Aberdeenshire HER - NO87SW0010 - ST TERNAN'S CHAPEL, ARBUTHNOTT

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Period Details

PeriodOrderProbabilityRadiocarbon DatesDate BuiltDate of DestructionDate of Loss
Early Medieval (400 - 900 AD) A90    
Medieval (1100 - 1560 AD) B100    
Post-Medieval (from 1560 AD) C100    
19th Century D100    

Period Notes

Period Notes Dedicated 1242; Arbuthnott Aisle added c.1500; nave burnt 1890 and restored 1896; Robert Bruce Memorial 1919.

Architect Details

Architect Details Matthews & Mackenzie, architects 1890-6; Sir Robert Stodart Lorimer, architect 1919. Robert Stodart Lorimer was born in Edinburgh on 4 November 1864, third and younger son of James Lorimer, Regius Professor of Public Law at Edinburgh University, and Hannah, daughter of James Riddell Stodart, WS. He was educated at Edinburgh Academy from 1877 to 1882 and at Edinburgh University from 1882 to 1885 but left without graduating, having decided to become an architect: it is said that he had acquired an enthusiasm for architecture and the company of craftsmen when his father leased and repaired the castle of Kellie in 1878. He was articled to Anderson Wardrop & Browne in 1885 but Browne withdrew from the practice soon after he arrived. Lorimer's relationship with Rowand Anderson was somewhat difficult and was to remain so but he had a particularly happy relationship with Hew M Wardrop whose premature death in 1887 was a severe personal loss to him. Having taken the technical classes at Heriot-Watt College he passed the qualifying exam in 1888 after little more than three years, something of a record. In 1889 Lorimer toured England for several months, his final destination being London where he made the acquaintance of John James Stevenson whose sisters lived in Edinburgh, and, rather later, Richard Norman Shaw. He found a place in the office of George Frederick Bodley, who was then working in partnership with Thomas Garner; Bodley encouraged the love of fine craftsmanship which was characteristic of Lorimer's practice. There he met Walter Tapper who was to be a lifelong friend, but the circle of friends with whom he travelled and sketched was predominantly Scottish and included Roger Kitsell, with whom he had been at university and at Anderson's, Robert Smith Dods from Hay & Henderson's office and John Begg from Hippolyte Blanc's. He also made the acquaintance of James Marjoribanks MacLaren and appears to have worked for him evenings and weekends as he is included with Bodley in Lorimer's ARIBA nomination paper. He was admitted on 16 June 1890, his proposers being Stevenson, Mervyn Macartney and John McKean Brydon, his first independent commission being a handsome Queen Anne house in Arthur Road, Wimbledon, for an uncle, George Wyld, MD. The previous year, 1889, Lorimer had joined the Architectural Association. After eighteen months with Bodley, Lorimer left to join two more Scottish friends, William Dunn and Robert Watson, who had succeeded to MacLaren's practice following his early death on October 1890. He left them in 1892 to tour Europe and opened an office at 49 Queen Street Edinburgh in 1893, with John Fraser Matthew as his first apprentice from May of that year. The catalyst was the commission to restore Earslhall for a family friend, R W R Mackenzie, followed by a series of houses in Colinton for Miss Guthrie Wright. These were in a simple harled style derived from MacLaren and Watson's synthesis of English and Scottish vernacular forms in their buildings at Glenlyon for Sir Donald Currie and quickly resulted in commissions for more. They paralleled the work of Lethaby, Ashbee and Voysey with whom he had become more closely acquainted through election to the Art Workers' Guild in 1897. Lorimer's practice was to remain predominantly domestic, partly from the social and professional circles in which he moved, but partly because large commercial buildings had to be designed quickly and required considerable staff reserves. Lorimer's office was always frugally run with never more than four assistants or improvers and apprentices beyond Matthew, who was his office manager. Apprentices and assistants were very carefully selected and included James Smith Richardson, Reginald Fairlie, Percy Nobbs and Ramsay Traquair, the two last subsequently professors of architecture at McGill in Montreal. Surges in business which could not be accommodated within the existing staff were accommodated by engaging 'outlanders' notably Victor Horsburgh whose Edinburgh practice never flourished, John James Joass and John Begg whenever available: this arrangement was to prove particularly important during the South African War when Matthew was called up as a volunteer officer. Lorimer was unusual amongst Scottish architects in having a significant English practice without ever opening a London office. While several commissions came from members of the Tennant family who had settled in England, it is not altogether clear how the others were obtained: it appears to have been initially a combination of his Wyld relatives, influential social and political