Background
Born in Larbert, Stirlingshire, he was the only son of Doctor Arthur Mitchell and Margaret Hay Houston.
Born in Larbert, Stirlingshire, he was the only son of Doctor Arthur Mitchell and Margaret Hay Houston.
After private tutoring, Sydney Mitchell attended Edinburgh University, and completed his training in the office of Robert Rowand Anderson, where he was articled from 1878 to 1883.
He designed a large number of bank branches, country houses, churches and church halls. His most significant commissions include the housing developments at Well Court and Ramsay Garden, both in Edinburgh. Doctor Mitchell served as Commissioner for the Board of Lunacy for Scotland, Chairman of the Scottish Life Assurance Company, President of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, and was a director of the Commercial Bank of Scotland.
From being an apprentice, Mitchell went straight into professional practice in 1883, utilising family contacts to gain commissions, and having a very prestigious office bought with his family"s wealth at 122 George Street.
George Wilson, whom he had worked with at the office of Robert Rowand Anderson, came with him as his assistant, despite being 12 years his senior. They had a lifelong relationship.
Their first commission came in 1883, for the proprietor of The Scotsman newspaper, John Ritchie Findlay, whose home, 3 Rothesay Terrace, he remodelled. Another significant early commission from Findlay was for Well Court, a workers" housing development in Dean Village, Edinburgh, which he worked on between 1883 and 1886.
The same year, Mitchell undertook work for the Commercial Bank, and in 1884 was appointed architect to the Bank, taking over from David Rhind who had retired in 1881.
This brought him a steady stream of work, and he designed or remodelled over 20 branches over the following years. In 1885, Mitchell was engaged to restore Edinburgh"s Mercat Cross. This led to a commission to recreate several of Edinburgh"s demolished medieval buildings, including the Netherbow, as part of the Edinburgh Exhibition of 1886.
He continued to draw on the Scots Renaissance style, which he had employed at Well Court, in such projects as Duntreath Castle (1890).
Practicing as Sydney Mitchell & Wilson, they were appointed by the Board of Lunacy in Scotland (due to Mitchell"s fathers position as Director), with commissions for Craighouse in Edinburgh, the Crichton Royal Institution in Dumfries, Melrose Asylum, and the Royal Victoria Hospital in Edinburgh. Later works, such as Ramsay Garden close to Edinburgh Castle, incorporated more Arts & Crafts influences.
In 1900 his office was at 13 Young Street in Edinburgh"s New Town and he was living slightly to the north, in a Georgian building at 34 Drummond Place. George Wilson retired in 1907, and Sydney Mitchell sold the practice around 1910.
He was buried in the family plot at Rosebank Cemetery in Edinburgh.
The grave lies on the north-facing retaining wall in the centre of the cemetery.