Wilson Eyre

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Wilson Eyre
Personal Information
Name Wilson Eyre
Nationality American
Birth date 1859
Birth place Florence
Date of death 1944
Work
Significant Buildings University of Pennsylvania Museum

Swann Memorial Fountain

Wilson Eyre (1858-1944) was an American architect who practiced in the Philadelphia area. While his family was from Philadelphia, he was born in Florence. He studied architecture briefly at MIT. He joined the offices of James Peacock Sims and later took over the office on Sim’s death in 1892.

He is known for his deliberately informal and welcoming country houses. He is also known for his distinctive artistic drawings. In 1917, he was awarded the Gold Medal of the Philadelphia Chapter of the American Institute of Architects. He also taught at the University of Pennsylvania and was one of the founders of the T Square Club of Philadelphia in 1883.

[edit] Works

  • University of Pennsylvania Museum
  • Swann Memorial Fountain
  • Henry Cochran house, Philadelphia, 1891
  • Charles Lang Freer House, Detroit, 1890
  • Charles Adam Potter House, Philadelphia, 1881-82
  • Henry Genet Taylor House and office, Camden
  • Anglecot, Philadelphia
  • University of Pennsylvania Chapter of St. Anthony Hall, 1889-1908, no longer extant. An Italianate palazzo that was the first fraternity house built on campus, pictured at [[1]]