connections at home, skilful publicity in the building journals and exhibiting at the RSA, the RA and at the London Arts and Crafts exhibitions: from 1904 the publications of Walter Shaw Sparrow were an important factor, as was 'Country Life' from 1905, while Hermann Muthesius's 'Das Englische Haus' of 1904 gave him a continental reputation. The first of these English houses was Whinfold in Surrey, 1898, where his client E P Benson introduced him to Gertrude Jekyll who developed his ideas on gardens: from the very first these had been a particular interest from the family garden at Kellie and the restoration of Earlshall. Equally important to Lorimer's development was the Glasgow shipowner William Burrell whom he met through Mackenzie at Earlshall. Lorimer had acquired an interest in antique furniture from at least his earliest London years, and Burrell, his mother and sisters took him on a tour of Rotterdam, Amsterdam and The Hague which widened his interests to continental detail in both interior work and furniture. Lorimer did not marry Burrell's sister Mary as had perhaps been hoped, nor the daughter of the London architect Eustace Balfour who frequently invited him to stay at Whittinghame. In 1902 he met for the first time one of the more distant Wyld relatives, Violet, one of the nine children of Edward Wyld of the Tile House, Denham, Bucks. She met the criteria of being musical and fitting happily into Lorimer's immediate circle of his brother John Henry Lorimer, the painter, and Francis William Deas. The house planned for her at Auchintrail, Fife in 1905 proved financially unrealisable at the time but 54 Melville Street Edinburgh was expensively remodelled for her in 1903 and an attic added to accommodate their family in 1912. Lorimer was elected FRIBA on 11 June 1906, proposed by John James Burnet, William Leiper and Edwin Landseer Lutyens. In 1909 his practice acquired a more public profile when his social connections and high profile at the Royal Scottish Academy, where he had been elected associate in 1903, resulted in him amicably replacing the elderly Thomas Ross as architect for the Thistle Chapel at St Giles Cathedral. At that date the only relevant experience he had beyond his time in Bodley's office was one Episcopal church; Ross did in fact advise on aspects of the design. His work there brought him a knighthood in 1911; and although he had no experience of office building either the Office of Works invited him to prepare sketch designs for the Scottish Office buildings on Calton Hill in 1913. That scheme was shelved because of the First World War and despite protest Lorimer was not re-commissioned when the scheme was revived in 1928. But on 21 September 1918 he was appointed one of the architects for the War Graves Commisssion, the countries allocated to him being Italy, Germany, Egypt and Macedonia. He designed 12 cemeteries in Italy including Barenthal and Cavaletto and Memorials at Giavera and Savona; 8 cemeteries in Macedonia and the Memorials at Lake Doiran and Monastir Road; 8 cemeteries in Egypt including Chatby, Hadra and Old Cairo; 5 Cemeteries in Germany, Cologne, Hamburg, Worms, Cassel and Berlin. At none of these was he asked to design on a monumental scale and the loss of that at Port Tewfik to Burnet, David Raeside having secured it on the latter's behalf, damaged their previously good relationship. Lorimer was also commissioned to design many of the war memorials at home, but that for Glenelg, where Lorimer had financed Louis Deuchars, brought him into a disastrous conflict with Pittendreigh MacGillivray when Lorimer was proposed as full academician in 1918. It delayed his election by three years and provoked the resignation of his elder brother, an action both were subsequently to regret. In that same year, 1919, the Duke of Atholl's committee for the Scottish National War Memorial which had Burnet as its architect-member and adviser, selected Lorimer from the six architects invited to submit examples of their work. His 1919 scheme and report were developed into a cloister and an octagonal shrine with Burnet's full approval in 1922, but he was thwarted by his disaffected former assistant Richardson. Richardson had been in partnership with Lorimer's even more disgruntled chief draughtsman John Ross McKay, dismissed in the Spring of 1920 for spending the weekend with a client, General Hunter-Weston, contrary to Lorimer's instructions. As principal inspector and assessor to the Ancient Monuments Board, Richardson put up a canvas montage to show the effect of the shrine on the castle skyline. Although Burnet robustly defended Lorimer's design, a campaign of public protest against 'the jelly mould' was led by the Earl of Rosebery and Lady Frances Balfour, daughter of the 8th Duke of Argyll and widow of the architect Eustace Balfour, who had, perhaps, old scores to settle. Lorimer had been critical of some of her husband's work even although the Balfours' connection had helped his career. A much less satisfactory scheme incorporating Robert William Billings's barrack block was forced upon him. Lorimer