William Botterill and Son was a prominent Kingston upon Hull architectural practice.
William Botterill came to Hull in 1848 as clerk of works for the new Royal Station Hotel and set up an architectural practice in 1851.
[3] The firm's commissions included chapels, houses, banks, offices, industrial buildings:[4][5] commissions included the schools for the Hull School Board, with Botterill initially producing gothic revival designs, and later designs in the Queen Anne revival style by Bilson.
[6] Botterill designed the Newland Park Estate in Hull in 1877, though most of its houses were developed after his death.
[7] Oriel Chambers (now the home of the Wilberforce Institute for the study of Slavery and Emancipation[2]) were built in 1879.