American architect
Part of Hatch's "extraordinary"[ 1] 3-story mansard roof for Gilsey House
Jubilee Hall at Fisk University
Murray Hill Hotel , built 1884, razed 1947 (c.1900-1910)
The former New York Life Insurance Company Building
Stephen Decatur Hatch (1839–1894)[ 2] was a prominent late-19th century architect who was responsible for a number of historically or architecturally significant buildings in Manhattan , New York City and elsewhere. He primarily designed commercial buildings.[ 3]
Early life, family and education
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Stephen Hatch was born in Swanton , Vermont .[ 4] His father was an inventor.[ 3]
Career
Hatch relocated to New York City, finding employment as a construction inspector .[ 3] He joined the busy architectural firm of John B. Snook in 1860 as a draftsman .[ 4]
Hatch left the Snook firm around 1864 to start his own practice. He became the architect of the U.S. War Department , responsible for construction of military posts in New York.[ 3] His practice began to flourish in 1868.[ 4]
Personal life and demise
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(September 2022 )
Hatch died in 1894, during the construction of an extension to the headquarters building of the New York Life Insurance Company .
Works
Manhattan
213-215 Water Street – warehouse, built 1868 for A.A. Thompson & Co., now part of South Street Seaport Museum ,[ 5] within the South Street Seaport Historic District
118 East 18th Street – built 1868[ 6]
Gilsey House Hotel – 1200 Broadway, built 1869–1871, converted to residential use 1980, a New York City landmark (1979)[ 1]
836-838 Broadway – built 1876-1877[ 7]
Robbins & Appleton Building – manufacturing, built 1879–1880, a New York City landmark (1979)[ 8]
Schepp Building – warehouse, 45-53 Hudson Street, built 1880, within the Tribeca North Historic District [ 9]
165 Duane Street – lofts, built 1881, within the Tribeca West Historic District[ 10]
Murray Hill Hotel – Park Avenue between 40th and 41st Streets, built 1884, razed 1947[ 11]
U.S. Army Building – also known as 3 New York Plaza, Water & Whitehall Streets, offices, built 1886[ 12]
168 Duane Street – warehouse, built 1886–1887, within the Tribeca West Historic District,[ 9] Dutch Revival style [ 13]
Manhattan Savings Institution[ 14] – also known as Bleecker Tower,[ 15] 644 Broadway, built 1889–1891, within the NoHo Historic District [ 16]
Fleming Smith Warehouse – 451-453 Washington Street, built 1891–1892, a New York City landmark (1978)[ 17]
Roosevelt Building – lofts, 839-841 Broadway, built 1893[ 18]
Former New York Life Insurance Company Building – also known as the Clock Tower Building, offices, 346 Broadway, built 1894–1895, completed by McKim, Mead & White , a New York City landmark (1987)[ 19] and on the National Register of Historic Places (1982)
United States Custom House (now the Federal Hall National Memorial) and the American Surety Building , both located in lower Manhattan.
Elsewhere
Methodist Episcopal Church – Madison, New Jersey , built 1870, on the National Register of Historic Places (2008)
Jubilee Hall – Fisk University , Nashville, Tennessee , built 1876, a National Historic Landmark (1974)
Laclede Building – St. Louis, Missouri , built 1888[ 20]
Eisenhower Executive Office Building , Rooms 231 & 232 – Washington, D.C. , office suite for the U.S. Secretary of War , completed March 1888[ 2]
Designed State Capitol building in Providence, Rhode Island.
References
^ a b NYCLPC p.80
^ a b "History of Rooms 231 and 232" on the White House website
^ a b c d "South Street Seaport Museum 213-215 Water Street" Historic American Buildings Survey , #NY-5684
^ a b c Dillon, James T. (September 11, 1979). Gilsey House Designation Report (PDF) . New York City Landmark Preservation Commission – via neighborhoodpreservationcenter.org.
^ "South Street Seaport Museum, 213-215 Water Street, New York, New York, NY" . loc.gov . Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Online Catalog.
^ "118 East 18th Street" . preserve2.org . Gramercy Neighborhood Associates.
^ "836-838 Broadway" on the Endangered Cast-Iron Buildings website
^ New York City Landmark Preservation Commission, p. 62
^ a b New York City Landmark Preservation Commission, p. 21
^ White & Willensky, p.63
^ "Murray Hill Hotel, 1918" . dspace.nitle.org . City University of New York .
^ White & Willensky, p. 26
^ "About Tribeca" . cityrealty.com .
^ http://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2010/06/manhattan-savings-institute-644.html [user-generated source ]
^ "Bleecker Tower" on Wired New York website
^ New York City Landmark Preservation Commission, p. 60
^ New York City Landmark Preservation Commission, p. 36
^ White & Willenski, p. 166
^ New York City Landmark Preservation Commission, p. 34
^ "The Gilsey House - 29th and Broadway" Accessed:2010-11-20
External links
International National Artists