was elected ARA - ahead of Burnet - in 1920 and eventually elevated to full RSA in 1921. In June of that year he was appointed principal architect for the War Graves Commission in the UK and designed the naval memorials at Chatham, Plymouth and Portsmouth. The war years had been a thin time, but Lorimer was by now sufficiently well-off to buy the small estate at Gibliston, Fife in 1915 and he looked forward to the post-war years with a degree of optimism, a partnership involving the return of Dods from Auastralia being discussed in 1916. In the event Lorimer's domestic practice was to remain at a low ebb and not entirely from want of clients. In his earlier years an engaging personality and an infectious enthusiasm had got him by, although as early as 1904 unwillingness to accept unwelcome instructions from clients had lost him the commission at Fairnalie where he refused to demolish the old house. But in his later years he could be overbearing. Lack of tact in his work at Hatton Castle for Burrell in 1916 resulted in the loss of the commssion, and, painfully, Burrell's friendship. In the post-war years Clive Pearson did not pursue Lorimer's over-ambitious proposals for Castle Fraser, essentially on conservation grounds, and at Fingask, the Gilroys found him 'too dictatorial' and engaged the more biddable J Donald Mills, as did the Valentines at Auchterhouse. Alfred G Lochhead, who replaced McKay as chief draughtsman, recalled that Lorimer could be 'terrible with clients: in the course of a disagreement on the design he said to one 'This house will be remembered because I designed it, not because you paid for it' - he actually said that'. Of the office itself, at 17 Great Stuart Street from 1913, Lochhead recalled that it had a friendly enough atmosphere if cold in winter as Lorimer begrudged coal like all other overheads. But there were sometimes problems: 'if a design wasn't working out he worried at it and worried at it because so much time had been spent on it - if I wasn't asked, I had to be careful about any suggestion even if I could see what to do… Burnet had a much healthier approach in such circumstances, he simply discarded it regardless of time spent and started afresh'. Matthew did his best to reassure clients and keep the peace in the office. His patience and tact were eventually rewarded with a partnership in 1927; he had been allowed to run a small independent practice of his own since 1910. Lorimer’s work for the War Graves Commission ended on 31 December 1927. The Scottish National War Memorial was completed in 1928. Lorimer was made KBE and the University made him an Honorary LLD. But he was exhausted by it and Matthew had been left to design King's Buildings for the University very much on his own. He took a holiday with the sculptor Pilkington Jackson in Sweden, the influence of that visit being seen in his designs for St Margaret's Church, Knightswood. But thereafter he spent more time at Gibliston and in the company of Deas and James Morton of Morton Sundour fabrics. He died following an operation for appendicitis on 13 September 1929. His ashes were buried at Newburn along with those of his parents. The partnership of Matthews & Mackenzie had its origin in that of Mackenzie & Matthews. Just before Thomas Mackenzie's death in October 1854 an Inverness office was established with William Lawrie in charge as resident assistant. For ten years both the Aberdeen and the Inverness practices continued under James Matthews' sole name, Lawrie finally becoming a partner in 1864. The practice title of Matthews & Lawrie tended to be used in the Inverness area only, work in and around Aberdeen being usually undertaken in Matthews' name only. By 1877 Alexander Marshall Mackenzie (born 1848), son of Thomas Mackenzie and a pupil in Matthews' Aberdeen office from 1863 to 1868, had amply demonstrated his capacity to gain clients through his own independent practice, which he had commenced in Elgin at the early age of twenty-two. Matthews re-admitted him as a partner, but in respect of Aberdeen and Elgin-based business only, Matthews's other partner William Lawrie retaining his semi-independent position in Inverness where the practice continued under the name of Matthews & Lawrie. From 1883 onward Mackenzie undertook virtually all of the design work of the Aberdeen office, Matthews being preoccupied with civic duties as provost, principally on Rosemount Viaduct and the Union Terrace improvements. The Inverness practice was taken over by John Hinton Gall in his own name only after Lawrie's death in 1887 and Matthews eventually retired completely in 1893 at the age of seventy-three, leaving Mackenzie as sole partner. Alexander Marshall Mackenzie was born in Elgin on 1 January 1848, the son of Thomas Mackenzie, architect and his wife Helen Margaret McInnes. His middle name derived from his mother, who was a granddaughter of William Marshall, the Duke of Gordon's factor and a celebrated composer of reels and strathspeys. His father died in October 1854 when he was six. Educated at Elgin Academy, he was articled to James Matthews' Aberdeen