Winchester’s hidden heritage preserved in 400-drawing archive gift
The Hampshire Record Office has acquired a 50-year collection of original architectural drawings by Andrew Rutter, Winchester’s first conservation officer, capturing the city’s evolving skyline and intimate details now available to the public.
Hampshire Record Office has taken possession of a trove of 417 original drawings by Andrew Rutter, the city’s pioneering conservation officer, documenting Winchester’s architectural soul from 1972 to 2020. The donation arrives as a cultural milestone, offering unprecedented glimpses into historic interiors, rooftop perspectives, and fading landmarks now lost to redevelopment.
Rutter’s meticulous sketches—ranging from grand civic buildings to tucked-away fireplaces in private homes—span nearly five decades of civic life. The collection was formally handed over on March 6 at the Hampshire Record Office, with Rutter absent due to health reasons but represented by his sons Paul and Mark, alongside historian Dr. Susan Wilson and archivist Sarah Lewin.
Key Points
- ✅ 417 original drawings donated to Hampshire Record Office
- ⚡ Spans 48 years, from 1972 to 2020
- 💡 Documents private interiors, rooftop views, and historic details
Among the attendees was Bob Wallbridge, current chairman of the City of Winchester Trust, whose organisation has long championed the preservation of Rutter’s work. Wallbridge described the donation as “a gift not just to Winchester today, but to every future generation who will walk these streets and wonder what once stood here.”
📋 By The Numbers
- 417 — Original pencil and ink drawings donated
- 18 — Recorded oral history interviews with Rutter integrated into catalogue
- 48 — Years covered by the collection
Sir Donald Insall, a leading conservation architect and longtime colleague of Rutter, contributed the catalogue’s foreword. His words echo the sentiment felt by many: “These are not merely drawings; they are love letters to a city, each line a testament to Andrew’s unwavering commitment to preserving Winchester’s identity.”
| Aspect | Rutter’s Drawings | Conventional Surveys |
|---|---|---|
| Perspective | Human-scale, intimate views of interiors and hidden corners | Typically aerial or street-level only |
| Scope | Spans 50 years, including structures later demolished | Often captures only current or recent state |
| Detail | Includes fireplaces, staircases, and decorative plasterwork | Limited to structural outlines |
Mark Rutter and Dr. Wilson compiled Winchester Tradition and Change, a digital catalogue that pairs each drawing with archival context, including Rutter’s own reflections from his time as conservation officer. The catalogue also features panoramic photographs by Mark Rutter, presenting a dual artistic vision of the city’s evolution.
💡 Pro Tip
Researchers and local historians should prioritise the catalogue’s oral history section—Rutter’s spoken recollections of 1970s planning battles and grassroots campaigns offer oral snapshots no drawing can provide.
The collection’s preservation was supported by City of Winchester Trust funding, which enabled high-resolution photography and printing of 150 A3-size reproductions. These will be accessible alongside the originals at Hampshire Record Office, ensuring both scholars and casual visitors can study them firsthand.
- 📊 The catalogue is thematically organised by location and era, allowing users to track changes in a single street over decades.
- 🔍 Some drawings include handwritten notes with dates, names of residents, or planning decisions—clues that could unlock new local histories.
- ⚠️ While the collection is extensive, it does not include every demolished building; gaps exist due to private refusals or inaccessible sites.
Rutter, now in his late 80s, expressed his hope in a recorded message played during the handover: “I drew what I loved, and now others can love it too—just as it was.” His family and collaborators have ensured his legacy endures not as a museum piece, but as an active tool for understanding, debate, and pride in Winchester’s layered past.