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"benison" Definitions
  1. BLESSING, BENEDICTION

61 Sentences With "benison"

How to use benison in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "benison" and check conjugation/comparative form for "benison". Mastering all the usages of "benison" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Dr Benison seems therefore to have substituted one mystery for another.
Kathleen Benison, of West Virginia University, thinks, however, that she has solved it.
Textbooks, however, are not always correct, so Dr Benison decided to check for herself.
"I remember holding one of the crystals and noticing how they were all broken," Dr. Benison said.
Dr Benison knew that gypsum crystals of the size found in Salar de Gorbea's dunes form in ponds 5km from those dunes.
In a paper published in Geology in March, Kathleen Benison, a geologist at West Virginia University, documented how what she calls a gravel devil may be responsible for the large crystals' movement around the desert.
But Dr. Benison, who found living algae and bacteria inside the crystals in Chile, is also interested in extreme life and how it can be preserved for thousands of years and transported via gypsum crystals.
Approaching Hovenweep National Monument and its 13th-century Pueblo ruins in the rising heat of Morning 3, we rode through the mist of farmers' sprinklers in green fields, as grateful for it as for any priest's benison.
And given the similarities in the climates in Salar de Gorbea and on Mars, Dr. Benison wonders if the crystals and dust devils here could serve as analogues for those that exist on Mars: "Can we look in those crystals and see the same kind of micro-organisms that we have in Chile?"
D. Stevenson 2001 The Beggar's Benison. Tuckwell Press, East Linton: 217-222 Most of the relics of the club, including objects with phallic decorations, are now held in the Beggar's Benison and Wig Club collection of the University of St Andrews. In 2002 David Stevenson, emeritus professor of history at the University of St Andrews, published a scholarly book on the Beggar's Benison.D. Stevenson 2001 The Beggar's Benison.
The museum is housed in a two-story building which was designed by British architect Arthur Benison Hubback.
John Benison (born 9 August 1946) is a former Australian rules footballer who played with Fitzroy in the Victorian Football League (VFL).
Ill no let thee gang without a solid benison, so tak the key, and gang into the scrutoire and bring out the pocket-book.
Alf Benison (21 June 1918 – 12 May 1979) was an Australian rules footballer who played for the South Melbourne Football Club and Footscray Football Club in the Victorian Football League (VFL).
Designed by Arthur Benison Hubback, the current station was officially opened in 1917. Affectionately known as the Taj Mahal of Ipoh by its locals, the building also houses a station hotel called the Majestic Hotel.
Dustin Benison Ware (born April 12, 1990) is an American professional basketball player for Wilki Morskie Szczecin of the Polish Basketball League. After four years at Georgia, Ware entered the 2012 NBA draft but was not selected in the draft's two rounds.
John Perrie, who came from Ireland, acquired in Christ Church Parish. He named the plantation after Youghal in County Cork. At his death in 1713, the plantation passed on to his daughter. Her husband conveyed the property to Captain George Benison in 1740.
His preference then became the style for many important buildings constructed during his tenure at the PWD and FMS Railways, many of them designed by Arthur Benison Hubback. These buildings have since become an important part of the architectural heritage of Malaysia.
Arthur Benison Hubback (13 April 1871 – 8 May 1948) was an English architect and soldier who designed several important buildings in British Malaya. He was active in sports, especially football and cricket. Hubback was promoted to brigadier general during his service in the British Army.
The club was dissolved in 1836; some of its papers and relics were retained by one of the last members, Matthew Foster Connolly, burgh clerk of Anstruther Easter and Wester, who left them to his son-in-law the Reverend Dr J.F.S. Gordon. The remaining club money was bequeathed to fund prizes for girls at school in East Anstruther as well as to start a new social club at the nearby University of St Andrews. In 1892 an unknown author published Records of the Most Ancient and Puissant Order of the Beggar's Benison and Merryland, Anstruther with photographs of many of the relics.D. Stevenson 2001 The Beggar's Benison.
Tuckwell Press, East Linton: 23-27 This work was reprinted in 1982 in the Gems of British Social History Series.A. Bold, ed. 1982 Beggar's Benison of Anstruther. Paul Harris Publishing, Edinburgh There was an attempt by army officer Maxwell Robert Canch Kavanagh to revive the club in 1921.
Gordon Hubback was born on 11 September 1902 to Margaret Rose Frances (Daisy) Voules and Arthur Benison Hubback who was working as an architect in Malaya. He was educated at the Royal Naval College, Osborne, and then at the Royal Naval College, Dartmouth. He was appointed captain on 15 May 1916.
