Kenneth MacKenzie Murchison
Template:Short description Template:Infobox architect
Kenneth MacKenzie Murchison, Jr. (September 29, 1872 – December 15, 1938) was a prominent American Beaux-Arts and Gothic Revival architect.
Early lifeEdit
He was born in Brooklyn, New York City in 1872. Murchison graduated from Columbia University in 1894 and from the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris, France, in 1900.<ref name="sun"/>
CareerEdit
Two years after graduating from the École des Beaux-Arts, he opened an office in New York where his first major commissions were for railroad stations for the Pennsylvania Railroad company. Among the stations he designed are Hoboken Terminal in New Jersey;<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> the Lackawanna Terminal and the Lehigh Valley Terminal, both in Buffalo, New York; and Baltimore Pennsylvania Station.<ref>Dorsey, John and James D Dilts, ‘’A Guide to Baltimore Architecture’’, Tidewater Publishers, Centerville, Maryland, 1981 p 281-282</ref>
In New York, he was well known as one of the founders of the Beaux Arts Balls, elaborate costume parties benefiting architects who had fallen on hard times. He also was a founder of the Mendelsohn Glee Club. At the time of his death, he had started work on a new Dunes Club to replace the one destroyed a few months earlier.<ref name="sun" />
Personal lifeEdit
On April 5, 1902, Murchison married Aurelie de Mauriac. They lived in the Beaux-Arts Apartments, which he designed, at 310 E. 44th St. They were the parents of two daughters:<ref name="sun"/>
- Katherine Murchison, who married Hays Browning.<ref name="sun"/>
- Aurelie Murchison, who married Edouard de Wardener.<ref name="sun"/>
Murchison died suddenly, at 11:45 p.m. on December 15, 1938, while at the Interborough Rapid Transit Company's Grand Central–42nd Street station, as The New York Times reported.<ref name="sun">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
BuildingsEdit
Name | Location | Date | Built for | Current use | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Station | 1 Hudson Place, Hoboken, New Jersey | 1907 | Lackawanna Railroad | Railroad station | File:Hoboken Terminal May 2015 002.jpg |
Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Station | 700 Lackawanna Ave at Jefferson Ave, Scranton, Pennsylvania | 1908 | Lackawanna Railroad | Hotel | File:Lackawanna Station Scranton Bunnell 1908.jpg |
Beaux-Arts Apartments | 307 and 310 E. 44th St., New York | 1929–1930 | Apartments | File:Beaux-Arts Apartments May 2021 09.jpg | |
U.S. Marine Hospital | Staten Island, New York | ||||
Havana Central railway station | 401 Avenida de Bélgica, Havana, Cuba | 1912 | Congress of Cuba | Railroad station | |
Pennsylvania Station | 47 Walnut St, Johnstown, Pennsylvania | 1916 | Pennsylvania Railroad | File:Johnstown PA Station.jpg | |
Pennsylvania Station<ref>Dorsey, John and James D Dilts, ‘’A Guide to Baltimore Architecture’’, Tidewater Publishers, Centerville, Maryland, 1981 p 178-179</ref> | 1515 N Charles St, Baltimore, Maryland | 1911 | Pennsylvania Railroad | File:Baltimore Pennsylvania Station corrected.jpg | |
Union Station | 1000 Water St at Park St, Jacksonville, Florida | 1919 | Florida East Coast Railway, et al. | Convention center | File:Jax FL Terminal POC04.jpg |
Lincoln Baths<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> | 65 S Broadway, Saratoga Springs, NY 12866 (SPA State Park) | 1928 | New York State Department of Public Works | Museum and Office Space | File:Lincoln Bath exterior.jpg Lincoln Bath exterior |
He also designed:
- Johnstown, Pennsylvania, Station-Johnstown (Amtrak station)
- Jamaica (LIRR station), Jamaica, New York.
- Long Beach (LIRR station), Long Beach, New York.
- The original Dunes Club, Narragansett, Rhode Island. (Only the gatehouse remains after the 1938 hurricane.)
- Sands Point Bath Club, East Egg, LI (destroyed by fire in 1986)
- Forest Hills Stadium, West Side Tennis Club, Forest Hills, Queens, New York City<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- New Colonial Hotel, Nassau
- First National Bank Building, Hoboken, New Jersey
- The Murchison Building, Wilmington, North Carolina
- Co-op Apartments, 39 E. 79th St., New York.
- The Tully House (Residence), Mill Neck, New York
- Luola Chapel, built at Orton Plantation in Brunswick, North Carolina, in memory of his sister who died in 1916. He also added wings to the main house.
- Summer Residences, Narragansett, Rhode Island
- Primelles Building, Havana, Cuba (American Architect. Vol. 119, Part 1)
- St. Elmo Hall, home to the St. Elmo Society, at 111 Grove Street at Yale University, today known as Rosenfeld Hall.
- William A. Clark House (with Lord and Hewlett)