office from 1863 to 1868, and remained there as assistant for a year. His elder brother Hugh being already settled in Edinburgh he then found a place in the office of David Bryce, living at 10 Forres Street. During that period he studied drawing and painting with Robert Innes who had painted a portrait of his father in 1851, and exhibited a selection of his topographical views at the RSA in 1870. This was, perhaps, at least partly in preparation for a study tour of Italy and France undertaken in that year, after which he commenced practice in Elgin at the early age of twenty-two. By 1877, the year after Bryce's death, Marshall Mackenzie had amply demonstrated his capacity to gain clients, and Matthews was persuaded to re-admit him as a partner, but in respect of Aberdeen and Elgin-based business only, William Lawrie retaining his semi-independent position in Inverness where the practice continued under the name of Matthews & Lawrie. From 1883 onward Mackenzie undertook virtually all of the design work of the Aberdeen office, Matthews being preoccupied with civic duties as provost, principally on Rosemount Viaduct and the Union Terrace improvements. When William Lawrie died in 1887, his chief assistant John Hinton Gall took over the Inverness practice in his own name only. Matthews eventually retired completely in 1893 at the age of seventy-three, leaving Mackenzie as sole partner. Marshall Mackenzie's classical work varied greatly in quality, mainly because of cost factors, working in granite being expensive. According to Herbert Hardy Wigglesworth, then his apprentice, a second visit to Italy in or about 1883 inspired the Northern Assurance Building and the Gray's School of Art and Aberdeen Art Gallery buildings, the details of the former suggesting that he had looked as much at modern Italian architecture as at high Renaissance examples. In the latter he adopted a two colour treatment by introducing elements of pink Corrennie granite, apparently in deference to the use of sandstone and brick dressings in Simpson's Triple Kirk opposite, an experiment that was to extend to the neo-Georgian villas he built in the 1890s. Much of his classical work from the mid-1880s onward was in a rather flat pilastraded idiom that lent itself to machine cutting: only at the Parish Council and School Board offices, and at the Manx Bank did he have the budget to adopt a more three-dimensional treatment. Marshall Mackenzie's Gothic work was much more consistent in quality. From 1883 onwards beginning with Craigiebuckler, he paralleled Honeyman, Rowand Anderson and Blanc in the adaptation of mediaeval forms to a more liturgical form of Presbyterian worship. Both Craigiebuckler and Ruthrieston were English Gothic in detail, but thereafter he showed a marked preference for late Scots Gothic forms. This development stemmed from his restoration of Arbuthnott Church in 1889, but was also related to the Aberdeen Ecclesiological Society, originally initiated by the Rev James Cooper of St Nicholas East Church, William Kelly, later of Smith & Kelly, and his brother-in-law Charles Carmichael on Kelly's return from London and a continental study tour in 1885. Mackenzie was one of their founder members and his first new-build church in the Scots Gothic idiom was Powis, Aberdeen, 1895, its details drawn from Greyfriars Church, then under threat from the Marischal College extension scheme and which - against his own wishes - he was to be obliged to demolish. Mackenzie was elected ARSA in 1893 although he had exhibited only once twenty-three years earlier, and admitted FRIBA on 30 November 1896 with the influential support of the London architects Alfred Waterhouse, Colonel Robert W Edis, and John McKean Brydon. These events were prompted by royal patronage, initially at the new church at Crathie in 1893 and again in 1895 when the Duke and Duchess of Fife (the Prince of Wales's daughter Princess Louise) commissioned the rebuilding of Mar Lodge. An honorary LLD followed in 1906, marking the final completion of the Marischal College extension scheme, formally opened by King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra to mark the Quater Centenary celebrations. The completion of the Marischal College works brought the practice still greater national fame, but by then the practice had already opened a London office in 1903, a development directly related to Mackenzie's brother-in-law. Mackenzie had married Phoebe Ann Robertson Cooper, the only daughter of Alexander Cooper of the Elgin legal firm Cooper & Wink, and a granddaughter of General George Duncan Robertson, head of the Clan Robertson. Her brother George Alexander Cooper (1856-1940), later Sir George 1st Baronet, had become an American property magnate. He had also married an heiress, Mary Smith of Evanston, Illinois, the niece of 'Chicago' Smith, and became a major art collector, his dealer being Joseph Duveen. In 1901 the Coopers bought the lease of 26 Grosvenor Square, which made them neighbours to the Earl and Countess of Aberdeen at no 27: they had recently returned from Canada where Lord Aberdeen