Benison, K.C. and Goldstein, R.H. 2001. Evaporites and siliciclastics of the Permian Nippewalla Group of Kansas, USA: a case for non-marine deposition in saline lakes and saline pans. Sedimentology 48(1):165-188. The shallow playas were intermittently flooded then dried leaving a mixture of lacustrine sediments and gypsum evaporites.
Arthur Hubback was born at 74 Rodney Street, Liverpool, England, son of Joseph Hubback (1814–1882), who was Mayor of Liverpool in 1870 and a merchant, and Georgina Hubback (née Benison and widow of Captain Allan Eliott Lockhart). Arthur attended Fettes College, Edinburgh, and then started work as an apprentice for the city architect in Liverpool, Thomas Shelmerdine.
He was the son of Joseph Hubback, a Liverpool merchant who was Lord Mayor of the city in 1870, and brother of Arthur Benison Hubback. He studied at University College, Liverpool, and then went to Selangor where his brother was, in 1895. He worked as a civil engineer and contractor in Malaya. For a while he also worked as a rubber planter.
272–273 James Melville's diary provides a graphic account of the arrival of a ship from the Spanish Armada to Anstruther. Local tradition has long held that some of the survivors remained and intermarried with the locals. In the 18th and 19th centuries, the town was home to The Beggar's Benison, a gentleman's club devoted to "the convivial celebration of male sexuality".
He was associate editor of The Beaver, a Canadian history magazine, from 1998 to 2006. He later became editor of The Beaver. He was Writer in Residence for the Winnipeg Public Library in 2007/08. In autumn 2011 Benison published "Twelve Drummers Drumming", the first of a series of crime novels inspired by the Christmas carol, The Twelve Days of Christmas.
Once a year the wives were invited to join the Wicht Club when the new volume of Was Wichtiges was presented. "The nine volumes … are a treasure trove of the work produced by young Harvard scientists and philosophers at the beginning of the twentieth century."Saul Benison, A. Clifford Barger, & Elin L. Wolfe (1987) Walter B. Cannon, The Life and Times of a Young Scientist page 13.
The estate was split up amongst different purchasers including George Roe (who bought Ballyconnell House, a few houses in the village and a few townlands including Annagh, Corranierna and part of Rakeelan) and The 4th Earl Annesley (who purchased the townlands of Carrowmore, Gortoorlan, Moher, Mullanacre and Snugborough). Another well-known family in the town were the Benisons of Mount Pleasant and Slieve Russell who owned a flax mill in Ballyconnell. Miss Josephine Benison, a daughter of James Benison, married (9 January 1890) Tom Arnold who was brother of the famous English poet Matthew Arnold; son of Dr. Thomas Arnold, the headmaster of Rugby Public School who appears as head master in the book Tom Brown's Schooldays and grandfather of Aldous Huxley. An account of this and Josephine's photo (Page 118, probably the earliest known photo of a Ballyconnell resident) can be seen online.
Soon after arriving in Hobart, he fell in love with and married Julia Sorell, granddaughter of former Governor William Sorell. They had nine children (four of whom died young), among them: Ethel, who was a suffragist and child model;Anne M. Sebba, 'Arnold, Ethel Margaret (1864/5–1930)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 6 Nov 2017 Mary, who became a novelist under the name Mrs Humphry Ward; Julia, who married Leonard Huxley, the son of Thomas, and gave birth to Julian and Aldous; and William Thomas the journalist. After being widowed in 1888, Arnold in 1890 married for a second time, to Josephine Maria Benison, daughter of James Benison, Ballyconnell, County Cavan, Ireland. While in Tasmania Arnold converted from Anglicanism to Roman Catholicism, a move which angered his Protestant wife sufficiently to cause her to smash the windows of the chapel during his confirmation.
A 2016 study performed mass spectrometry on air bubbles trapped inside rock salt deposited 813 Myr ago. They detected an oxygen content of 10.9%, much higher than had been expected from indirect measures. This suggested the Great Oxygenation Event may have happened much earlier than previously thought.Nigel J.F. Blamey, Uwe Brand, John Parnell, Natalie Spear, Christophe Lécuyer, Kathleen Benison, Fanwei Meng, Pei Ni. Paradigm shift in determining Neoproterozoic atmospheric oxygen.
