NameWilliam Jupp
Birthabt 1770, London, England
Deathabt 1839
FatherWilliam Jupp (~1734-1788)
MotherMary Webb (1744-~1809)
Misc. Notes
name from the will of Richard Jupp - transcribed:
Richard Jupp (the father) Will
PG1
I Richard Jupp of ... Lyon Street in the parish of Saint Colin? in Clerkenwell in the county of ... make and publish this to be my last will and testament that is to say I give to my sister Sarah Jupp ... annuity or yearly sum of ten pounds during her life and to my sister Carrinah Porter ... annuity or yerly sum of ten pounds during her life the said ... annuities to be paid to my said sisters ... by two equal half yearly payments on the fifth day of april and the tenth day of october in every year ... that oa all ... and without any ... or abatement whatsoever the first half yearly payment of this said ... annuities to begin and be made on the first of ... days of payments as shall ... after my death and I direct that my executors ... after ... shall by and from my personal estate purchase ... three per cent ... annuities the .... of will from .... and pay this said ... annuities given to my sisters as aforesaid and that they my said executors shall stand ... of ... Bank annuities in trust to pay and apply the yearly interest and dividends thereof as .... shall be to ... payable in .... of the said annuities resoectively and after ..... I ... of my said sister Sarah Jupp ... of the said Bank annuities and after the ... of my said sister Carrinah Porter? the other ... thereof shall respectively fall into the .... part of my personal estate and effects and go as ... is ... in after disposed of also ... my sons Richard Jupp and William Jupp fifty pounds ... to be paid to them respectively within three calender months ... after my death also I give to my grandson Richard Webb Jupp oldest son of my said son William Jupp ... hundred pounds and to my grandson William Jupp ... son of my said son William Jupp one hundred pounds the said .... to my said grandsons to be paid to them respectively when they shall respectively attain the age of twenty six years without any interest for the same in the mean time and in ... my said grandsons or either of them shall die before me or before they shall respectively attain this said age then I direct that this said ..... or .... so given to him or them so .... shall fall into the residuary part of my
PG2
personal estate and efects and go as ... after disposed of also I give and bequeath to my daughter Sarah Jupp for her own use all my household goods plate ... books furniture and implements of household and all my cloathes and wearing apparel whatsoever and also all my watches rugs and ... and my chariot and horses also I give and bequeath to Samuel Smith of Chapham in the county of Surrey Esquire and my said son William Jupp four thousand pounds of lawful .. of Great Britain in trust to .... the same ... Government

Bapt JUPP London, England, Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1538-1812; City of London > St Nicholas Olave > 1704-1812 > 22; image 22 of 61 @ancestry.com; Source Citation: London Metropolitan Archives, St Nicholas Olave, Composite register: baptisms 1704 - 1812, marriages 1705 - 1720, burials 1704 - 1812, P69/NIC3/A/MS05696.
Sophia Sarah 12 may 1766
Richard Webb 13 aug 1767
Mary sep 1768
Charlotte Jupp 26 oct 1769
next page image 23 of 61
william 5 dec 1770
Robert 12 october 1772
George Thomas 5 may 1774

WILLIAM JUPP
Event(s): Christening: 05 DEC 1770  Saint Nicholas Olave, London, London, England
Parents: 
Father: WILLIAM JUPP  
Mother: MARY
Messages: Extracted birth or christening record for the locality listed in the record. The source records are usually arranged chronologically by the birth or christening date.
Source Information:
Batch No.: C022672
Dates: 1704 - 1812
Source Call No.: 0374515
Type: Film 
Printout Call No.: 6903724
Type: Film 
Sheet: 00

News1797 WilliamJupp Surveyor.pdf
The Times (London, Greater London, England)
01 Nov 1797, Wed
Page 3
On Friday last, tyhe Merchant Taylors’ Company appoited Mr William Jupp their Surveyor, in the room of his Uncle, Richard Jupp Esq, who has resigned.

MarrAnnouncement JuppBrewer1798.pdf
The Evening Mail (London, Greater London, England) @newspapers.com
30 Mar 1798, Fri
Page 4
MARRIED
On Thursday morning at Queen’s Square Chapel, Mr William Jupp of New Ormond STreet to Miss Matilda Brewer of Ludgate Hill

News1798 WilliamJupp Surveyor.pdf
The Times (London, Greater London, England) @newspapers.com
26 Jun 1798, Tue
Page 3
“The Worshipful Company of Ironmongers have been pleased unanimously to elect Mr William Jupp of New Ormond Street, their Surveyor, in the stead of his uncle, Richard Jupp Esq., who has resigned”

Dictionary of National Biography, Volumes 1-20, 22 Supplement (Vol· 22) > Biographies > Page 707 of 1350 @ancestry.com; Source Information: Ancestry.com. Dictionary of National Biography, Volumes 1-20, 22 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010. This collection was indexed by Ancestry World Archives Project contributors.
Original data: Stephen, Sir Leslie, ed. Dictionary of National Biography, 1921–1922. Volumes 1–20, 22. London, England: Oxford University Press, 1921–1922.
Name: Richard Webb Jupp
Birth Date: 1767
Death Date: 1852
Father's Name: William Jupp