had been Governor General from 1893 to 1898. The London decorators Howard & Sons redecorated no 26 'under the aegis of Duveen Brothers' probably with some involvement by Duveen's architect Rene Sergent in Paris, the panelling for Duveen's tapestries being made by Anatole Beaumetz. While this work was in progress, Marshall Mackenzie's eldest son Alexander George Robertson Mackenzie - his middle names were those of his maternal grandfather- born 1879, was working with Sergent in Paris as an improver. Articled to his father in August 1894 at the age of fifteen, 'AGR' took classes at Gray's School of Art, Robert Gordon's Institute of Technology and the University of Aberdeen, and quickly developed extraordinary ability, becoming his father's chief assistant at the end of his apprenticeship in 1898. Nevertheless he felt he needed London experience, and early in 1900 he obtained a place in the office of one of his father's proposers, Colonel Edis, which enabled him to study at the Architectural Association and at the Central School of Arts and Crafts under Lethaby, Halsey Ricardo and Frampton. After his spell with Sergent in 1901 he obtained a place in the London office of Niven & Wigglesworth, Herbert Wigglesworth having been an apprentice of his father's, and passed the qualifying exam in June. He was admitted ARIBA on 17 September 1901, his proposers being his father, Wigglesworth, and his partner Niven. At that date he had travelled only in Normandy and in Holland, but soon thereafter he spent two months on a study tour in Italy before being recalled to his father's office in 1902 to assist with the Marischal College extension. The London office was set up initially to enlarge and remodel Hursley Park in Hampshire, which the Coopers had bought in 1902, the work being carried out in association with Duveen, who obtained the boiseries and the Beauvais tapestries. AGR was put in charge of the London office although the division was by no means clear-cut, his father being in London for a few days every fortnight while the son undertook a certain amount of the design work of the Aberdeen office. Partly from the Coopers' influence and partly from sheer ability, the London practice was successful, at once securing the £300,000 commission for the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in Aldwych, followed by a still more prestigious one for Canada House, also part of the Strand-Kingsway improvements which put him in the same league as J J Burnet. The Canada House project was deferred but another for Australia House, also in Aldwych, followed a few years later and was built. AGR was then elevated to FRIBA on 3 March 1913, his proposers being Leonard Stokes who had become a close friend and with whose son there was to be a future connection, and Niven and Wigglesworth. By that date Gilbert Marshall Mackenzie was also in the London office. Born in 1890 or 1891 and educated at Charterhouse rather than in Aberdeen, Gilbert was articled to the Aberdeen office in 1909 but left in the same year for the University of Cambridge, probably to read modern languages in preparation for study at the Atelier Gromort in Paris in 1911. He returned to the London office in 1912 without taking the Diplome du Gouvernement, recalled to assist his brother with Australia House, and passed the qualifying exam in the same year without completing any apprenticeship and little more than a year's practical experience in total. He was admitted ARIBA in the same year, his proposers being his father, his brother, and another professional friend of his brother's, Herbert Austen Hall. Shortly thereafter he was taken into partnership. The Mackenzies suffered severely in the First World War. The long-deferred Canada House project was cancelled, the Union Club and the Royal College of Physicians being eventually bought for the purpose and the commission given to Septimus Warwick. Gilbert was called up and commissioned in the First Battalion of the Seaforth Highlanders in which he reached the rank of Captain. While serving in France he drew and painted life in the trenches. Subsequently he was sent to Mesopotamia where he was killed in action near Kut on 21 April 1916. AGR enlisted as a private in the London Scottish, in the hope that he could transfer to the Seaforths and be with his brother, but was severely wounded and lost most of a leg. He was invalided out and assisted his father with the completion of Australia House, where work had continued throughout the war years. Mackenzie's second son, who had become a solicitor and was a partner in Cooper & Wink and was too old for active service similarly volunteered, but because of his eyesight he had to be content with the Service Corps from which he survived unscathed. Alexander Marshall Mackenzie was elevated to the status of full academician in 1918, and the Aberdeen practice remained as prosperous as ever, but despite the continuing support of the Coopers, the London practice did not recover its pre-war success as Burnet's had done. Although still based in London, by the later 1920s AGR was spending much of his time