The Phantoscope was a film projection machine, a creation of Charles Francis Jenkins and Thomas Armat . In the early 1890s, Jenkins began creating the projector. He later met Thomas Armat, who provided financial backing and assisted with necessary modifications.
84-563: On September 25, 1895, Jenkins and Armat began the presentation of their completed Phantoscopes at the Cotton States Exposition in Atlanta, Georgia. Their presentation continued for the next eighteen days, during which the increased strain causes conflicts. Tensions escalated when, on October 13, Jenkins borrowed one of their three completed Phantoscopes. He intended to present the invention in his hometown of Indiana, and promised to return
168-529: A "Southern motif" which seems noticeably lacking in the Italian and Spanish-Revival style he used. However, Gilbert gave the exposition a more romantic look than the Atlanta exposition, while also modernizing it with the Mediterranean-style that was, during the 1890s and early 20th-century, in fashion for commercial and residential buildings Rather than Southern plantation architecture, it seems that Gilbert
252-400: A different state. The many elaborate displays reflected a diversity of views spanning the mainstream social and domestic roles of Southern women, such as patriotism and the ideals of traditional motherhood to little-known achievements of women counter to mainstream stereotypes. The Legion of Loyal Women display presented an arrangement of 45 dolls, each one adorned with a small shield showing
336-703: A firm in his name at 1 Broadway in New York City, initially specializing in railroad and public buildings. He said, "It certainly costs no more, often not such much, to design a building that is architecturally correct, of good, quiet contour, the whole effect gained by constructional outlines, in place of the fancy 'ginger-bread' work too often adopted; and with the interior arrangements designed to meet every requirement." Throughout his career, Gilbert also designed apartment buildings, churches, clubs, exhibition buildings, hospitals, hotels, houses, and office buildings. Gilbert did not just design buildings, he also managed
420-486: A gold medal from the Exposition Directors for "the designing and building all of the fifteen principal structures within the limit of time and appropriation." After a family vacation in 1896, William Greene Raoul decided to make Asheville, North Carolina his family's summer home. Getting away from the heat of a Georgia summer may have been one goal. Still, his son Thomas contracted tuberculosis in 1897, and
504-516: A great deal of time on the streets looking at the strange crowds — American Indians, Circassians , Hindus, Japanese, and people from every corner of the globe — who had come as professional midway entertainers or fakirs. The exposition included many exhibits on Minerals and Forestry, Agriculture, Food and Accessories, Machinery and Appliances, Horticulture, Machinery, Manufacturers, Electricity, Fine Arts, Painting and Sculpture, Liberal Arts, Education, and Literature. About 6,000 exhibits were examined by
588-689: A new hotel at the existing Grand Union Hotel site in Ottawa, Canada. This one-million-dollar project was to include 300 hotel rooms. In 1872, Gilbert married Cora Rathbone, daughter of the late Captain John Rathbone, in Brooklyn, New York. He was 19 and she was seventeen or eighteen years older. From its beginning, this was an unhappy marriage. Gilbert was an elder with the University Presbyterian Church in New York City, and later an elder with
672-695: A picture of the "first successful projecting Phantoscope (...) — built in January 1895)". After much more research, it seemed that the first successful Phantoscope projection had been the September 1895 screening in collaboration with Thomas Armat , who seems to have been the one to come up with the crucial idea of intermittent film transport. A screening in Jenkins' cousin's jewelry store, rather similar to Croy's description, took place in October 1895. Jenkins continued improving
756-702: A railroad company from being amenable to 'local pride.'" He also criticized designing public buildings in Queen Anne or other overly decorative styles as being both expensive to construct and to maintain. In 1893, Gilbert designed an exhibition building for the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago for his clients the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad along with The Wagner Palace Car Co . The building contained wings on either side for railroad engines; inside
840-616: A skyscraper without having thick load-bearing walls. Another benefit of this construction technique was that it was fireproof. To work around local building ordinances, Gilbert constructed a foundation that was four stories or 70 feet (21 m) tall, essentially the height of the adjacent buildings. This foundation was constructed of iron and Little Falls stone. Next, came ten stories constructed in Philadelphia and Tiffany brick, with an octagonal roof covered in Spanish tiles. The brickwork
