia page (in April 2022) that he started working for the London & South Western Railway (L&SWR) in 1907, their employment records confirm that he entered their service as a draughtsman in their Engineer's Department at Waterloo at the rate of £3-6s-0d per week on 21 March 1906. His pay rose to £3-10s-0d pw on 17 March 1909, to £3-15s-0d pw on 25 January 1911 and to £4-4s-0d pw on 23 April 1913. On 1 January 1916 he was placed on salaried staff at £230 per annum, rising to £250 pa on 1 January 1918.

When he completed his 1911 census return he described himself as an architectural draughtsman employed by the L&SWR living in a five roomed house at 29 Moor Mead Road, St Margarets, Twickenham, Middlesex. Also on the census was his wife of two years, Olive Martha Scott, who was aged 23 years (therefore born about 1887/1888) and who was born in Pietermaritzburg, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, their son Andrew Lord Scott (1910-1925) and his brother William Boyd Scott, who was also described as an architectural draughtsman.

Electoral registers in 1918 and 1919 show him and his wife listed at 22 Trafalgar Road, Twickenham. They were still living there when his wife died, aged 31 years, and was buried on 28 January 1920 in Hampton Hill, Middlesex. He continued to be shown on the 1920 electoral register at 22 Trafalgar Road, Twickenham.

On 14 July 1921 he married Janet Veitch Menzies (1883-1963) in Edinburgh. Electoral registers from 1923 and 1926 show them listed at 34 Keswick Road, Putney, whilst from 1935 to 1939 they were at 36 Roehampton Close, Putney.

Probate records give his address to have been 17 Coates Crescent, Edinburgh and that he died, aged 83 years, on 15 May 1965 in Edinburgh, where he was cremated on 19 May 1965.

Credit for this entry to: Andrew Behan.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the memorials created by the subject on this page:
James Robb Scott

Creations i

Waterloo Station Victory Arch

From the Waterloo station web site: "Waterloo is the UK's largest station, co...

Read More

Waterloo WW1 war memorial

Our photo shows just one of the four panels.  See Stockwell War Memorial for ...

Read More

Other Subjects

Josiah Gunton

Josiah Gunton

Architect. specialist in non-conformist churches. Born in Cambridgeshire. By 1881 he was living in Hackney. He was articled to Gordon and Lowther architects and became a partner in 1885. His son W...

Person, Architecture, Politics & Administration

1 memorial
Sir John W. Simpson

Sir John W. Simpson

Architect. Born Brighton (though the picture source has him born in Scotland). His father and brother were also architects. Active member of RIBA and its president 1919-21. Architect to the Honoura...

Person, Architecture, Scotland

2 memorials
John Evans

John Evans

Built the first planned Admiralty Office in 1695. Became Navy Board Purveyor.

Person, Architecture

1 memorial
Gerald Horsley

Gerald Horsley

Architect. Son of John Callcott Horsley. His best known buildings are in a Baroque style. He designed St Paul's Girls' School in Hammersmith, and a few stations for the North Western Railway such a...

Person, Architecture

1 memorial

Previously viewed

Europe’s first recording studio / Gramophone Company

Europe’s first recording studio / Gramophone Company

In 1898 The Gramophone Company moved into the building with the plaque and started to record popular songs often performed by music hall stars in the West End. The studio, which used primitive tech...

Building, Music / songs

1 memorial
Edith Nesbit

Edith Nesbit

Author and poet. Wrote approximately 40 books for children including 'The Railway Children'. Born at 38 Lower Kensington Lane. She married the journalist and politician, Hubert Bland in 1880, but u...

Person, Literature, Poetry

2 memorials
Ambedkar

Ambedkar

NW3, King Henry Road

May 2015 newsflash: "PUNE: The Maharashtra government will complete the process to buy the house in London where B R Ambedkar lived in th...

1 subject commemorated
Charles Williams

Charles Williams

Writer on literature and theology, novelist and poet. Born Charles Walter Stansby Williams, 3 Spencer Road. He worked for the Oxford University Press (OUP) in various capacities for most of his lif...

Person, Literature, Poetry, Religion

1 memorial
St John's House rebuilt

St John's House rebuilt

WC1, Queen Square, 12, St John's House

We find this building puzzling since in some ways it looks more modern than those around but it retains many characteristics that suggest...

1 subject commemorated