The architect was Arthur Benison Hubback who designed the mosque in the Indian Muslim Mughal architectural style. Masjid Jamek served as Kuala Lumpur's main mosque until the national mosque, Masjid Negara, was built in 1965. The mosque has since been enlarged with extensions built, and the originally open-air forecourt roofed over. One of the domes of the mosque collapsed in 1993 due to heavy rain, but has since been repaired.
Panelists at the meeting included Louis M. Starr, director of the Columbia University oral history program; Elizabeth Mason, associate director of the Columbia University oral history program; Allan Nevins, writer and historian; Samuel Hand, history professor at the University of Vermont; and Saul Benison, writer and history professor at Brandeis University.K'Meyer, T. E. (1999). An interview with Samuel Hand: "Reel life: The early years of the OHA/OHR." Oral History Review, 26 (2), 107-125.
Jamek Mosque, officially Sultan Abdul Samad Jamek Mosque (, Jawi: مسجد جامع سلطان عبدالصمد), is one of the oldest mosques in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. It is located at the confluence of the Klang and Gombak River and may be accessed via Jalan Tun Perak. The mosque was designed by Arthur Benison Hubback, and built in 1909. The name "Jamek" is the Malay equivalent of the Arabic word (جامع) meaning a place where people congregate to worship.
The first Kowloon station was a temporary structure built near the (now demolished) Post Office on Salisbury Road in 1909 and served until the permanent station was completed. Regular service between Canton and Kowloon began on 1 October 1910. The new station was designed by Arthur Benison Hubback and built on reclaimed land overlooking the harbour. Work on the foundations started in May, 1913, and the construction of the station began on 1 March 1914.
In the 1825 Registry of Freeholders for County Cavan there was one freeholder registered in Cullilenon- John Reilly. He was a Forty-shilling freeholders holding a lease for lives from his landlord, the Montgomery Estate. He also appears in the 1827 Tithe Books below. The Tithe Applotment Books for 1827 list the following tithepayers in the townland- Keon, Grimes, Wynne, Clark, McLaughlin, Sturdy, Hanna, Donahy, Montgomery, Answell, Reilly, Brady, Sheridan, McGraugh, Benison, Gallagher, Murdy, Enery.
A print of the film still exists. Film Preservation Associates copyrighted a version of the film in 1999 with a musical score composed and performed by Brian Benison. The film was later produced for VHS by David Shepard of FPA with a runtime of 117 minutes, and subsequently issued as a DVD. Sam Wood apparently created Don't Tell Everything (1921), also starring Swanson, Reid, and Dexter, in part using outtakes left over from The Affairs of Anatol.
Both the second and third headquarters were designed by Arthur Benison Hubback, a chief draughtsman of Selangor public works department notable for the design of various municipal buildings in the Federated Malay States. The second and third FMSR headquarters survive to date, the former subsequently housing various occupants before serving as the National Textile Museum and the latter continuously housing successive rail operators in Malaya and Peninsular Malaysia after the dissolution of the FMSR, including the Malayan Railway Administration and Keretapi Tanah Melayu.
Among the British upper classes during the Georgian era, pubic hair from one's lover was frequently collected as a souvenir. The curls were, for instance, worn like cockades in men's hats as potency talismans or exchanged among lovers as tokens of affection. The museum of St. Andrews University in Scotland has in its collection a snuffbox full of pubic hair of one of King George IV's mistresses (possibly Elizabeth Conyngham), which the notoriously licentious monarch donated to the Fife sex club, The Beggar's Benison.
The earliest and most prominent example of this style of architecture in Malaya is the Sultan Abdul Samad Building. As Norman held the position of the Government Architect, many buildings built in the period were credited to him, but were in fact largely the work of his subordinates such as Arthur Benison Hubback and R. A. J. Bidwell. In 1903, when he was 45, Norman was compulsorily retired on ground of inefficiency. He returned to England where he continued to practice as an architect in Norwich and Plymouth.
The > Members and Knights two and two came round in a state of erection and > touched the Novice Penis to Penis. Thereafter the special Glass, with the > Society's Insignia thereon and Medal attached, was filled with Port Wine, > when the new Brother's health was heartily and humorously drunk, he was told > to select an amorous Passage from the Song of Solomon and to read it > aloud."A. Bold, ed. 1982 Beggar's Benison of Anstruther. Paul Harris > Publishing, Edinburgh: 9-10 A sample entry from the club's records shows a typical meeting: > "1737.