924-616: A student with the architectural firm J. Cleveland Cady in New York City for five years, beginning in 1872. In 1876, Gilbert was hired as an architect for the New York, Lake Erie and Western Railroad , under engineer Octave Chanute . Through his work with the railroad in the northern and northwestern states, Gilbert earned a reputation for originality. Although his body of work is diverse, he preferred Romanesque style and consistently featured "sinuous, interlaced patterns, virtuoso brickwork and deep red color effects". By 1890, Gilbert opened
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#17328513868851008-418: A train shed that covered eight tracks. The waiting room was the largest in the world, at 100 by 150 feet (30 by 46 m) and 100 feet (30 m) high. This elaborate structure remained in use until it was demolished in 1974. It was called "the gateway to the city." Gilbert was also the architect for the 1898 remodel of New York City's Grand Central Terminal —a project started in 1892 where "no expense
1092-558: A way to double income from property, The Philadelphia Inquire r noted that "the old Knickerbockers who own real estate on Broadway and other gilt-edge thoroughfares in the lower part of New York have a new god in the person of Bradford L. Gilbert." The building was razed in 1914 to make way for a taller structure. During his career, Gilbert designed just one firehouse—for Engine Company No. 1 and Hook & Ladder Company No. 1 in Long Island City . Established in 1891, this company
1176-449: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Cotton States and International Exposition (1895) The Cotton States and International Exposition was a world's fair held in Atlanta , Georgia , United States in 1895. The exposition was designed "to foster trade between southern states and South American nations as well as to show the products and facilities of the region to
1260-490: Is a remarkable example of a clever utilization of a narrow plot of ground." The Tower Building cost $ 250,000 (equivalent to $ 8,477,778 in today's money) to build. This was quite a bargain given that it was expected to earn $ 210,000 a year in rent, after taxes and upkeep. A building with traditional construction on the same lot would have only netted $ 30,000 a year in rent, due to the height limit of ten stories and thick walls reducing square footage. Because Gilbert had devised
1344-468: Is best remembered for the "Atlanta Compromise" speech given by Booker T. Washington on September 18, promoting racial cooperation. The idea for an international exposition in Atlanta was first proposed in November 1893 by William Hemphill , a former mayor of Atlanta. Hemphill served as vice president and director of the exposition. Bradford Lee Gilbert was the supervising architect. He designed
1428-483: Is now a National Register Historic District . The National Register says, "The Manor and Cottages compose a picturesque small historic district, evocative of Asheville's dramatic turn-of-the-century resort town boom era." In 1897, Gilbert designed the English-American Building for Atlanta's English-American Loan and Trust Company—whose president was Rufus Bullock , a former Georgia governor. Located at
1512-512: Is to be spared in making the building attractive". The actual cost was around $ 175,000 (equivalent to $ 5,934,444 in today's money). Gilbert designed the ten-story building in the Romanesque style . The front of the building had ornamental bronze panels and bay windows on the second story. The lower level was granite, with Indiana Limestone on top. Inside, there were tiled floors and deeply paneled ceilings, as well as pneumatic tubes to connect
1596-546: The Atlantic Coast Line Railroad . The Atlanta Constitution wrote, "The design for the Administration Building and Gateway is one of the handsomest of the entire Exhibition. The design…is a composite design of old baronial castles…these castellated turrets, those embattled ramparts, those ancient moats, the old swinging drawbridge, will prove a source of keen enjoyment and profit." Gilbert received
1680-610: The Knights of the Ku Klux Klan . Known as the Flatiron Building since 1916 because of its shape, this is the oldest remaining steel-framed skyscraper in Atlanta and one of the few non-railroad buildings by Gilbert that survive today. Dr. Elizabeth Lyon says, "The building plays an important role in its urban setting by establishing a sense of dignity and scale and helping to create a visually interesting sequence of spaces and styles in
