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James Renwick, Jr.

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James Renwick, Jr.

James Renwick, Jr. (b. November 11, 1818, Bloomingdale, New York - d. June 23, 1895, New York City, United States), was a well-known American architect in the 19th-century. The Encyclopedia of American Architecture calls him "one of the most successful American architects of his time."

He was born into a wealthy and well-educated family. His mother, Margaret Brevoort, wealthy and socially prominent, was from a well-established New York family. His father, James Renwick, was an engineer and professor of natural philosophy at Columbia College, now Columbia University. His two brothers were also engineers.

Renwick was not formally trained as an architect. His ability and interest in building design were nurtured through his cultivated background, which granted him early exposure to travel, and through a broad cultural education that included architectural history. He learned the skills from his father. He studied engineering at Columbia, entering at age twelve and graduating in 1836. He received an M.A. three years later. On graduating he took a position as structural engineer with the Erie Railroad and subsequently served as supervisor on the Croton Reservoir, acting as an assistant engineer on the Croton Aqueduct in New York City.

He received his first major commission, at the age of twenty-five, in 1843 when he won the competition to design Grace Church, an Episcopal church in New York City, which was executed in the English Gothic style. In 1846 Renwick won the competition for the design of the Smithsonian Institution Building in Washington, DC. Built between 1847 and 1855, the many-turreted building, generally referred to as ‘the Castle’, was in the Romanesque style, as requested by the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian, and was built of red sandstone quarried in Seneca, Maryland. It was a major factor in the Gothic revival in the United States.

In 1849, he designed the Free Academy Building (City College of New York), New York City, at Lexington Avenue and 23rd Street. It was likely the first Gothic Revival college building on the East Coast. [1]

Renwick went on to design what is considered his finest achievement, and his best-known building: St. Patrick's Cathedral, New York, on the corner of Fifth Avenue and 51st street. He was chosen as architect for the cathedral in 1853. Construction began in 1858, and the cathedral opened in May of 1879. The cathedral is the most ambitious essay in Gothic that the revival of the style produced, and is a mixture of German, French, and English Gothic influences.

Another building that Renwick designed housed the first Corcoran Gallery of Art ( it is now home to the Smithsonian's Renwick Gallery), in the Second Empire style, in Washington D.C. (1859-1871). Other commissions include the first major buildings on the campus of Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York (1861-1865), including the Main Hall (1860), Saint Bartholomew's Church (1871-1872) in New York City, All Saints' Roman Catholic Church (1882-1893) in Harlem, which was designed in the Victorian Gothic style, the New York Public Library, many mansions for the wealthy of New York, banks, the Charity and Smallpox Hospitals on Roosevelt Island, the main building of the Children's Hospital on Randall's Island, the Inebriate and Lunatic Asylums on Ward's Island, and the former facade of the New York Stock Exchange. He was also supervising architect for the Commission of Charities and Correction.

Several of Renwick's proteges became influential architects in their own right, including Bertram Goodhue, who was a partner of Ralph Adams Cram and designed the Nebraska State Capitol building, and John Wellborn Root.

He is buried in Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York with his wife and next to his father.

[edit] Major buildings designed

[edit] External links

[edit] Source

  • Packard, Robert. (Ed.) (1995). The Encyclopedia of American Architecture (2nd ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill.fr:James Renwick Jr
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