Marshall Sisson

Marshall Arnott Sisson RA (14 February 1897 – 26 January 1978) was a British architect, active in 1928–70.

He researched Jerash's Roman architecture in the Middle East in 1926[1][2] and spent time in John Russell Pope's practice in New York in 1927.

[1][2] They include two cubical houses in Cambridge[2] and a small residential development in Carlyon Bay, Cornwall, including Gull Rock House[3] (1933–34), described as an early example of the use of monolithic reinforced concrete in England.

[4] From around 1935, Sisson embraced traditional architectural styles, starting with a neo-Georgian public library for the town of Colchester (1937).

[1][2] He was involved in dismantling and transporting St Mary Aldermanbury, a bomb-damaged Wren church, to Westminster College in Missouri.

St John's, Smith Square , which Sisson restored after bomb damage