The Carcosa mansion was built in 1896–1897 as the official residence of Sir Frank Swettenham, the first British High Commissioner of the then Resident-General of the Federated Malay States. It was designed by Arthur Benison Hubback under instruction from the State Engineer of Selangor Public Work Department Charles Edwin Spooner, and sometimes also credited to Arthur Charles Alfred Norman. According to a letter he wrote in 1936, Swettenham chose the name Carcosa as a portmanteau of two Italian words, cara and casa, intended to mean "desirable dwelling".
In the 1820s John Benison agreed to purchase the island for £4,500 but then refused to complete sale as he felt that the 2nd Baronet could not make out a good title in respect of the sale terms, namely that the island was free from tithes and taxes. William Hudson Heaven purchased Lundy in 1834, as a summer retreat and for the shooting, at a cost of 9,400 guineas (£9,870, or £ today). He claimed it to be a "free island", and successfully resisted the jurisdiction of the mainland magistrates. Lundy was in consequence sometimes referred to as "the kingdom of Heaven".
In 1856 they sold the estate to take advantage of its increased value owing to the opening of the Woodford Canal through the town in the same year. The estate, including Rakeelan, was split up among different purchasers and maps & details of previous leases of the sold parts are still available. The Tithe Applotment Books for 1827 list the following tithepayers in the townland- Faris, Bedel, McAvinue, Reilly, Hyland, McDaniel, Roe, Sturdy, Plunkett, Benison, McGuire, Montgomery, Fitzsimons, Adbort.Tithe Applotment Books 1827 The Ordnance Survey Name Books for 1836 give the following description of the townland- Rath Caoláin, 'Keelan's fort'. Rathkillan.
In the Second World War he served in the National Fire Service covering the Glasgow docklands (an area of intense bombing). After the war he moved to St Andrews University as Master of Music, being raised to full Professor of Music in 1973. He was involved in the newly created Edinburgh Festival in the 1950s, and oversaw production of important new Scottish musical works such as Ane Satyre of the Threi Estaites. He was fond of putting Scottish literary works to music, including: Sunset Song, Cloud Howe, The Beggar's Benison, A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle, and Ramsay's The Gentle Shepherd.
Panggung Bandaraya DBKL Panggung Bandaraya DBKL (Malay for DBKL City Theatre) is a historical theatre hall located across the Merdeka Square in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, at the junction of Jalan Tun Perak and Jalan Raja. Construction began in 1896 and was completely finished in 1904. The theatre formerly occupies the historic Old City Hall of Kuala Lumpur. The theatre and old City Hall building were designed by a colonial government architect, Arthur Benison Hubback, who was also responsible for designing the Kuala Lumpur Railway Station, the Jamek Mosque and other colonial structures throughout the Klang Valley.
I never met him without being the better for > it, and his kindly greeting and genial smile were always to me like a > benison [blessing] from one I loved. A more gracious presence, and a more > lovable nature have seldom been combined. His goodness made itself > intuitively felt; and he had not even to speak, for his purity of heart and > sincerity of mind seemed fairly to beam from his eyes. There may have been > better men than Jacob Ezekiel, I presume he had his share of human > frailties; but, I have never yet met another who could so impress the > hallowing influence which true goodness inspires.
Sorensen's garden designs influenced other gardens in the Blue Mountains, such as "Benison", at Leura. Sorensen redesigned and expanded an existing garden at "Mahratta" at Wahroonga, in 1925 for its then owner, Gerald Allen of the mercantile firm Samuel Allen & Sons. After 1930, Sorensen also worked for the next owner of "Mahratta", James Joynton Smith who, as owner of the Carrington Hotel, had given Sorensen his first work in Australia as a gardener. In 1932, he started a garden at "Heaton Lodge", Mudgee, for the Lonergan family, owners of the town's department store; this was the first garden that he created in an area of relatively low rainfall.
Masjid Ubudiah (or Ubudiah Mosque), considered one of Malaysia's most beautiful mosques, is located beside the Royal Mausoleum on Jalan Istana at Bukit Chandan in Kuala Kangsar. The mosque was designed by Arthur Benison Hubback, who was also responsible for the design of the Ipoh railway station and the Kuala Lumpur railway station. The mosque was built during the reign of the 28th Sultan of Perak, Sultan Idris Murshidul Adzam Shah I Ibni Almarhum Raja Bendahara Alang Iskandar Teja, who commission its construction as thanksgiving for his recovery from an illness that plagued him in his later years. The groundbreaking ceremony took place on 26 September 1913.
