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・ Alexander Macleod (MP)
・ Alexander MacLeod (writer)
・ Alexander Macmillan
・ Alexander MacMillan (publisher)
・ Alexander Macmillan, 2nd Earl of Stockton
・ Alexander Macomb
・ Alexander Macomb (general)
・ Alexander Macomb (merchant)
・ Alexander Macomb House
・ Alexander Macomb Mason
・ Alexander Maconochie
・ Alexander Maconochie (penal reformer)
・ Alexander Maconochie Centre
・ Alexander Maconochie, Lord Meadowbank
・ Alexander Macphail
Alexander MacPherson
・ Alexander MacRae
・ Alexander MacRobert
・ Alexander MacWhorter
・ Alexander MacWhorter III
・ Alexander MacWilliam, Sr.
・ Alexander Madden
・ Alexander Madlung
・ Alexander Madrigal
・ Alexander Magleby
・ Alexander Maguire
・ Alexander Mahone
・ Alexander Mahoney
・ Alexander Mair
・ Alexander Maitland


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Alexander MacPherson : ウィキペディア英語版
Alexander MacPherson

Alexander MacPherson, (1847 – 1935), was an English architect. Although born in Nottingham he worked for the majority of his career in and around Derby, where he had moved in 1880. He served as president of the Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire Architectural Society.
==Career==
He was for many years in partnership with architect W. E. Richardson. He also worked in conjunction with surveyor John Ward, who subcontracted architectural work to him, although sometimes signing drawings produced by MacPherson.
MacPherson worked in a variety of styles from the baroque of department stores such as the Co-Operative Central Halls he designed in Derby and elsewhere, to the 'Queen Anne' of the now demolished Children's Hospital in Derby. He was however, perhaps happiest designing in the Tudor style made popular during the Arts and Crafts movement. Buildings such as Littleover Old Hall, Derbyshire (1898), Reginald Street Public Baths, Derby (1904), Victoria Street Tramways Office, Derby (1904), and the workers' houses he built for the Liversage Charity Estate and Haslam foundry in Derby are characteristic of this style. MacPherson's interiors were often crammed with richly carved woodwork. His rooms in Aston Hall, Aston upon Trent, and the Friary, Friargate, Derby, are very good surviving examples of this style.
In later years he increasingly adopted the classical style, his work for the Walker Okeover family of Osmaston Manor, Derbyshire, being a good example of this period in his career. His last known major work, Bemrose School in Derby, is a powerful essay in the pared down classical style (1928–30), which has recently been altered.
Many of MacPherson's buildings have been destroyed. Two conservation areas within the City of Derby, ''Chester Green'' and ''Nottingham Road'' have, however, been created to protect his buildings.


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