George Esslemont Gordon Leith , <small>AADip, Hon. DArch</small> (1885âÂÂ1965) was a South African architect. His work evolved from Edwardian to Modernist, vividly representing stylistic developments typical in architecture during the first half of the 20th century. He is known as one of the masters of the Traditional Style in South Africa and for his classicist designs of official bodies such as banks, town halls and colleges, where he associated himself with the Grand Manner. In the 1930s, he was among the first South Africans to contribute to the 'New Style', before turning to the Modernist form.
Gordon Leith was born in Knysna, Cape Colony, one of 9 children born to George Leith, a teacher turned lawyer, and his wife, Sarah Clark Scott. The couple had moved from Scotland to South Africa in search of a better climate for GeorgeâÂÂs health; they eventually settled in Pretoria. Gordon was sent to Staats Model School, where his classmates included Henk Pierneef, Fanie Eloff and Gerard Moerdijk, with whom Leith would work on several projects over their lifetimes. During the Boer War, Leith studied painting under Frans Oerder, violin under Henri ten Brink and drawing and modelling under Anton van Wouw; Leith was the subject of van Wouw's sculpture 'The Art Student'. In 1902, with the war over, he spent a few months as a draughtsman at the Pretoria Railway Workshops until, in 1903, he was given a position on the architectural staff of the Pretoria Public Works Department. He did so well there that his co-workers convinced his parents to send him to London, to the Architectural Association School of Architecture. From 1905 to 1908, he was the schoolâÂÂs top student and qualified with distinction for his Associateship of the Royal Institute of British Architects. In 1909, he returned to Pretoria.
Leith went back to the Pretoria Public Works Department, working under architects Patrick Eagle and James Cormack, and led a team that prepared plans for a large government complex of buildings, including Houses of Parliament. When it was decided that Cape Town would become the legislative capitol of South Africa, and Pretoria its administrative capitol, Sir Herbert Baker was brought in to plan the Pretoria Administrative Buildings, now known as the Union Buildings. Leith joined Baker's staff and, because of his enormous energy and talent, carried out the greater part of the preparation of the sketch plans, perspectives and detail drawings for the project. In 1912. Baker created the Baker Traveling Scholarship, which allowed promising young architects to study abroad and learn about architecture in other cultures. Leith was its first recipient.
From 1912 to 1914, Leith attended the British School at Rome and the British School at Athens. He spent some time in Britain and returned to South Africa in 1915, working with Baker on the drawings for the Secretariats at Delhi and teaching at the South African School of Mines. In 1916, on the recommendation of then-General Jan Smuts, he was commissioned as a Second Lieutenant in the Royal Field Artillery. In the course of battle in France, he exhibited extreme bravery and was promoted to Captain and awarded the Military Cross; he also survived a gas attack and lived the rest of his life with the effects.
After the 1918 peace, at the request of General Smuts, Leith continued to serve in France as Designing Architect under Baker and Sir Edwin Lutyens at the Imperial War Graves Commission. Working from London, he designed Terlincthun British Cemetery and Calais Southern Cemetery and assisted Lutyens on his memorials. But, with his damaged lungs, Leith needed a better climate. He resigned his commission and returned to South Africa, this time settling in Johannesburg.
Leith settled in the Forest Hill suburb of Johannesburg, first briefly partnering with architect Theo Schaerer and then establishing his own practice in an office shared with Jan Breyer. He received enough commissions that he was able to open an office in Pretoria, which was run by his student, Norman Eaton. In Pretoria, he became a part-time lecturer in design, at Transvaal University College. He also helped Geoffrey Eastcott Pearce establish South AfricaâÂÂs first School of Architecture, which would be incorporated into the University of the Witwatersrand.
Leith was active in the Association of Transvaal Architects and the Natal Institute of Architects, the South African Institute of Architects and the Free State Institute of Architects. In 1946, the University of the Witwatersrand awarded him an honorary Doctorate in Architecture for his services to Architecture.
Leith's first wife was Ethel Mary Cox (1888âÂÂ1974); they wed in England in 1914. They had three daughters and divorced; in 1934, Ethel returned to England with the children. Leith then married a woman known only as Alma Leith. One of Leith's daughters from his first marriage, Sarah Greenaway Leith, eventually known as Sally Miall (1918-2010), became a British rally driver, novelist, and Bletchley Park code-breaker.
Leith was a member of the Scientific and Technical Association in Pretoria, and was a staunch supporter of Jan Smuts and the United National South African Party. He was multi-lingual and a skilled raconteur and mimic, and was well-known for using an Indian motorcycle to zip around Johannesburg to inspect his many building projects.
Leith died shortly before his 78th birthday, following a long period of ill health. He was buried next to his parents in the family plot in the Old Cemetery, Pretoria.