Willey Reveley

Their son, Henry Willey Reveley (1788–1875), became a civil engineer and architect in Cape Town and Western Australia.

Reveley contributed some views of the Levant to the Museum Worsleyanum (1794), the catalogue of Worsley's collections; and, also in 1794, edited the third volume of James Stuart's Antiquities of Athens.

[6] In 1796, Reveley made four proposals to straighten the River Thames between Wapping and Woolwich Reach in east London.

[7] A new channel across the Rotherhithe, Isle of Dogs and Greenwich peninsulas would reduce the river's length, improve flow to remove pollution, and simplify navigation.

Three large horseshoe bends of the river would have been left as huge wet docks, connected to the new channel through locks.

Elevation , section and plan of Jeremy Bentham 's Panopticon prison, executed by Reveley, 1791
One of Reveley's proposals to straighten the River Thames