Anthony Keck (1726–1797) was an 18th-century English architect with an extensive practice in Gloucestershire, Worcestershire, Herefordshire and South Wales.
[2] He designed in the "austere Neoclassical style of the late eighteenth century – a provincial follower of Robert Adam.
"[3] He died on 4 October 1797 at the age of seventy, at Beech House, the home he partly designed for himself,[4] in the village of King's Stanley, Gloucestershire, where he had his workshop and studio for most of his life.
Keck is credited with designing some fifty[3] country houses in the South-West of England and South Wales.
His works include: Keck's work was not confined to country houses, including churches, such as Old St Martin's, Worcester[5] and St Peter and St Paul's, Upton-upon-Severn, including its famed lantern and cupola;[6] public buildings, such as the Worcester Royal Infirmary[7] and contributions to the Stroudwater canal.