Charles Follen McKim

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Charles Follen McKim

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Charles Follen McKim 1847-1909, American architect, b. Chester co., Pa., studied (1867-70) at the École des Beaux-Arts. He was one of the founders of the firm of McKim, Mead, and Bigelow, which in 1879 became McKim, Mead, and White (see William Rutherford Mead and Stanford White ). A vast number of important commissions came into the firm's offices, in which McKim's spirit and taste were the controlling forces. Following a policy of adhering to classical architecture and its Renaissance derivatives, the partners erected a long series of buildings with a restrained classical sobriety that turned the tide away from the vagaries of the prevailing romanticism. Early examples of the style were the old Madison Square Garden (1891, now demolished), New York City, and the Boston Public Library (1888-95). McKim was influential in the development of the Chicago World's Columbian Exposition, for which he built the Agricultural Palace. He designed a fine series of clubhouses in New York City, of which the Harvard Club and the University Club are two; a number of buildings for Columbia Univ., including the present-day Low Memorial Library; the Pennsylvania RR station (1904-10); the Pierpont Morgan Library; and numerous fine commercial and residential works. His restorations include the work on Thomas Jefferson's buildings at the Univ. of Virginia and on the White House at Washington, D.C. McKim was associated with D. H. Burnham, Augustus Saint-Gaudens, and F. L. Olmsted, Jr., on the Senate Park Commission, which drew up plans for the development of Washington and the District of Columbia. He was first president of the American Academy in Rome, to the founding of which he had devoted many years of zealous effort.

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Charles Follen McKim

Encyclopedia of World Biography | 2004 | Copyright 2004 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Charles Follen McKim

Charles Follen McKim (1847-1909), American architect, was the founding partner in the firm of McKim, Mead & White, which set the standard for architectural taste in the United States between 1879 and 1909.

Charles Follen McKim was born at Isabella Furnace, Pa., on Aug. 24, 1847. His father was a fervent abolitionist and his mother was a Quaker. After attending the Weld School in New Jersey and Philadelphia public schools for 3 years, McKim entered Harvard's Scientific School in 1866. Finding his studies difficult and disagreeable, he tried instead the architectural course in Paris at the École des Beaux-Arts and spent 3 happy years there (1867-1870).

On his return to America, McKim began working in the architectural office of Gambrill and Richardson in New York City. Here McKim learned from Henry Hobson Richardson that architecture was a "fine art" and should be practiced as such. In 1872 McKim opened his own office in New York. His friend William Rutherford Mead soon joined him, and then a partnership was formed in 1878 with William B. Bigelow. Bigelow resigned and was replaced by the flamboyant Stanford White in 1879.

In 1874 McKim had married Annie Bigelow, William's sister; they were divorced in 1878. They had one daughter. In 1885 he married Julia Amory Appleton, who had commissioned him to build her summer home at Stockbridge, Mass. She died in 1887.

For McKim the first realization that classical architectural forms and ornament were finer than any other came during a sketching trip through New England in 1877 with Bigelow and White. They visited Salem, Marblehead, and Newburyport and made measured drawings of the best colonial houses.

As a summer resident of Newport, R. I., McKim was well acquainted with wealthy socialites, and many commissions came from these friends. The Newport Casino (1881) was one of his earliest buildings in the resort community. The design was appropriately informal, gay, and picturesque; its broad verandas easily coped with the crowds.

McKim and his partners designed the Villard houses (1882), which were attached to form a three-sided court, on Madison Avenue in New York City, in a style adapted from the Italian Renaissance. This veritable palace favorably impressed his client's friends and led them to choose McKim's firm to design many other buildings.

The complicated Boston Public Library (1887-1898), though generally Italianate, derives in part from Henri Labrouste's Bibliothèque Ste-Geneviève in Parisparticularly the high, arched windows that light the reading room. Many of McKim's artist friends, such as Augustus Saint-Gaudens, John LaFarge, and James McNeill Whistler, contributed their work to make the library a splendid museum of contemporary art.

McKim's guiding influence is visible in the correctly proportioned Johnson Gate (1889) at Harvard University; the Algonquin Club (1889) and Symphony Hall (1892) in Boston; the important Columbia University Library (1893-1896); the American Academy (1895-1904) in Rome; and the University Club (1896-1899), the Pierpont Morgan Library (1902), and the vast Pennsylvania Station (1902-1910; demolished) in New York City. McKim also represented the firm on the building commission for the Chicago World's Columbian Exposition (1890-1893) and designed the classical Agricultural Building.

