W Braxton Sinclair

William C Braxton Sinclair RE FRIBA (who styled himself W Braxton Sinclair) was a British architect who worked in the 19th and 20th centuries in the United Kingdom and in Burma, where he was a captain in the Royal Engineers. He was also a local historian.

Army service
Sinclair joined the 6th Battalion of The Essex Regimentand was promoted to lieutenant in 1910. As lieutenant, he served with the regiment in the First World War and as a captain in the Royal Engineers in the Second World War. Three photographs associated with his war service are held at the National Army Museum.

Works
His works include:
 * 8 Turner Close, Hampstead Garden Suburb (1920–23), which was listed Grade II in 1970
 * First Church of Christ Scientist, Southport, Lancashire, 1924–33, now demolished
 * First Church of Christ Scientist, Bromley (1928–33) at 54B Widmore Road, Bromley, London, which is Grade II listed. The Bromley Civic Society describes it as "an amazing fusion of classicism and Art Deco based on the design of a Roman tomb which accounts for the addition of a Mediterranean cypress tree as part of the integral landscaping. Special features are the classical pilasters in varying thicknesses of brick, repeated in the window tracery and the design of the carved wooden doors. Small hand-made bricks are used throughout."
 * The Tudor-style gatehouse (1939) at the entrance to Dunsborough Park in Ripley, Surrey
 * First Church of Christ, Scientist, Richmond (1939–53) at Sheen Road, Richmond, London
 * Huddersfield House (1958–59) at 199–203 Strand, London WC2

In 1913 he restored the tower at Holy Cross Church in Greenford, north-west London.

In 1950 he extended the neo-Georgian flats that had been built in 1937 in Chesterfield Gardens in Greenwich.

His design of a sophisticated air raid shelter for flats at Queen's Gate, in South Kensington, London, was published in The Builder in October 1938.

Publications

 * "The monasteries of Pagan I" in Journal of the Burma Research Society, vol.10, 1920

While briefly stationed in York during the Second World War, Sinclair, who was a Georgian Group member, wrote notes which, revised by the Society's architects, became the first publication of the York Georgian Society, Some Hints on the Maintenance and Repair of 17th and 18th Century Premises (1945).

Legacy
Sinclair bequeathed, to the Victoria and Albert Museum, four Burmese pictorial textile hangings known as kalagas. The museum also holds three watercolours by Sinclair, two showing Burmese landscapes and one of a Burmese pagoda. After his death Mrs Mary Simpson donated on his behalf, to the Victoria and Albert Museum, an 18th- or 19th-century wooden and lacquered sculpted figure of the Buddha Shakyamuni.