William H. White (architect)

[2][3] On the completion of his articles in London with George Morgan, he crossed the Channel, and, after a short term in the office of a French architect, established himself in Paris.

[4] Following the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War, White returned to Britain and found a new job in India through his father's connections, entering the Public Works Department of the Indian Government.

He designed several important buildings in India, including the Court of Small Causes at Calcutta (illustrated in The Builder, 23 March 1878), the Monument to Chief Justice Sir John Norman (assassinated 1871), and the Presidency College.

About this time he was appointed the Examiner in Architecture at the Royal Indian Engineering College, Cooper's Hill, a post be occupied for about two years.

White gained the post, and served his time eighteen years—an era in the progress of the Institute marked by increased influence at home and abroad, and a necessarily more extended system of administration.

William Henry White 1897 RIBA Journal