John Buckler. John Buckler, Snr was a British artist and occasional architect who is best remembered for his many drawings of churches and other historic buildings, recording much that has since been altered or destroyed.
Buckler was born in Calbourne, Isle of Wight. At the age of 15 he became clerk to the steward of Magdalen College, Oxford and began a lifelong involvement in the management of the college's London estates.
After several years working on plans for new buildings, around 1801 he became bailiff and collector of rents for Magdalen College in Freeman's Court, London, and in Southwark, and held this post until his retirement in 1849. The work for the college allowed him ample free time, and he also practised as an architect until 1830, designing buildings such as Halkyn Castle, Flint for Robert Grosvenor, 2nd Earl Grosvenor the tower of the church in Theale, Berkshire.
Glastonbury Priory, also called Abbey House, Somerset for J.F. Reeves, and Poll Park, Denbighshire, for William Bagot, 2nd Baron Bagot, an early essay in the half-timbered style, according to Howard Colvin, who suggested that Buckler had a hand in the Gothic remodelling of Blithfield Hall, Staffordshire, for Lord Bagot, 1822-23.
He or his son also designed the church of St. John the Baptist, Pentrobin, now Penymynydd, in the County of Flintshire, 1843, for Sir Stephen Glynne, as one of the first Gothic Revival churc