Background
William Owen was born in Latchford, Warrington.
William Owen was born in Latchford, Warrington.
Owen is best known for his collaboration with William Lever in the creation of the soap-making factory and associated model village at in the Wirral Peninsula (then in Cheshire, now in Merseyside). Here he designed the factory, many of the workers" houses, public buildings and the church. On his own, or in partnership, Owen designed houses, churches, banks, public houses, an infirmary, a school, and a concert hall.
He trained as an architect under John Lowe in Manchester, becoming his assistant, and later was assistant to James Radford.
He then travelled in Europe before establishing a practice in Warrington in 1869. The partnership also had an office in Manchester.
Owen"s work was confined to Northwest England. His more notable designs include churches in Altrincham, Greater Manchester, and Warrington, buildings for Parr"s Bank in Southport, Merseyside, and Wigan, Greater Manchester, and the Parr Hall, a concert hall in Warrington.
In 1886 William Lever established a soap factory in Warrington.
The site proved to be too small for his plans and the rent was too high Lever and Owen together travelled around the area looking for a larger and more suitable site. They settled on a marshy area near Bromborough Pool in the Wirral Peninsula.
Here they planned to build a larger factory and the model village that was to become Building the factory began in 1888, followed by the first houses in the next year, the first 28 of which were designed by Owen.
Owen then went on to design more houses and other buildings in the village, initially on his own, and later with Segar.