1764-666: The New York City exhibit. An electric railway was built for the exposition by the Dixie Intramural Railway Company, founded and presided by Col. Ira Yale Sage . Pennsylvania 's first woman American architect , Elise Mercur (1864–1947) designed the Palladian style Woman's Building. The Women's Building showcased accomplishments of women throughout the South, and the country, in the areas of education, health care, and
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#17328513868851848-585: The New York City Rescue Mission ) which was founded in 1887 by missionaries Jerry McAuley and his wife Maria , to give shelter and food to the poor. McAuley and his wife were Christian converts who were previously an alcoholic convict and an alcoholic prostitute, respectively. After her husband's death in 1884, Maria McAuley (née Fahy) became the Matron of the Cremorne Mission which Gilbert
1932-723: The Ottawa Central Railway Station . He also designed stations, offices and terminals for the National Railroad of Mexico . Gilbert designed the Illinois Central Terminus (also called Central Station) at 12th Street in Chicago—it was constructed in nine months for the 1893 for the World's Columbian Exposition . The location and use of the building created certain challenges given the brief that all fair buildings have impact and beauty; Gilbert's solution
2016-733: The Princess Anne Hotel , this marked the beginnings of the beach resort, as well as Norfolk Southern Railroad . In 1895, Gilbert designed the Mary F. Ballentine Home for the Aged at 927 Park Ave. in Norfolk, Virginia, for Thomas R. Ballentine. This facility was named after Ballentine's late wife as it was originally her idea. The Ballentine Home was intended to provide a non-institutional, home-like environment for elderly local women, "more specifically gentle folk of irreproachable family." Ballentine endowed
2100-969: The Southwestern Railroad . As an architect with the New York, Lake Erie & Western Railroad, Gilbert designed many railroad stations and related buildings. Through his private practice, his railroad clients included the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad ; Boston & Maine Railroad ; Central Railroad of New Jersey ; Concord and Montreal Railroad ; the Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad ; Flint & Pere Marquette Railroad ; Georgia Railroad Company ; Grand Rapids and Indiana Railroad ; Illinois Central Railroad ; Intercolonial Railroad (Canada); Michigan Central Railroad ; Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad ; New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad ; Norfolk and Virginia Beach Railroad ; Northern Pacific Railway ; Old Colony Railroad ; Philadelphia & Reading Company and others. In 1901, he designed
2184-646: The Tower Building in 1889, the first steel-framed building anywhere and the first skyscraper in New York City. This technique was soon copied across the United States. He also designed Atlanta's Cotton States and International Exposition of 1895, the Flatiron Building in Atlanta , and many railroad stations. Bradford was born in Watertown, New York , the son of civil engineer and banker Horatio Gates Gilbert and his wife Marie Antoinette (née Bacon). His uncle
2268-712: The 320 foot (98 m) long Cotton Palace with and its 75 feet (23 m) tall dome, and the Administration Building, Agriculture Palace, Art Palace, Auditorium, and the Sunken Garden & Conning Tower Sculpture. The main buildings, with their domes, arcades, finials, and brackets, were all painted in off-white, giving the Exposition its name the Ivory City—a play on the White City of the World's Columbian Exposition of 1893 Gilbert's instructions for this fair were to create
2352-1269: The Administration Building with the Main Entrance and Exits, the Agricultural Building, the Auditorium, the Chime Tower and Band Stand, the Electricity Building, the Fire Building, the Machinery Hall, the Manufacturers & Liberal Arts Building, the Minerals and Forestry Building, the Negro Building, the Semi-Circular Entrance and Exit Gateway, the Transportation Building, and the United States Government Building. The grounds were designed by Joseph Forsyth Johnson . Over $ 2,000,000
2436-600: The Ashley River—to give structure to his Natural Section that included the Art, Machinery, Negro, various states, Transportation, and Women's Buildings. Gilbert wrote that the Natural section "will form a natural park of endless beauty of vista and landscape effect naturalistic [sic.]…a winding path of 100 feet in width will be carried underneath the overspreading live oaks along the edge of the embankment." The artificial or Art Section
2520-463: The Award Committee. The Awards Committee awarded a total of 1,573 medals: 634 gold medals, 444 silver medals, and 495 bronze medals. In late September Charles Francis Jenkins demonstrated an early movie projector called the " Phantoscope ." Organist and composer Fannie Morris Spencer chaired the exposition’s music committee. John Philip Sousa composed his famous march, " King Cotton ", for
