History

Sir Ninian Comper

History

The ashes of architect and stained glass designer Sir John Ninian Comper are buried in the north aisle of the nave of Westminster Abbey. The gravestone has a cross at the top and the inscription:

"JOHN NINIAN COMPER KT. ARCHITECT 1864-1960. He designed the windows in this aisle"

In 1907 the Dean of Westminster approached Comper to design a series of eight stained glass windows for the north side of the nave depicting figures of kings associated with the Abbey together with an abbot of Westminster from the same era. These windows form memorials to engineers and scientists Henry Royce, Charles Parsons, John Wolfe Barry, Benjamin Baker, Lord Strathcona and Lord Kelvin. There is also a memorial window to the Royal Army Medical Corps and one to British prisoners of war who died in Germany during the 1914-18 war. He also designed a separate window to John Bunyan in the north transept and a window in the east triforium. In 1932 Comper provided the furnishings for the Warriors chapel in the nave (now St George's chapel).

Comper was born in Aberdeen in Scotland on 10 June 1864, a son of the Revd.John Comper and his wife Ellen (Taylor). His ancestors had lived in Sussex since the Norman conquest and his father had gone to Scotland to teach. Ninian worked as assistant to C.E.Kempe, glass painter, and studied drawing in London before working under G.F.Bodley. A partnership with William Bucknall came later and in 1890 Comper married his sister Grace. They had four sons and two daughters - son Sebastian also became an architect (he designed the furnishings in the Nurses Memorial Chapel in the Abbey and the memorial tablet to Queen Anne Neville). Ninian designed and worked on churches throughout the country and became one of the most influential church architects of his day.

A photo of the gravestone, and of the windows by Comper, can be purchased from Westminster Abbey Library.

Further reading:

Sir Ninian Comper by Anthony Symondson and Stephen Bucknall, 2006.

Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 2004.

The Royal Institute of British Architects hold many of Comper's papers.