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Alexander Jackson Davis

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Alexander Jackson Davis
Detail of Davis portrait ca. 1855
Born(1803-07-24)July 24, 1803
New York City, U.S.
DiedJanuary 14, 1892(1892-01-14)(aged 88)
OccupationArchitect
Practice1828–1884
BuildingsNorth Carolina State Capitol
U.S. Customs House
Dutch Reformed Church
Lyndhurst
Wadsworth Atheneum
Loudoun
Grace Hill
Hurst-Pierrepont
ProjectsMontgomery Place
Oliver Bronson House
Virginia Military Institute
Llewellyn Park
Lather's Woods
Federal Hall National Memorial,New York City
Front facade ofLyndhurst,1838 and 1864
Blandwood Mansionis an example ofItalianatedesign by Davis. 1844 inGreensboro, North Carolina
Davis's ItalianatevillaWinyah Park"inNew Rochelle, New York(photo 1909)
”Tudor Villa "in New Rochelle, New York (photo 1909)
Whitby Castle in winter (photo 2010)
Gothic villa, watercolor. A faculty residence on the Parade Ground,Virginia Military Institute,1850s
Wadsworth Atheneum,Hartford, Connecticut,1842
Yale College Secret Society Skull & Bones, attribution either A. J. Davis orHenry Austin(1804–1891)
Yale Skull & Bones' tomb showing A. J. Davis' towers salvaged from his Yale Alumni Hall (1851–1853) at right rear

Alexander Jackson Davis(July 24, 1803 – January 14, 1892) was an American architect known particularly for his association with theGothic Revivalstyle.

Education

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Davis was born in New York City and studied at the American Academy of Fine Arts,[1]the New-York Drawing Association, and from the antique casts of theNational Academy of Design.Dropping out of school, he became alithographerand from 1826 he worked as a draftsman for Josiah R. Brady, a New York architect who was an early exponent of theGothic Revival style.Brady's Gothic 1824 St. Luke's Episcopal Church is the oldest surviving structure inRochester, New York.[2]

Career

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Partnership with Ithiel Town

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Davis made a first independent career as an architectural illustrator in the 1820s,[1]but his friends, especially painterJohn Trumbull,convinced him to turn his hand to designing buildings. Picturesque siting, massing and contrasts remained essential to his work, even when he was building in aClassicalstyle. In 1826, Davis began working in the office ofIthiel Townand Martin E. Thompson, the most prestigious architectural firm of theGreek Revival.In the office Davis had access to the best architectural library in the country, in a congenial atmosphere where he gained a thorough grounding. They designed Sachem's Wood in New Haven, Connecticut, which was built from 1820 to 1830.[3][4]

From 1829, in partnership with Town, Davis formed the first recognizably modern architectural office and designed many late Classical buildings, including some of public prominence. In Washington, Davis designed the Executive Department offices and withRobert Millsthe firstPatent Office building(1834–1836).[citation needed]He also designed theCustom House of New York City(1833–1842).Bridgeport City Hall,constructed in 1853 and 1854, is a later government building Davis designed in the Classical style.

A series of consultations over state capitols followed, none apparently built entirely as Davis planned: theIndiana State House,[1]Indianapolis (1831–1835), elicited calls for his advice and designs in building other state capitols in the 1830s:North Carolina's(1833–1840, with local architect David Paton),[1]theIllinois State Capitol,[1]often attributed entirely to the Springfield, Illinois architectJohn F. Rague,who was at work on the Iowa State Capitol at the same time, and in 1839, the committee responsible for commissioning a design for theOhio Statehouseasked his advice. The resulting capitol in Columbus, Ohio, often attributed to theHudson River SchoolpainterThomas Coleconsulting with Davis andIthiel Town,[5]has a stark GreekDoric ordercolonnadeacross a recessed entrance, flanked by recessed window bays that continue the rhythm of the centralportico,all under a unique drum capped by a low saucer dome. With Town's partner James Dakin, he designed the noble colossalCorinthian orderof theGreek Revival"Colonnade Row"on New York's Lafayette Street, the very first apartments designed for the prosperous American middle class (1833, half still standing). Two years after its completion, Davis was hired to design theDutch Reformed Churchupriver in Newburgh, inspired by theTemple of Poseidon,both positioned for the viewing of maritime travelers. He continued in partnership with Town until shortly before Town's death in 1844.

