George Vaughan Maddox
George Vaughan Maddox  | |
|---|---|
Kingsley House (left), built to Maddox's design and his home for much of his life  | |
| Born | 1802 | 
| Died | 27 February 1864 (age 61/62) Hempsted, Gloucestershire  | 
| Occupation | Architect | 
| Years active | 1820s–1840s | 
George Vaughan Maddox (1802–27 February 1864) was a nineteenth-century British architect and builder, whose work was undertaken principally in the town of Monmouth, Wales, and in the wider county. Working mainly in a Neo-Classical style, his extensive output made a significant contribution to the Monmouth townscape. The architectural historian John Newman considers that Monmouth owes to Maddox "its particular architectural flavour. For two decades from the mid-1820s he put up a sequence of public buildings and private houses in the town, in a style deft, cultured, and only occasionally unresolved." The Market Hall and 1-6 Priory Street are considered his "most important projects".