on the work of the Aberdeen office, where Alexander Marshall was assisted by John Gibb Marr (born 1890), who had originally been articled to Clement George. Marr was taken into partnership on 1 January 1927. Niven and Wigglesworth's practice had also begun to run out of work following the completion of Hambro's Bank in London, and their partnership was dissolved in 1927, partly because Niven had developed other interests. Wigglesworth merged his half of the remaining practice with Mackenzie's. Further consolidation took place in Aberdeen in May 1931 when the Mackenzies merged the Aberdeen practice with that of the cinema and auction mart specialist, Clement George, born 1879 in Macduff, who had been in the office from 1897 to 1907, and had remained a family friend: his senior partner, George Sutherland had died in 1927. The practice now became A Marshall Mackenzie, Son & George. These arrangements were to prove brief. Clement George died on 23 February 1932, followed on 4 May 1933 by Alexander Marshall Mackenzie who had been at the drawing board until within a week of his death, latterly working mostly from Culter House, a great early eighteenth-century house with a fine formal garden to which he had moved from the very stylish houses AGR had designed for him at Ladyhill and Loch Coull in 1911. The practice title then reverted to A Marshall Mackenzie & Son. James Matthews was born in December 1819, son of Peter Matthews, a teller in the Commercial Bank in Aberdeen and a Burgess of Guild, and was christened on 12 or 13 December that year. His mother was Margaret Ross, daughter of William Ross, the architect-builder who had built Union Bridge. Educated at Robert Gordon's Hospital, he was articled to Archibald Simpson in 1834, and worked under the supervision of Simpson's assistant Thomas Mackenzie (born 1814). In 1839 he went to George Gilbert Scott's in London. On his return early in 1844, Simpson offered him the post of chief assistant with the promise of partnership in two years. He declined as he thought Simpson would be 'too greedy' (the Mackenzies, however, found Matthews 'a bit of a Jew'). Matthews then formed his partnership with Thomas Mackenzie, initially with Mackenzie doing most of the designing in Elgin, and Matthews attending to the management of the Aberdeen office. In that year they won the competition for the Free Church College (New College) in Edinburgh, in a competition assessed by Sir Charles Barry. The perspective, formerly at Bourtie, is now in the possession of Professor Alistair Rowan. The competition was set aside, however, and the commission given to William Henry Playfair. Initially the Elgin practice was much more prosperous than the Aberdeen one and in 1848 Matthews applied unsuccessfully for the post of head of the Edinburgh office of the Office of Works. Mackenzie died of brain fever - apparently brought on by an accident - on 15 October 1854, Matthews continuing the practice thereafter under his name alone, though he did form a brief partnership with George Petrie of Elgin in c.1857. Petrie presumably filled the role of Mackenzie manning the Elgin end of the practice. Just before Mackenzie's death an Inverness office had been established with William Lawrie in charge as resident assistant. Although not made a partner until 1864, Lawrie was given what seems to have been a free hand in the design work and for some years the Inverness office was the more prosperous. Matthews continued the Aberdeen office alone, and it was not until 1877 that Mackenzie's son, Alexander Marshall Mackenzie, was taken into partnership, having established a successful practice of his own in his native Elgin. Thereafter Matthews ran the practice as two separate partnerships - Matthews & Mackenzie in Aberdeen and Elgin, and Matthews & Lawrie in Inverness. When Lawrie died in 1887, the Inverness practice was inherited by John Hinton Gall (born 1848), who had been his chief assistant since 1872 and who continued the business under his own name, Matthews withdrawing completely from that branch of the firm. Matthews entered the Town Council in 1863, and retired as a councillor in 1871. In November 1883 he was recalled as Lord Provost and held office until November 1886. He was mainly responsible for implementing the City Improvement Act of 1883 which included building Schoolhill and Rosemount Viaduct and giving improved access to the latter area of the city. He was a director of the North of Scotland Bank, of which he was Chairman from time to time. His public services (in particular the Mitchell Tower and Graduation Hall) brought an Honorary LLD from the University of Aberdeen. In his later years Matthews lived in some grandeur at Springhill, which he had greatly altered for himself. Matthews retired from the practice in 1893 at the age of seventy-three, and died at 15 Albyn Terrace on 28 June 1898. He was buried in St Nicholas churchyard, where his monument records the earlier deaths of his daughter Margaret Rose Matthews on 18 May 1868, his son James Duncan Matthews on 21 November 1890 and his wife Elizabeth Duncan on 21 March 1895.