2604-403: The Chime Tower and Band Stand, the Electricity Building, the Fire Building, the Machinery Hall, the Manufacturers & Liberal Arts Building, the Minerals and Forestry Building, the Negro Building, the Semi-Circular Entrance, and Exit Gateway, the Transportation Building, and the United States Government Building. There was a logic to his designs; for example, the Minerals and Forestry Building
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2688-800: The Harlem Branch YMCA building and the Samuel R. Smith Infirmary and Hospital in Staten Island. The fire house's site cost $ 20,000; the building was $ 60,000 (equivalent to $ 2,112,923 in today's money). The firehouse is still in use and is listed as a NYC Individual Landmark . In 1888, Gilbert designed the Virginia Beach Hotel, with its attached Terminal Station, for the Norfolk and Virginia Beach Railroad in Virginia Beach, Virginia . Later called
2772-690: The Mission, Gilbert made a public announcement saying, "If it did not affect this mission and the noble Christian woman who conducts it, I would remain silent. I suppose you have all read in today's papers…a story reflecting upon Mrs. McAuley and myself. I pronounce it false. All those who know me will take my word, and all those who do not know me will see by the result that what I say is true." Standing by Gilbert were banker A.S Hatch , real estate agent Sidney Whittemore, Franklin W. Coe, and other ladies and gentlemen associated with McAuley Mission. Hatch also spoke, saying "The very fact that I am on this platform tonight
2856-504: The North and South." The exposition introduced new ideas to foster trade and collaboration between the Southern and Northern states and to also show ideas, products, and facilities to the rest of the nation and to Europe. The exhibitions presented prototypes for a hospital room, a nursery, a kindergarten classroom, and a model library—each one in working order. These functional rooms represented
2940-484: The Sixteenth Century." Gilbert's layout divided the fair into sections, suggesting that he studied that of the widely successful Columbian Exposition . His idea was to split the grounds into areas for the natural and artificial, connected by a "narrow neck" that included the Administration Building. Like Frederick Law Olmsted in Chicago, Gilbert used the natural setting—in this case, live oaks and magnolias along
3024-456: The United States and thirteen countries. However, the exposition was plagued by financial issues. Walter McElreath described the fair in his memoirs: The railroad yards were jammed every morning with trains that brought enormous crowds. The streets were crowded all day long. Every conceivable kind of fakir bartered his wares. Dime museums flourished on every street ... Vast stucco hotels stood on Fourteenth Street ... I spent
3108-1068: The Westminster Presbyterian Church. He was a member of the American Institute of Architects —New York Chapter, the Architectural League of New York , the National Arts Club , the National Sculpture Society , the Quill Club, the Riding Club, and the Transportation Club, as well as the Chicago Club in Illinois . Gilbert was a supporter and trustee of the McAuley Water Street Mission (now
3192-526: The authors. On September 18, 1895, Booker T. Washington gave the "Atlanta Compromise" speech was an address on the topic of race relations . Washington's speech laid the foundation for the Atlanta Compromise , an agreement between African American leaders and Southern white leaders in which blacks would work meekly and submit to white political rule, while whites guaranteed that blacks would receive basic education and due process of law. The speech
3276-487: The bandstand is the only structure from the event that survives. However, Gilbert and the expedition quarreled over his compensation for work. In May 1902, Gilbert appeared in court for his lawsuit against the exposition for $ 16,422.80, the balance due on his $ 34,422.30 invoice (equivalent to $ 1,212,195 in today's money). In return, the exposition sued Gilbert for $ 51,000 (equivalent to $ 1,795,985 in today's money) in damages and loss of business due to his failure to complete
3360-525: The building was constructed in 1884. This was the first YMCA in New York City. It was converted into residences in 1932 and survives today as a New York City Landmark . In June 1886, Gilbert was hired to design a building for the Harlem Branch of the YMCA . The building was located between 5th and 6th Avenues on the north side of 125th Street. It was brownstone on the lower levels and brick and terra cotta on
3444-417: The building was decorated with some Celtic -style ornaments, repeating patterns in variegated orange-yellow and orange-red brick, and rows of repeating slender windows. One modern writer says, "The stables were nearly abstract, a field of dreams in orange, red, and yellow masonry." The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission says, "Color and texture, rather than ornament, were skillfully used to give
