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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lewis Pilcher
Jewett House, Vassar College
Born1871
Died1941
NationalityAmerican
EducationColumbia Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation
Alma materWesleyan University
Known forArchitect

Lewis F. Pilcher, AIA (1871–1941), was an American academic and architect active in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth-century New York City. With William G. Tachau, he was a partner of Pilcher and Tachau, the predecessor firm of Tachau and Vought.[1] He was a professor of art at Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York. He subsequently was a state architect of New York.[2]

Biography

Pilcher attended Wesleyan University from 1889-1890, and graduated from the Columbia School of Architecture in 1895.[3] He began his career working for Brooklyn architect Mercein Thomas, then started his own practice with former classmate W.G. Tachau.[3] In 1901 Pilcher won a competition to design the Troop C Armory in Brooklyn, which set the state for his later term as State Architect of New York, in which position he would design several armories across the state.[3] He went on to design the armories in Troy, Albany, Buffalo, Yonkers, and Ithaca.[3]

Through his connections at Vassar, Pilcher designed the nine-story North Residence (1907), renamed in 1915 as Jewett House. The structure is composed of a four-story U-shaped arms block, which frames a quad-side court, and is attached to a rear eight-story tower that incorporates a 30,000-gallon water tank. The structure extensively used steel and concrete structural components faced with red brick and terracotta ornamentation. The high level of decorative work, including crenellations, grotesque terracotta faces and animals was incongruous to Vassar’s restrained red brick-with-sandstone-trim Quad dormitories and was nicknamed “Pilcher’s Crime.” The structure failed to attract donors who would have attached their name and it was instead renamed in honor of the college’s first president, Milo P. Jewett.[2]

His partner, William G. Tachau, went on to a more successful career in the architectural firm of Tachau and Vought.[1]

Kingsbridge Armory, Bronx, NY

Works

References

  1. ^ a b c d Nancy L. Todd.[1] New York's Historic Armories: An Illustrated History (Albany, New York: State University of New York Press, 2006), p.268
  2. ^ a b c Karen Van Lengen and Lisa Reilly.Vassar College: An Architectural Tour. The Campus Guide Series. (New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2004), p.80
  3. ^ a b c d Hamlin, Prof. A.D.F. (January 1923). "The State Architect and His Works" (PDF). The Architectural Record. LIII (1): 27–43. Retrieved 13 July 2018.
  4. ^ texts Guide to the campus : Cornell University. Cornell University. 1920. p. 54.
This page was last edited on 17 March 2023, at 16:57
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