Edward Strong the Younger


Edward Strong the Younger was an English master mason and architect-builder active in the late 17th and early 18th centuries. He is best known for his work with Sir Christopher Wren and later with Wren’s circle on major works of English Baroque, including St Paul’s Cathedral, Marlborough House, parts of Greenwich Hospital/Palace, and multiple new London parish churches of the post–Great Fire rebuilding programme. He and his father, Edward Strong the Elder, led one of the most important stonemasonry and building enterprises in England at the turn of the 18th century.

Biography

Early life and training

Strong was the eldest son of Edward Strong the Elder, master mason of London, and Martha Beauchamp. He was born in 1676, into a dynasty of Cotswold- and London-based masons supplying high-quality freestone for elite building work.
He was apprenticed to his father and entered the Masons’ Company in July 1691. He became “free” on 18 October 1698. He later served the Company as Warden in 1712 and 1715, and as Master in 1718, marking him as one of the most prominent operative masons in London at the time.
In 1698, immediately after gaining his freedom, Strong undertook what was effectively an early “Grand Tour”: he travelled for about a year through France, the Low Countries, and Italy together with Christopher Wren the Younger. The trip was both technical and cultural — studying continental architecture, urbanism, and ornament at first hand — and it also shows the unusually close personal link between the Strong and Wren families. This kind of extended architectural study abroad was unusual that early, and it helped position Strong the Younger not just as a contractor but as a designer-builder with European literacy in style.

Professional role

Strong the Younger worked in a period when the lines between “architect,” “master mason,” “contractor,” and “site architect” were fluid. He was often described as “mason,” “master mason,” or “mason-contractor,” but his responsibilities went well beyond stonecutting:
  • supervising teams ;
  • procuring and shaping high-quality freestone ;
  • translating drawings into buildable geometry, especially in complex curved or vaulted work;
  • executing — and sometimes designing — towers, spires, lanterns, and other highly visible skyline elements.
Through this role he effectively acted as what we would now call a combination of site architect, construction manager, and specialist contractor for stone structure and ornament.

Association with Sir Christopher Wren

The Strong family had an extraordinary multi-decade partnership with Sir Christopher Wren, beginning with Strong’s uncle Thomas Strong and father Edward Strong the Elder in the aftermath of the Great Fire of London. Wren relied on them for precision stonework and for real-world solutions to ambitious geometry — domes, drums, towers, and spires. Wikipedia+1
Edward Strong the Younger inherited and extended this relationship. He worked with Wren and Wren’s office on:

St Paul’s Cathedral, London (1675–1710; topping-out 1708)

Strong took a leading role in the upper works of the dome, in particular the great stone lantern that crowns the cathedral. He is specifically recorded as “mason of the lantern.” On 26 October 1708, the ceremonial “last stone” of the lantern was laid jointly by Christopher Wren the Younger and Edward Strong. This moment symbolically echoed the laying of the cathedral’s foundation stone in June 1675, which tradition ascribes to Strong’s uncle Thomas Strong.
Strong’s work at St Paul’s included highly technical curved stonework for the lantern and skyline elements — among the most structurally and visually critical parts of the building.

City Churches (“Wren churches”)

He is associated with the construction and/or completion of a number of Wren’s post-Fire churches and their later steeples / spires, where complex Baroque towers were often added a decade or two after the main nave was finished. Examples include St Vedast alias Foster, St Stephen Walbrook, St James Garlickhythe and others.

Greenwich (the riverside royal hospital / palace complex at Greenwich)

Strong was involved in ashlar work and colonnades at Greenwich in the early 18th century, an enormously prestigious state commission. Wikipedia
The Strongs’ long partnership with Wren shows how English Baroque classicism depended not only on a single “architect-genius,” but on a technically sophisticated mason-builder capable of realising it at scale.

Personal life

In 1699, Edward Strong the Younger married Susanna Roberts, daughter of Joseph Roberts, a prominent City “serjeant plumber.” Their marriage further tied the Strongs into London’s specialist building trades. The couple had at least four daughters and a son. The son, also named Edward, died of smallpox at about age 20. Their eldest daughter, Susannah Strong, later married Sir John Strange, who became Master of the Rolls, and they had eleven children, including the diplomat and collector John Strange.
These marriages show that by the early 18th century Strong’s family had moved from purely craft status toward the professional–gentry world.
He died on 10 October 1741.

Known works