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3528-495: The central business area of the city." Gilbert was the supervising architect for the South Carolina Inter-State and West Indian Exposition in 1901. Remarkably, he was responsible for all aspects of this Charleston world's fair event, from the buildings to the 250 acres (100 ha) grounds to its infrastructure, including roads, water, sewage, and electricity. Gilbert designed twenty large buildings, including
3612-642: The city's origins as New Netherland . In 1912, the stables were remodeled into a car park and were renamed the Dakota Stables (not to be confused with a 19th-century facility with that name), and the Pyramid Garage in the 1950s. Over the years, the building lost many of its period details; it was demolished in 2011. Gilbert designed a Queen Anne style building for the YMCA in the Bowery . Known locally as The Bunker,
3696-458: The construction of all of the buildings by the opening date. In 1902, Gilbert was paid $ 1,000 (equivalent to $ 35,215 in today's money) by Atlanta to draw plans for a new railroad station. In 1901, he designed the Ottawa Central Railway Station . In 1905, Gilbert and Henry Janeway Hardenbergh , also an architect from New York City, collaborated on the redesign and expansion of the Windsor Hotel in Montreal, Canada. Construction began in
3780-412: The environments where women played important roles outside the home and family, and were equipped with the most up-to-date equipment, features, and furnishings. The model library included a collection of publications by women authors from every state in the nation. A photography exhibition featured portraits of women in every branch of literature, appended with a verse, letter, or section of a manuscript by
3864-403: The exposition and dedicated it to the people of Georgia . December 26, 1895, was "Negro Day" at the exposition. Famed African American quilter Harriet Powers attended this day and met with Irvine Garland Penn , the chief of the Negro Building. The National League of Mineral Painters, with Adelaïde Alsop Robineau and Mary Chase Perry , contributed decorative objects and artwork to
3948-419: The fine and decorative arts. Its exhibitions were curated by women from Georgia. The contents were contributed by women around the country. Women culled historical artifacts, decorative arts objects, and industrial products to compose displays in each room, including the Baltimore Room, the Lucy Cobb Room, Mary Ball Washington Tea Room, the Columbus Room, Model Library, Assembly Hall, and others, each assigned to
4032-415: The firefighters but also reflects the importance of this paid crew who fought fires at the Standard Oil refinery, row-frames, schools, tenements and factories such as the Pratt & Lambert varnish factory. New York City's Historic Districts Council says, "This building was one of the more ambitious firehouse projects undertaken by the department due to its size and level of architectural detail." Even
4116-413: The home when he died and it remained in Gilbert's building until new construction at a different location in 1952. In 1891, wealthy railroad executive William Greene Raoul hired Gilbert to design his residence on Peachtree Street in Atlanta, Georgia . The ornate, gabled house and its estate included a wine cellar, a cottage for servants, a stable, and the first tennis court in Atlanta. This house
4200-467: The intermission of a prayer meeting at Cremorne Mission. Her claim was on the basis of infidelity, to be heard in the superior court at White Plains . At the same time, she served Maria McAuley with a $ 50,000 lawsuit for alienation of affections , with allegations that "were numerous and specific." Cora claimed she had been driven from her home, that her husband was abusive, and his attention had been diverted to Mrs. McAuley. On October 16, 1887, at
4284-404: The issue was settled, Armat sold his patent to Thomas Alva Edison . Writer Homer Croy described in his 1918 book How Motion Pictures Are Made , how Charles Francis Jenkins would have presented the first motion picture on a large screen on 6 June 1894 in Richmond, Indiana , with his parents, brothers, other family members, friends and some newspaper men as an audience. Jenkins would have shot
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#17328513868854368-543: The junction of Broad and Peachtree Streets, this triangular-shaped building with eleven stories was the second skyscraper in Atlanta. Its style was Neo-Classical and Neo-Renaissance, but the shape was modern. At a cost of some $ 400,000, the building included three electric elevators, 200 rooms, and electric lighting. The Within a year, the building's tenants included National Cash Register Co ., Otis Bros. Co . (elevators), Rand McNally Co ., Mutual Life Insurance Co ., Southern Bell and many others along with its owners and