McKim was a highly persuasive personality. He knew with confidence what was esthetically right; he knew how to please wealthy clients; and he designed with dignity and sobriety, never giving way to frills and picturesqueness for their own sake. He received many honors, including the coveted Royal Institute of British Architects King's Medal (1903), and honorary degrees from Harvard University, Bowdoin College, Columbia University, and the University of Pennsylvania. He was elected academician of the National Academy of Design in 1907 and was presented the Gold Medal of the American Institute of Architects in 1909. He died in St. James, Long Island, N. Y., on Sept. 14, 1909.

Further Reading

There is no definitive book on the firm of McKim, Mead & White, although four large volumes of plans and photographs were published. The best work on McKim is Charles Moore, The Life and Times of Charles Follen McKim (1929). Another work worth consulting is Alfred Hoyt Granger, Charles Follen McKim: A Study of His Life and Work (1913).

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Free newspaper and magazine articles

Free Article Stanford White in Saint James, New York. (houses by architectural firm McKim, Mead and White founded in 1879)
Magazine article from: The Magazine Antiques; 7/1/1998
Free Article "Inventing the Skyline": the career of Cass Gilbert.(Review)
Magazine article from: New Criterion; 1/1/2001
Free Article Stanford White's house for Payne Whitney in New York City.(architect)
Magazine article from: The Magazine Antiques; 10/1/2002

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, and more

Stanford White in Saint James, New York. (houses by architectural firm McKim, Mead and White founded in 1879)
Magazine article from: The Magazine Antiques; 7/1/1998; ; 700+ words ; Most of McKim, Mead and White's architectural commissions...separated by less than two miles, McKim, Mead and White created designs that...Stanford White in Saint James begins with Charles Follen McKim. The two met in the New York City office...
For design splendor, McKim's built to last.(Editorial)
Newspaper article from: The Boston Herald; 12/7/2001; ; 700+ words ; ...display at the Public Library: the McKim building and the adjoining, much...after the men who designed them: Charles Follen McKim and Philip Johnson. But the newer...buildings such as City Hall and Charles River Park, points to an architectural...
How 1902's City of Tomorrow Became the Capital of Today
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 1/4/1999; ; 700+ words ; ...this city in the 20th century. Charles Follen McKim was a worrywart. One of a quartet...everything had to be just right. McKim and his colleagues had absorbed...original 1791 plan by Maj. Pierre Charles L'Enfant, and they were only...
The Baltimore Sun Frederick N. Rasmussen column.
Newspaper article from: Baltimore Sun (Baltimore, MD); 4/21/2007; 700+ words ; ...that rose on the former site of Charles Follen McKim's "great Doric temple to transportation...completed. Cassatt died in 1906; McKim died three years later. "Alexander J. Cassatt and Charles Follen McKim had bequeathed to Gotham a magnificent...
Stanford White: Letters to His Family. (book reviews)
Magazine article from: House Beautiful; 10/1/1998; ; 700+ words ; ...book on the domestic designs of McKim, Mead & White, architect...written histories, The Houses of McKim, Mead & White (Rizzoli...inseparable synergy, "Individually, Charles Follen McKim, William Rutherford Mead, and...
"Inventing the Skyline": the career of Cass Gilbert.(Review)
Magazine article from: New Criterion; 1/1/2001; ; 700+ words ; ...Gilbert as coming a generation later than Charles Follen McKim and Stanford White because his major works...also once worked as an assistant in the McKim, Mead & White office. In fact, McKim was Gilbert's senior by only twelve years...
Architecture, murals perfect aesthetic match
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 7/19/1992; ; 700+ words ; ...to decorate the BPL, architect Charles Follen McKim picked Americans including Daniel...wait a decade if it must, but McKim had to have murals by the Frenchman...and a lot of measurements that McKim had sent him. Gianfranco Pocobene...
One hundred years of inspiration. (American Academy in Rome, Italy)
Magazine article from: Town & Country; 1/1/1996; ; 700+ words ; ...building, designed by the firm of McKim, Mead and White and completed...since its founding (by architect Charles Follen McKim), it has had to struggle a bit...the academy was conceived when McKim and a group of other architects...
A much-needed lift for the Boston Public Library
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 10/9/1991; ; 700+ words ; ...original building, which was designed by architect Charles Follen McKim and first opened to the public in 1895. Over the...Richardson, who founded the firm. "Of course, Charles McKim and his partner, Stanford White, started their...
Stanford White's house for Payne Whitney in New York City.(architect)
Magazine article from: The Magazine Antiques; 10/1/2002; ; 700+ words ; McKim, Mead and White was unquestionably the...century. Together, the three partners, Charles Follen McKim (1847-1909), William Rutherford Mead...domestic interiors. (1) By the 1880s, McKim, Mead and White had become the architectural...

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