Cuthbert Welby Pugin

Cuthbert Welby Pugin (2 June 1840 – 25 March 1928)[1] was an English architect, furniture builder and businessman working in the gothic revival style.

He is most notable for his design of St John the Evangelist, Poulton-le-Fylde and his collaborations with Peter Paul Pugin to complete St Anne's Church, Highfield Road, English Martyrs Church, Tower Hill and Sacred Heart Church, Kilburn to designs by Edward Welby Pugin.

[2] All three brothers also made additions and alterations to The Grange, Ramsgate, originally designed by their father.

He began assisting Edward in the 1860s, and he and Peter Paul took over the English and Scottish work of Pugin & Pugin in 1873, when Edward had to flee to the US to escape his creditors.

When Edward died in 1875, Peter Paul took over main responsibility for the firm, with Cuthbert focussing on its furniture-making and furnishing sides until 1880, when he withdrew to run the family's furniture workshops directly.

St John's Church, Poulton-le-Fylde, Cuthbert Pugin architect