4452-401: The lobby to the offices. This building was replaced by the current Grand Central Station in 1913. Whether designing a large railroad station for New York City or a small station for a Mexican village, Gilbert believed the structure should be comfortable, functional, and aesthetically pleasing to be an asset to its community. In Engineering Magazine, Gilbert wrote, "No excuse should exempt
4536-426: The machine by October 25. He did not, and instead, remained in Indiana Armat decided to leave the exhibit with their remaining Phantoscope, after a fire destroyed several exhibits and another of their Phantoscopes. What followed was a lengthy court battle in which Jenkins sought a solo patent, but was denied, resulting in Jenkins receiving a solo patent for his initial projector and Armat for the modified version. After
4620-407: The mountain air of Asheville was believed to be a cure. Raoul and his son hired Gilbert to design Albemarle Park , a park-like resort development on 32 acres (13 ha) just outside of Asheville. Gilbert began with a small hotel called Manor Inn, five cottages and the Lodge (or Gatehouse) where the Raoul family lived at first. In 1902, he added three new houses, a wing to the Manor Inn, doubled
4704-418: The name of a state, to illustrate the American Patriotic salute. Other displays posed a challenge to the roles of women and other social conventions. The Colonial Room presented utensils and furnishings, as well as Dolly Madison 's spectacles, a gun carried in the Battle of Concord , and brass medallions belonging to George Washington ; the display was said to represent "the growing bond of cooperation between
4788-399: The park grounds remain largely as Joseph Forsyth Johnson designed it for the exposition. However, the stone balustrades scattered around the park are the only remaining part of the enormous main building. Bradford Gilbert Bradford Lee Gilbert (March 24, 1853 – September 1, 1911) was a nationally active American architect based in New York City . He is known for designing
4872-537: The past, but were an excellent place "to illustrate the modern architecture". Edmund Coffin Jr. , a prominent real estate investor and lawyer in New York City, hired Gilbert to design the Mason Stables . This project took three years to construct and was divided into two phases, 1881–1882 and 1883–1894. When completed, the Mason Stables were one of the most extensive livery stables in New York City. The five-story stables included 158 stalls and room for more than 300 carriages. Primarily Romanesque Revival in style,
4956-635: The presented film of Annabelle 's butterfly dance in the backyard of his Washington home and had each frame colorized. When film historian Terry Ramsaye investigated this event for his 1926 book A Million and One Nights , Annabelle replied to questions about the film that it had been a great pleasure to go to Edison's Black Maria studio where she performed her "Butterfly", "Serpentine' and "Sun" dances, but that she had never danced for Jenkins. The newspaper article that Croy cited could not be found, not even in Jenkins' scrapbook where Croy claimed to have gotten his information from. The scrapbook did however contain
5040-471: The projector and created motion picture cameras that were eventually used for broadcasting to home receivers by radio waves, or what we know today as, television. Mechanically he broadcast the first television pictures and owned the first commercially licensed television station in the United States. The Franklin Institute later awarded a gold medal to Jenkins for his invention as the world's first practical movie projector. This film technology article
5124-407: The projects and visited the construction sites; this was documented in newspapers articles announcing his arrival in town to check on the progress of the projects. This attention to detail may have paid off as many of his other projects steamed from his railroad connections, including designing residences for William H. Baldwin Jr. who was president of the Long Island Railroad , Alfred Skitt who
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#17328513868855208-459: The public of its safety, Gilbert moved his offices to its top floor and remained there until he stopped practicing. He also scaled the building in the middle of an 1889 hurricane to prove that the building was not vibrating with a plumb line . In 1889, Engineering News called it "a most skillful solution of an exceedingly difficult problem". Kobble's New York and Environs wrote, "The Tower Building, of No. 50 Broadway, with its fifteen stories,