From Google Books:
A biographical dictionary of British architects, 1600-1840
By Howard Colvin, Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art
Edition: 4, illustrated
Published by Yale University Press, 2008
ISBN 0300125089, 9780300125085
1334 pages
p599 Jupp, William (1734-1788),
was one of the sons of Richard Jupp, Master of the Carpenters’ Company in 1768, to whom he was apprenticed, being made free of the company in 1753. He exhibited two designs for gentlemen’s seats at the Society of Artists ib 1763 and 1764, and an unexecuted design for a county house signed by him was at the Platt Hall Gallery, Rusholme, Manchester. He rebuilt the LONDEN TAVERN, BISHOPSGATE STREET WITHIN (dem 1876) after its destruction by fire in 1765. The entrance hall and principal staircase of CARPENTERS’ HALL, LONDON WALL,were erected to his designs, c 1780. The entrance hall was decorated in stucco work with figures and implements emblamatic of carpentry, and with the heads of Vitruvius, Palladio, Inigo Jones and Wren, executed by Bacon. The archway forming the entrance to the street was also designed by Jupp, with a bust of Inigo Jones by Bacon on the keystone. The staircase was damaged by fire in 1849 and the Hall itself was demolished in 1876. Both at Carpenters’ Hall and at the London Tavern, Jupp appears to have been assisted by William Newton, who certainly designed the Eating-Room and Ballroom of the latter building. Jupp was a warden of the Carpenters’ Company in 1781 and died on 16 November 1788. He was the father of Willam Jupp (d 1839) and of Richard Webb Jupp, who was Clerk to the Carpenters’ Company from 1796 to 1852. The latter’s son, Edward Basil Jupp, FSA (1812-1877), Clerk to the same company from 1852 to 1877, was the author of an Historical Account of the Worshipful Company of Carpenters, 1848, 2nd ed 1887, from which the above particulars are largely derived. [APSD; ODNB; CHL Woodd, Pedigrees and Memorials of the Family of Woodd and the Family of Jupp, privately printed 1875, Carpenters’ Company Records in Guildhall Library, London, MS 4335/4]
Jupp, William (1770-1839) was the younger son of William Jupp (d 1788). He was Master of the Carpenters’ Company in 1831. He exhibited at the Royal Academy from 1794 to 1804, including a design for a room at the “Star and Garter” Hotel at Richmond, Surrey (1803). He was architect and surveyor to the Skinners’, Merchant Taylors’, Ironmongers’ and Apothecaries’ Companies, and was also District Supervisor for Limehouse, Blackwall, Wapping, Mile End Old Town, Poplar and Ratcliff. In 1801-3 he carried out alterations to SKINNERS HALL, DOWGATE HILL [JF Wadmore, Account of the Skinners’ Company, 1902, 133], and as surveyor to the Merchant Taylors’ Company was presumably the architect of that company’s almshouses at Lee, Kent, erected in 1826. In 1821 he designed for the Revd. John Clayton what was described as “a neat gentleman’s residence” at GREAT GAINS, UPMINSTER, ESSEX [accounts in Essex RO, D/DU/651/149]
[APSD; EB Jupp, Historical Account of the Company of Carpenters, 1887]

Article: M. H. Port, ‘Jupp, Richard (1728–1799)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2011 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/15169, accessed 23 May 2013]:
Richard Jupp (1728–1799): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/15169
William Jupp the elder (1734–1788): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/15171
William Jupp the younger (1770–1839): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/15172
Richard Webb Jupp (1767–1852): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/15170
Edward Basil Jupp (1812–1877): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/15168
His brother, William Jupp the elder (1734–1788), architect, born in London, was likewise apprenticed to their father. He was made free of the Carpenters' Company in 1753, and became a warden in 1781. He exhibited country house designs at the Society of Artists in 1763 and 1764, but his principal works were in the City of London. He rebuilt the London tavern, Bishopsgate Street Within (dem. 1876), after a fire in 1765, and was employed in making plans for the Carpenters' Company's Stratford estate (1769), and improvements to their London Wall property (1777 and c.1784). About 1780 he designed the entrance hall and staircase of Carpenters' Hall, London Wall (dem. 1876). He married Mary Webb (c.1745–1809) in 1765; they had five sons and five daughters. He died at his house in St Clement, Eastcheap, London, on 16 November 1788.
William Jupp's son William Jupp the younger (1770–1839), architect, born in the parish of St Nicholas Olave, exploited his family connections, becoming architect and surveyor to four City companies—the Skinners' (altering their hall in Dowgate Hill in 1801–3), the Merchant Taylors' (building almshouses at Lee, Kent, in 1826), the Ironmongers', and the Apothecaries'. He was also district surveyor for several East End districts. In 1821 he designed a house at Great Gains, Upminster, Essex, for the Revd John Clayton. He was master of the Carpenters' Company in 1831. About 1798 he married Matilda (fl. c.1780–1802), who predeceased him, leaving three daughters. He died at Upper Clapton, Middlesex, on 30 April 1839.

-http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=65156
'Windmill Street', Survey of London: volume 21: The parish of St Pancras part 3: Tottenham Court Road & neighbourhood (1949), pp. 27.
XLI—WINDMILL STREET
This street which was commenced in 1723 took its name from the mill shown in the manorial map in St. Pancras, Part II. In Rocque's Map of London (1746) can be seen the first building of the Middlesex County Hospital (1745–6) which stood on the south side of the street until it was moved to its present site at the corner of Cleveland Street and Mortimer Street. St. Pancras Female Charity School was established at No. 12 (south side), where Nicholas Marcey was rated for the school in 1770. It was removed to its present site in Hampstead Road in 1790.
Inhabitants:
No. 17. 1818, William Jupp, probably William Jupp, the younger, (d. 1839), architect, son of William Jupp, architect, who designed the entrance hall to the Carpenters' Company, and nephew of Richard Jupp, architect to the East India Company. He was surveyor to the Skinners, Merchant Taylors, Ironmongers and Apothecaries Companies
Spouses
Last Modified 19 Oct 2018Created 25 May 2020 using Reunion for Macintosh