Exterior Designed by Arthur Benison Hubback in an Indo-Saracenic Revival architecture, the building was originally completed in 1905 to house the headquarters for the Federated Malay States Railways (FMSR, now KTM). After the FMSR moved to the Railway Administration Building in 1917, the building was handed to the Selangor Public Works department, and has subsequently housed various government and commercial occupants, including the Selangor Water Department, the Malaysian Central Bank, Agricultural Bank of Malaysia, Malaysian Craft and the High Court, before being converted for use as the National Textile Museum and opened to the public on 9 January 2010. The building is officially designated as JKR Building 26. It was gazetted as a historical building in 1983.
Kuala Lumpur Railway Station, by Arthur Benison Hubback, 1910. Despite having relatively little relationship to existing architectural styles, the Indo-Saracenic style was officially introduced to the Federated Malay States in British Malaya (present day Peninsular Malaysia) by British engineers and architects who have worked in British India prior. During the design of government offices for the Selangor state government in Kuala Lumpur in the late 19th century, C. E. Spooner, then State Engineer of the Public Works Department, favoured a "Mahometan style" over a neoclassical one to reflect Islamic mores in the region, instructing architect A.C. Norman, with further assistance by R. A. J. Bidwell, to redesign the building.Gullick, John Michael (1998).
Arthur Benison Hubback would later become the leading architect in the style in the Federated Malay States between the 1890s and 1910s, during which the style experienced its peak in popularity. The style was also favoured as one of several adopted by British architects for Malayan mosques as they did not feel the need to adhere accurately to the cultural heritage and the traditional culture of the Malays, who remain prominent in Malayan society and are Muslims but lacked the means to design buildings of grand scales; both the Jamek Mosque and Ubudiah Mosque, both designed by Hubback, are examples of mosques that resulted from this fusion of style.Mizan Hashim, David (1998). "Indian and Mogul influences on Mosques", The Encyclopedia of Malaysia (Architecture), p. 84–85.
The permission terminated in 2011. In 2009, after two years of intensive preparatory work in Uni-Crema, 'the free university for adulthood', he 'contributed to the promotion of cultural and social citizenship' in the groove of 'Christian humanism and Christian tradition'. In September 2010 he became the first bishop in Italy to organize and launch a 'youth mission' diocesan, a peaceful invasion of 'minstrels of God' in order to communicate His friendship and His benison not only in churches but in nightclubs, theatres, through sport, etc. At the end of his pastoral visit, in 2011, he organized an ecclesial assembly 'in order to prepare our Church to face the times ahead,' open to all different parts of the diocese: priests, associations and groups and individual believers.
Lilydale High School was founded in 1919, at which stage it was housed in a single building not located on the current school grounds. In the May 2006 Victoria state budget, A$5.65 million had been allocated to the school for the completion of construction at the school, consisting of 15 new buildings and facilities to be completed between 2006 and 2007."Budget benefits for police and schools" by Dion Teasdale, Star News 6 June 2006 Leon Bishop commenced as the school's Principal in 2006 after the retirement in 2005 of the previous school's Principal of 18 years, John Benison. In 2019, the school's Steam (STEM) coordinator, Tony Vallance, won the Australian Teacher of the Year award in the Australian Education Awards.
Noted Australian cartoonist, illustrator and artist Marie "Mollie" Horseman (1911–1974) was a contributor to Everybody's during the early 1960s. Her numerous illustrations (either anonymous or signed "Vanessa") included full-page colour cartoons of the "Sexy Man" type and the serial Girl Crusoe (1964), a parody of the popular 'good girl cheesecake' comic (see good girl art). In 1963 Everybody's hailed her (somewhat inaccurately) as 'Australia's only woman cartoonist', although she was definitely the best known.. Other freelance contributors included Ken Emerson, John Petersen, Astra Dick, Theo Batten, Stewart McCrae and Arthur McNeil. The original staff artists on the magazine when it was first published were Lyle Nagel (art director), Oliver “Olli” Houghton, Charles Benison, Trevor Wells, Jill Marshall and Herman “Jonah” Lloyd-Jones.
Jane Bee is the name of a fictional character, the protagonist of several murder mystery novels by the Canadian author Douglas Whiteway (under the penname C. C. Benison). In each one, a murder takes place at one of Queen Elizabeth's estates, and Her Majesty asks Jane to solve the crime, giving her some clues and helpful information as she goes along. Jane is a young woman from Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada, whose father Steve is a retired Mountie; her mother Ann is a journalist, and she has two older sisters (all back in Canada) and a great-aunt Grace who lives near London. Jane was staying with Grace when she answered a newspaper ad for a job and thus became a maid on the royal staff.