5292-411: The rest of the nation and Europe." The Cotton States and International Exposition featured exhibits from six states, including various innovations in agriculture and technology, and exhibits about women and African Americans. President Grover Cleveland presided over the opening of the exposition remotely by flipping an electric switch from his house in Massachusetts on September 18, 1895. The event
5376-405: The selection of the renowned Gilbert, rather than the city's usual firehouse architects, was a statement. Calling on the origins of New York as New Netherland , Gilbert's designed the firehouse in Dutch Renaissance Revival style, with oversized limestone trim to offset the darker granite background. Gilbert had also used Dutch Renaissance Revival for other buildings in New York City, including
5460-728: The size of the dining room and added a stage for musicians. Known cottages credited to Gilbert include Clover, Columbus, Hollyhock, Marigold, and Milfoil. To suit the mountain setting, Gilbert created a "resort with an English inn atmosphere," with grounds designed by landscape architect Samuel Parsons, Jr. This translated to a hybrid of Tudor Revival , Colonial Revival , Dutch Colonial Revival , and Shingle architectural styles, with exteriors that featured shingles, roughcast plaster, and timber framing . Built between 1898 and 1920, Albemarle Park would eventually consist of 42 structures—some designed by other architects—becoming one of America's first planned residential parks. Albemarle Park
5544-410: The spring of 1906 to create one of the largest hotels in North America of its day. Built of a steel frame and stone, the hotel was increased to a height of eight stories, with 250 new rooms and 175 new bathrooms. The combined total of old and new construction was 800 rooms and 450 baths, as well as a new double entrance through a rotunda. In July 1905, Gilbert and Hardenbergh were selected to design
5628-406: The structure its simple, yet monumental character." Another unique aspect of the Mason Stables was its layout, as the stables wrapped around other buildings, resulting in three entrances—76th Street, 77th Street, and Amsterdam. Two of the entrances featured step-gables , a characteristic of Dutch Renaissance Revival style that Gilbert used with other public buildings in New York City as a nod to
5712-415: The upper levels, with step-gables in the Dutch Renaissance Revival style at the 125th Street entrance. The $ 65,000 (equivalent to $ 2,204,222 in today's money) building included a gymnasium, a swimming pool, a bowling alley, five classrooms, a library, a parlor, a reception room, a reading room, and an auditorium that seated 800 people. John Noble Sterns, a supporter of the Cremorne Mission where Gilbert
5796-437: The upper levels. The roof was dark glazed Spanish tiles, along with a coppery dome. Gilbert was also instructed to make the building fireproof. He achieved this in part by using the building's adjacent tower as a series of fire-proof vaults. The 15-story tower was also a functional clock tower. The cost of this project was over a million dollars, including the passenger station, waiting rooms, restaurant, office building, and
5880-441: Was Jasper W. Gilbert , a justice with the New York Supreme Court . He attended Siglar's School in Newburg and the Sedgwick Institute in Great Barrington, Massachusetts . Later, he had private tutors at home in Irvington, New York to get ready to attend Yale University , rather than his father's alma mater Norwich University . However, Gilbert decided to forgo college as he was very anxious to learn architecture. He became
5964-517: Was a trustee, hired Gilbert in 1888 to design an eleven-story office building in New York City. For such a tall building, traditional construction methods required very thick walls that would have dominated the lot that was just 21.5 feet (6.6 m) wide. Calling upon his railroad background, Gilbert thought of turning a railroad bridge on end, with iron girders to support the floors and external walls. This innovation of "skeleton construction" with "steel-framed curtain walls" allowed him to construct
6048-505: Was a trustee. In 1885, Gilbert was secretary of a committee that raised funds for a public drinking fountain in memory of McAuley. Gilbert separated from his wife in January 1887. In June 1887, he filed for an annulment in Jersey City, New Jersey , on the basis that he was underaged at the time of his marriage, with his wife being seventeen years his senior. On October 13, 1887, Cora Gilbert served her husband with divorce papers during
6132-417: Was an exhibit showing photographs and sketches of Gilbert's work on railroad station architecture. The Exposition's board of directors gave Gilbert a gold medal "for a new type of American architecture". In 1895, the exhibit illustrations were published by Railway Gazette as a book, Sketch Portfolio of Railroad Stations and Kindred Structures . Gilbert noted that railroad buildings had been overlooked in
