Habershon & Fawckner or Habershon, Pite & Fawckner was a British architectural practice active in England and Wales from the 1860s, particularly in Cardiff and the South Wales area. They had had offices in London, Cardiff and Newport, designing a large number of houses, villas and non-conformist chapels.
Mansion House (originally The Grove), Cardiff (1896)
Habershon Street, Splott, Cardiff, named after William Habershon
Summerhill Baptist Church, Albert Avenue, Newport
St Michael and All Angels Church, Partridge Green (1890)
Matthew Edward Habershon, known as Edward Habershon, was an architect practising in London and south-east England. He specialised in neo-gothic buildings, especially churches and chapels. With his brother W.G. Habershon he designed St John the Baptist's Church, Hove, now a Grade II building. With E.P.L. Brock he designed a number of churches including St Leonards-on-Sea Congregational Church, also listed at Grade II. He designed St Andrews church in Hastings, where Robert Tressell's large mural was created. In 1862 he was involved in the relocation of London's burial grounds, moving more than one thousand hundredweight of human remains.
St Andrews Church, Queen Street, Hastings, built 1869
St John the Baptist, Hove, 1852–1854
Duncrub House
St Leonards-on-Sea with spire missing