In 1831, he was elected an associate member of the National Academy. From 1835, Davis began work on his only publication,Rural Residences,the first pattern book for picturesque residences in a domesticatedGothic Revivalstyle, which could be executed in carpentry, and also containing the first of theItalianate style"Tuscan" villas, flat-roofed with wide overhanging eaves and picturesque corner towers. Unfortunately, thePanic of 1837cut short his plans for a series of like volumes, but Davis soon formed a partnership withAndrew Jackson Downing,illustrating his widely read books.

Additions toVesper Cliffwere built in 1834.[6]

Country residences (1840 - 1860)

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The 1840s and 1850s were Davis's two most fruitful decades as a designer of country houses. His villa"Lyndhurst"atTarrytown, New York,is his most famous house. Many of his villas were built in the scenicHudson River Valley—where his style informed the vernacularHudson River Bracketedthat gaveEdith Whartona title for a novel[7]—but Davis sent plans and specifications to clients as far afield as Indiana. Around 1850, he designedSharswood Plantationfor the VirginianplanterNathaniel Crenshaw Miller. He designedBlandwood,the 1846 home of GovernorJohn Motley Moreheadthat stands as America's earliest Italianate Tuscan Villa.[citation needed]Innovative interior features, including his designs formantelsandsideboards,were also widely imitated in the trade. Other influential interior details include pocket shutters at windows,bay windows,and mirrored surfaces to reflect natural light. TheGreek RevivalstyleWilliam Walsh Housewas built atAlbany, New York,andGothic RevivalstyleBelmeadwas built nearPowhatan, Virginia,in 1845.[8]

Two smaller but well known structures designed by Davis include one built forJohn Cox Stevensin 1845; Stevens was the firstCommodoreof theNew York Yacht Cluband the smallCarpenter Gothicbuilding on his property near Hoboken was given to NYYC to be used as its first clubhouse. This building, fondly called "Station 10", still exists and can be found in Newport. Davis built a similar pavilion for his colleague and fellow NYYC founder,John Clarkson Jay,on Jay's Long Island Sound waterfront property inRye, New York,in 1849. Although this building was taken down in the 1950s, the original setting and garden where it was once located is part of aNational Historic Landmarksite and open to the public.

Inspired in part by friendAndrew Jackson Downing,Davis constructed several Gothic Revival cottage-style homes inCentral New York,including the 1852-completedReuel E. Smith House,which is included in theNational Register of Historic Places.

In 1851, Davis completedWinyah Park,one of approximately eighteen or more Italianate houses he designed in the 1850s. Winyah was built for Richard Lathers, who had studied architecture with Davis in New York in the 1830s. It was situated on Lathers's estate in the town ofNew RochelleinWestchester County,New York. For this design Davis won the first architectural prize at the New York World's Fair of 1853–1854.[9][10]He used its most striking feature, two adjacent yet contrasting towers, in a much larger house named Grace Hill, built in Brooklyn between 1853 and 1854. In both Winyah and Grace Hill, broad octagonal towers serve as visual anchors for the taller square towers. Lathers later employed Davis to design four additional "investment houses" on his property which became known as"Lathers's Hill".The homes included two Gothic cottages and "Tudor Villa" constructed in 1858, and "Pointed Villa" constructed in 1859. In 1890, the artistFrederic Remingtonpurchased one of these cottages from which he created his estate "Endion", which served as the studio for most of his artistic career.[11]

The success of "Winyah Park" and "Lathers's Hill" generated other important commissions for Davis in New Rochelle, including two cottage-villas,WildcliffandSans Souci,which he designed for members of a prominent Davenport family. Both homes feature Davis's signature centralgable.Another extant Gothic Revival commission is Whitby Castle, designed in 1852 for Davis' lifelong friend William Chapman. The building is part of theBoston Post Road Historic District (Rye, New York)and retains many original features. Today it is used as the clubhouse for theRye Golf Club.

Davis was invited to become a member of theAmerican Institute of Architectsshortly after its founding in 1857.[12]In the late 1850s, Davis worked with the entrepreneur Llewellyn S. Haskell to createLlewellyn ParkinWest Orange, New Jersey,a garden suburb that was one of the first planned residential communities in the United States.[13]

Davis designed buildings for theUniversity of Michiganin 1838, and in the 1840s he designed buildings for theUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.At theVirginia Military Institute,Jackson's designs from 1848 through the 1850s created the first entirelyGothic revivalcollege campus, built in brick andstuccoedto imitate stone.[14]Davis's plan for the Barracks quadrangle was interrupted by theCivil War;it was sympathetically completed to designs ofBertram Goodhuein the early 20th century.[15]

Davis is credited with coining the term "Collegiate Gothic",documented in a handwritten description of his own" English Collegiate Gothic Mansion "of 1853 for the Harrals of Bridgeport, Connecticut.[16][17]

He married Margaret Beale in 1853 and had two children.

