A. N. Prentice

Andrew Noble Prentice FRIBA (20 April 1866 - 23 December 1941) was a British architect.

[1] He was born on 20 April 1866 in Greenock, the son of Thomas Prentice (1830 - 1908) and Jessie Mcalpine (b 1829).

In 1888 he won the Soane Medallion Travelling Studentship by the Royal Institute of British Architects for a design for a gentleman's residence.

In 1891 he was awarded second prize in the Owen Jones competition of the Royal Institute of British Architects for a selection of sketches in watercolour and pencil from a recent visit to Spain and Italy.

[5] He started in independent practice in 1893 and entered into a partnership with William Mackereth Dean from 1920 to 1933 and with H.J.

The Six Bells at Witham on the Hill, 1905
Lifford Memorial Hall, Broadway 1915