6216-457: Was colorful, and there was Celtic ornamentation similar to that of Mason Stables. Opening in 1889, the Tower Building is considered New York City's first skyscraper and the first curtain-wall building in the world. It was initially greeted with great skepticism, with members of the public predicting it would blow over. Some people walked around the block rather than walk by it. Some engineers declared it "unsafe and impracticable". To assure
6300-488: Was constructed of natural Southern woods. At his suggestion, Bradford's designs were in the Romanesque style as this resulted in cost-effective temporary structures with a simple outline. Romanesque style was also a good way for Atlanta "to be seen as au courant with America's commercial trends." In addition to designing for the Exposition, he also created vendor buildings for the Southern Railway Company and
6384-531: Was formal with architecturally similar buildings: the Palaces of Agriculture, Commerce, and Cotton. Gilbert sited this section over the former Washington Race Course , a flat area that was already treeless, allowing him to create "complex geometrical design" for the Court of Palaces which was surrounded with a sunken garden and connected by a colonnade. After the exposition, the majority of its temporary buildings were razed;
6468-696: Was home to the Raoul family through 1914. During the 1940s, the Red Cross acquired the property and used the house as a blood donation and bandage rolling center; around 1950 the Red Cross built a modern building on the property, directly in the front of the Raoul house. The house was also surrounded by the Cabana Motor Hotel and the Biltmore Hotel, losing its original context on a street of mansions. The Raoul House
6552-617: Was influenced by the fair's goal of reminding commercial interests of the once lucrative trade route between the West Indies and the port of Charleston . Thus, architect Bruce Harvey concludes "The architecture at Charleston's exposition both reflected and promoted this conscious hope for the future." The architectural critic Montgomery Schuyler wrote, "At Chicago, they called the style Columbian; at Buffalo, they called it Pan-American…in Charleston—the Spanish Renaissance of
6636-577: Was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in the 1980s but burned in 1991 while it was leased to a nightclub. In 1895, Gilbert was the supervising architect for the Cotton States and International Exposition in Atlanta . For this world's fair event, he designed many structures, including the Administration Building with Main Entrance and Exits, the Agricultural Building, the Auditorium,
6720-627: Was presented before a predominantly white audience and has been recognized as one of the most important, influential, and controversial speeches in American history. The Cotton States Exposition successfully showcased Atlanta as a business center and attracted investment to the city. After the exposition, the grounds were purchased by the City of Atlanta and became Piedmont Park and the Atlanta Botanical Garden . The buildings were demolished, but
6804-768: Was president of the New York City Interborough Railway Company , Arthur M. Dodge whose father built the Macon and Brunswick Railroad , Benjamin A. Kimball who was president of the Concord and Montreal Railroad Company, and William Greene Raoul president of the Atlantic and Birmingham Railway , the Central Railroad and Banking Company of Georgia , the Mexican National Railroad Company , and
6888-593: Was spent transforming the exhibition site. A pond was expanded to 11.5 acres (4.7 ha) Lake Clara Meer for the event. Tropical gardens, now known as the Atlanta Botanical Garden, were also constructed for the fair. The government allocated $ 250,000 for the construction of a government building. Many states and countries such as Argentina also had buildings. The Exposition was open for 100 days, beginning on September 18, 1895, and ending on December 31, 1895. It attracted nearly 800,000 visitors from
6972-466: Was the first professional firefighters in Queens. However, the first base of operation for this ladder company was a modest wood-frame shed. The department merged with that of New York City in 1898, and its name changed to Fire Engine Company No. 258 and Ladder Company No.115 in 1904. Constructed between 1902 and 1904, Gilbert's granite building with 4 1/2 stories not only improved the working condition of
7056-495: Was to increase the size of the station and give it strong Romanesque details, as "the first impression gained of the building by the general public would be regarding its general contour and 'massing' as well as the outline skylines". In other words, it needed to be impressive at a distance. His design included a ten-story office building, with lobby and offices connected via a pneumatic tube service. The first three stories were built from dark speckled granite, with buff brick for
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