James Gamble Rogers

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James Gamble Rogers

Sterling Memorial Library, Yale University, New Haven, CT
Personal information
Name James Gamble Rogers
Nationality American
Birth date March 3, 1867(1867-03-03)
Birth place Bryan Station, Kentucky
Date of death October 1, 1947 (aged 80)
Place of death New York, New York
Work
Significant buildings Sterling Memorial Library

Harkness Memorial Tower
Butler Library, Columbia University

A tribute to Rogers in a Yale residential college
A tribute to Rogers in a Yale residential college

James Gamble Rogers (March 3, 1867October 1, 1947) was an American architect best known for his academic commissions at Yale University and elsewhere.[1]

Rogers was born in Bryan Station, Kentucky, to James M. and Katharine Gamble Rogers.[1] Rogers attended Yale University, where he was a member of Scroll and Key, a senior society whose membership included several other notable architects. He received his B.A. in 1889, and is responsible for many of the gothic revival structures at Yale University built in the 1910s and 1920s, as well as the university's overall plan. He designed for other universities as well, including such buildings as the Butler Library at Columbia University, many of the original buildings at the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center (now known as the Columbia University Medical Center), and several structures at Northwestern University.

Rogers was philanthropist Edward Harkness's favorite architect, and Harkness would often condition a gift for a new academic or medical building upon the institution's agreement to hire Rogers for the project. It is thus no coincidence that Rogers' work is abundant at Yale, Columbia and other institutions Harkness supported lavishly. Though Harkness loved Rogers's work, when Harkness donated a new home for Wolf's Head, his society at Yale, another architect was chosen, for obvious reasons, according to many sources in architectural histories.

Rogers's nephew, James Gamble Rogers II (1901-1990) was also an architect, who designed homes in Winter Park, Florida for the Rogers family architecture firm Rogers, Lovelock and Fritz, where Rogers II's son John (Jack) Rogers is a principal architect.

Rogers II's other son, James Gamble Rogers IV (1937-1991) was also trained as an architect. After working in the family firm as a young man, James Gamble Rogers IV decided to pursue his passion for music. He became a noted Florida folksinger, composer and guitarist, now memorialized by the Gamble Rogers Memorial Foundation[2], Gamble Rogers Middle School, and Gamble Rogers Memorial State Recreation Area at Flagler Beach on Florida's east coast.

James Gamble Rogers' architectural drawings and photographs are now held in the Dept. of Drawings & Archives in the Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library at Columbia University in New York.

[edit] Buildings

[edit] References

[edit] Sources

  • James Gamble Rogers and the Architecture of Pragmatism, Aaron Betsky, MIT, 1994.
  • The Architecture of James Gamble Rogers II in Winter Park, Florida, Patrick and Debra McClane , 2004. ISBN 0-8130-2770-5
  • The Campus Guide: Yale University, Patrick L. Pinnell, Princeton Architectural Press, New York, 1999.
  • Yale: A Pictorial History, Reuben A. Holden, New Haven, Yale University Press, 1967.