Declining patronage and retirement (1860–1892)

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With the onset ofCivil Warin 1861, patronage in house building dried up, and after the war, new styles unsympathetic to Davis's nature were in vogue. In 1867, he designed theHurst-Pierrepont Estate.[18]In 1878, Davis closed his office. He built little in the last thirty years of his life, but spent his easy retirement in West Orange drawing plans for grandiose schemes that he never expected to build, and selecting and ordering his designs and papers, by which he was determined to be remembered. They are shared by four New York institutions: theAvery Architectural and Fine Arts LibraryatColumbia University,theNew York Public Library,theNew-York Historical Society,and theMetropolitan Museum of Art.A further collection of Davis material has been assembled at theWinterthur Museum, Garden and Library.Davis is interred inBloomfield CemeteryinBloomfield, New Jersey.[19]

Selected works

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See also

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References

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  1. ^abcde"United States Capitol, Washington, D.C.: East Front Elevation, Rendering".World Digital Library.Retrieved13 February2013.
  2. ^"Monroe County (NY) Library System - Pathfinders - Architecture - Every Building Tells a Story".www.rochester.lib.ny.us.Archived fromthe originalon 21 February 2006.Retrieved28 March2018.
  3. ^"Wooded Path".Daily Nutmeg.2020-06-08.Retrieved2023-05-15.
  4. ^Historic American Buildings Survey, creator (1933-01-01)."Sachem's Wood, Hillhouse Avenue, New Haven, New Haven County, CT".Library of Congress.Retrieved2023-05-15.
  5. ^"Images of Ohio State House, Columbus, Ohio, by Alexander Jackson Davis".www.bluffton.edu.Retrieved28 March2018.
  6. ^William E. Krattinger (n.d.)."National Register of Historic Places Registration: Vesper Cliff".New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation.Archived fromthe originalon 2015-09-24.Retrieved2009-11-20.See also:"Accompanying 15 photos".Archived fromthe originalon 2016-03-03.Retrieved2009-11-26.
  7. ^"Archived item".Archived fromthe originalon 2007-10-06.Retrieved2005-06-06.
  8. ^"National Register Information System".National Register of Historic Places.National Park Service.March 13, 2009.
  9. ^Society, South Carolina Historical (28 March 2018)."This discursive biographical sketch of Colonel Richard Lathers, 1841-1902: was compiled as required for honorary membership in Post 509, Grand Army of the Republic..."J.B. Lippincott.Retrieved28 March2018– via Google Books.
  10. ^Edwards, Lee M. (1986).Domestic Bliss: Family Life in American Painting, 1840-1910.Hudson River Museum.
  11. ^Architectural Record.McGraw-Hill. 1909.
  12. ^"History of The American Institute of Architects".American Institute of Architects.Archivedfrom the original on 13 September 2008.Retrieved2008-09-24.
  13. ^W. Hawkins Ferry (1968).The Buildings of Detroit A History.Wayne State University Press.ISBN978-0-8143-1665-8.
  14. ^"Clayton Hall, Virginia Military Institute Barracks, by Alexander Jackson Davis".homepages.bluffton.edu.Retrieved2023-04-30.
  15. ^"Barracks History Timeline - VMI Archives - Virginia Military Institute".www.vmi.edu.Retrieved28 March2018.
  16. ^Truettner, Julia M. (31 December 2002).Aspirations for Excellence: Alexander Jackson Davis and the First Campus Plan for the University of Michigan, 1838.University of Michigan Press. p. 49.ISBN0472112775.Retrieved16 March2018.
  17. ^Golovin, Anne Castrodale."Bridgeport's Gothic Ornament The Harral-Wheeler House"(PDF).Smithsonian Institution.Smithsonian Institution Press.Retrieved16 March2018.
  18. ^Elise M. Barry (April 1982)."National Register of Historic Places Registration: Hurst-Pierrepont Estate".New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation.Archived fromthe originalon 2012-10-17.Retrieved2010-11-21.
  19. ^"NJ Historical Trust".Archived fromthe originalon 2021-06-02.Retrieved2019-02-17.
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Further reading

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