Napoleon LeBrun

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Napoleon Eugene Charles Henry Le Brun (January 2, 1821July 9, 1901) was an American architect. Le Brun is best known as the architect of several notable Philadelphia churches, including St. Patrick's Catholic Church, Twentieth Street (1841); the Seventh Presbyterian Church (1842), the Scot's Presbyterian Church (1843), the Church of St. Peter the Apostle (German Catholic), Fifth Street (1843); the Protestant Episcopal Church of the Holy Nativity (1844), no longer standing; St. Augustine's Church, Fourth Street [1]; and the Cathedral-Basilica of SS. Peter & Paul, Logan Square. He also designed the American Academy of Music at Broad and Locust Streets.

He was a prominent architect in Pennsylvania. He also designed the Schuylkill County Prison in Pottsville, a site that later gained historical significance as the site of several hangings of "Molly Maguires," a rebellious secret society that operated in the coal fields during the 1860-1970s. [2] He also designed the first Columbia County Courthouse in Bloomsburg and the 1854 Montgomery County Courthouse in Norristown , Pennsylvania. Although both were later extensively redesigned and expanded, the notable and distinguishing marble facade of the Montgomery County Courthouse remains his outward and identifying creation.

Sometime after 1861, Le Brun relocated his family to New York City, where his sons Pierre L. and Michel Moracin would join him in a firm that would become N. Le Brun & Sons, the official architects of the New York City Fire Department in the latter half of the 19th century. N. Le Brun and Sons were also instrumental in designing some of the earliest skyscrapers, including the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company Tower.

LeBrun was a son of the Napoleonic ambassador to the United States who, after the denouement of that regime, remained in this country and settled in Philadelphia. LeBrun's early architectural training was in the offices of Thomas U. Walter in Philadelphia, later to become architect of the United States Capitol. LeBrun, as a young man in his twenties, found opportunity in the booming industrial development of the Schuylkill Valley in the 1840s. That accounts for his commission for the Montgomery County Courthouse in Norristown. His other early work includes the original version of Trinity Episcopal Church, Pottsville (1847), still standing though much altered by later revisions, which replaced an 1827 structure by William Strickland. His commission for the church, memorialized in the minutes of the Trinity vestry of the time as a payment to "N. LeBrun, architect" was probably the springboard for his commission for the Schuylkill County prison (1851), upon the relocation of the county seat from Orwigsburg to Pottsville. There is probably other early work of LeBrun in the Schuylkill Valley that remains to be discovered and recognized.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

 This article about a United States architect or architectural firm is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Languages