Church of St. Clare, Horodkivka, Ukraine, built 1910–1913, blending elements of neo-Gothic and modern twentieth century architecture The Carson Mansion, Eureka, California in the American style called Queen Anne Revival architecture. Palácio das Indústrias, São Paulo, Brazil Indo-Saracenic Revival architecture: Kuala Lumpur Railway Station, Malaysia, by Arthur Benison Hubback, 1910 Eclecticism came into practice during the late 19th century, as architects sought after a style that would allow them to retain previous historic precedent, but create unseen designs. From a complete catalogue of past styles, the ability to mix and combine styles allowed for more expressive freedom and provided an endless source of inspiration. Whilst other design professionals (referred to as 'revivalists') aimed to meticulously imitate past styles, Eclecticism differed, as the main driving force was creation, not nostalgiaHamlin, T, 1952.
The club house was built with funds from the British colonial administration, and the British Resident of Selangor was ex officio the President of the club – the first three Presidents were John Pickersgill Rodger, William Edward Maxwell, and Frank Swettenham. The club was initially based in a small wooden building with an attap roof near the north eastern corner of the padang. In 1890, this early building was replaced by a two- storey structure designed by A.C.A. Norman, a Government Architect, at the present site of the club on the west side of the padang. The building was then rebuilt in 1910 using a design by architect Arthur Benison Hubback (notably credited with the design of the Kuala Lumpur Railway Station) in Mock Tudor styling, with two additional wings on either side of the main building.
By all the glories of the day And the cool evening's benison By that last sunset touch that lay Upon the hills when day was done, By beauty lavishly outpoured And blessings carelessly received, By all the days that I have lived Make me a soldier, Lord. By all of all man's hopes and fears And all the wonders poets sing, The laughter of unclouded years, And every sad and lovely thing; By the romantic ages stored With high endeavour that was his, By all his mad catastrophes Make me a man, O Lord. I, that on my familiar hill Saw with uncomprehending eyes A hundred of thy sunsets spill Their fresh and sanguine sacrifice, Ere the sun swings his noonday sword Must say good-bye to all of this; – By all delights that I shall miss, Help me to die, O Lord. Written on 30 June 1916, just two days before his death.
The greatest part of the company's business consisted of retailing local, interstate and overseas periodicals, postcards (Neville Cayley produced a series) and stationery from its eight city shops and fifty-odd railway stall outlets, but was important as one of Australia's most successful book publishers and retailers of locally produced paperback books. Considerable effort was put into the artwork of the paperbacks, both on their brightly colored covers and the illustrations within. Artists who contributed included J. Muir Auld, Percy Benison, L. H. Booth, Norman Carter, H. W. Cotton, John P. Davis, Ambrose Dyson, Will Dyson, Tom Ferry, A. J. Fisher, Harry Garlick, C. H. Hunt, Ben Jordan, Harry Julius, George W. Lambert, Fred Leist, Norman Lindsay, Lionel Lindsay Percy Lindsay, Ruby Lindsay, Vernon Lorimer, David Low, Hugh Maclean, Frank P. Mahony, Claude Marquet, R. H. Moppett, Charles Nuttall, G. C. Pearce, James Postlethwaite, L. L. Roush, James F. Scott, Sydney Ure Smith, D. H. Souter, Percy Spence, Martin Stainforth, Alf Vincent and Harry J. Weston. On Rowlandson's death, Reg.
Closeup of the Ipoh station's station building facade, depicting its ornate construction and scale relative to parked road vehicles. Like many early stations built under Perak Railway, the 1894 station's construction was rudimentary, consisting of a single-storey wooden structure with massive pitched tiled roofs and an overall open air layout. The 1917 station's design was conceptualised by Arthur Benison Hubback, a British architectural assistant to the Director of Public Works credited for designing various public buildings in British Malaya in various vernacular colonial Western styles as well as "Neo- Moorish/Mughal/Indo-Saracenic/Neo-Saracenic" styles that draw influences from British Indian colonial architecture. In contrast to the Kuala Lumpur railway station, the Ipoh station's exterior is more distinctively Western in design, drawing elements of late-Edwardian Baroque architecture and incorporating moderate rustication on the base of the ground floor, opened pointed and arched pediments, extensive use of engaged columns, and a large central dome over the porte-cochère, while integrating vernacular elements such as deep, open air loggias into the ground floor and upper floor of the building (the ground floor's loggia measures at 183 metres, the length of the station's frontage).

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