John Gibbs (c. 1827 – ) was a British Gothic Revival architect based in Wigan, Manchester, and Oxford, England.
[3] In 1858, he proposed a memorial fountain to commemorate Alfred the Great (purported to be the founder of Oxford University for many years) to be located in the centre of the wide Broad Street, southeast of St Giles', but it was never completed.
In North Oxford, Gibbs designed three large and prominent houses on the west side of Banbury Road (numbers 54, 56, and 58).
56 (1867) was built for Henry Hatch, a draper, and was later the long-time residence of Sir Edward Bagnall Poulton, FRS, Hope Professor of Zoology at Oxford University.
[12] John Gibbs designed the parsonage and the village school (1871) at South Leigh in Oxfordshire west of Oxford.