Clapton Crabb Rolfe (5 March 1845 – 18 December 1907) was an English Gothic Revival architect whose practice was based in Oxford.
Family
Rolfe was the second of nine children. His father was Rev. George Crabb Rolfe (1811–93) who was perpetual curate of Hailey, Oxfordshire from 1838 until his death.[4] His mother Ellen was a sister of the architect William Wilkinson.[4] Rolfe's elder brother George Wilkinson Rolfe (1843–1912) followed their father into the clergy[4] and a younger brother, William Andrew Rolfe (born 1850), also became an architect.[4] In 1873 Rolfe married Annie de Pré. They had one son, Benedict Hugh Rolfe (born 1874)[4] who trained as an architect and assisted his father on some of his later works, before settling in London as a consulting engineer.[4]
Rolfe died in 1907. Both he and Annie are buried in the parish churchyard of St Mary's, Wheatley, Oxfordshire.[4]
The Buildings of England series of architectural guides spells Rolfe's middle name "Crabbe" but other authorities use "Crabb",[3][4] A memorial plaque in Hailey parish church to his father Rev. G.C. Rolfe also uses the latter spelling.
Career
Much of Rolfe's work was for parish churches and other institutions of the Church of England. His first major commission was to design a new parish church at Hailey for his father.[5] His design was in a freely reinterpreted French Gothic style.[5] The Oxford Diocesan Architect G.E. Street condemned Rolfe's first draft as "needlessly eccentric".[5] Despite Street's objections Rolfe completed the church with some unusual details, including an unusually shaped bell-turret.[6]
Rolfe became an Associate of the Royal Institute of British Architects in 1869.[3] In 1881, following the death of G.E. Street, Rolfe was one of the applicants to succeed him as Oxford diocesan architect.[4]John Oldrid Scott was the successful applicant, but Rolfe was later appointed Oxford Diocesan Surveyor.[4]
Rolfe was a devout Anglo-Catholic who sought to translate his faith into his building work.[4] In 1871 he wrote in The Builder:
Those professional men nowadays who despise and ridicule that pure symbolic spirit which actuated our forefathers in their church-work, and probably substitute for it that £sd money-grubbing spirit of the age, are alike unfit and unworthy of being engaged on any modern church-work whatever.[9]
Rolfe wrote a number of publications on aspects of church architecture and furnishing, but as he got older the style and content of his writing became increasingly obscure.[4]
Works
Buildings
Saint John the Evangelist, Hailey, Oxfordshire: new church, 1868–69[10]
North Oxford Victorian Suburb Conservation Area Appraisal Draft. Oxford: Oxford City Council. p. 20.
Brodie, Antonia; Felstead, Alison; Franklin, Jonathan; Pinfield, Leslie; Oldfield, Jane, eds. (2001). Directory of British Architects 1834–1914, L–Z. London & New York: Continuum. p. 187. ISBN0-8264-5514-X.
Crossley, Alan; Currie, C.R.J.; Baggs, A.P.; Chance, Eleanor; Colvin, Christina; Day, C.J.; Selwyn, Nesta; Townley, Simon C. (1996). A History of the County of Oxford, Volume 13: Bampton Hundred (Part One). Victoria County History. pp. 166–170. ISBN978-0-19-722790-9.
Baggs, A.P.; Chance, Eleanor; Colvin, Christina; Cooper, Janet; Day, C.J.; Selwyn, Nesta; Williamson, Elizabeth; Yates, Margaret (2004). Townley, Simon C. (ed.). A History of the County of Oxford, Volume 14: Bampton Hundred (Part Two). Victoria County History. pp. 254–255. ISBN978-1-904356-25-7.