Electus D. Litchfield | |
---|---|
Born | 1872 New York City, New York |
Died | 1952 Bronx, New York |
Nationality | USA |
Known for | Architect |
Electus D. Litchfield, FAIA (1872–1952) was leading American architect and town planner of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, practicing in New York City.[1] His firm, Electus D. Litchfield, established in 1926, practiced at 80 Fifth Avenue until he disestablished it in 1950.[2]
Contents |
Born 1872 in New York City, he graduated from Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute and Stevens Institute of Technology. He worked in various firms until establishing his own in 1926, designing a number of commercial buildings.[2]
"He was a devotee of municipal beautification."[2] He was one of the main architects and town planners of Yorkship Village, nearby the shipyard in Camden, New Jersey, a World War I industrial town of 2,000 homes.[2] "He was also an architect for the Red Hook slum clearance and housing project, assisted in reconstruction of Bellevue Hospital, and designed the Brooklyn Masonic Temple."[2]
Outside of New York, Litchfield designed "many public and commercial buildings and monuments, including the Denver post office and courthouse; the public library in St. Paul; the National Armory in Washington, and a monument to the Lewis and Clark expedition at Astoria, Ore." He disestablished his firm in 1950.[2]
In the 1930s, as president of the Municipal Art Society, he fought a proposal to renovate Central Park with numerous baseball fields.[2]
He was a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects, member of the Architectural League of New York, New York Fine Arts Federation, the Beaux Arts Institute of Design, and Building Revision Commission (1906–1907), a former director of the Citizens Housing and Planning Council, a founder of the New York Building Congress, and a "former governor of the Society of Colonial Wars of New York, and a member of the General Society of Colonial Wars, the City Club of New York and The Pilgrims."[2]
"Mr. Litchfield had come into the news as the grandson of William S. Cox, a naval lieutenant in the War of 1812, whose commission had been revoked by court-martial in 1814.
"Lieutenant Cox had helped carry the dying Capt. James Lawrence below decks of the frigate Chesapeake during a battle with the British at Boston Harbor. As the result of leaving the scene of the fighting while senior uninjured officer, Mr. Cox was demoted.
"For forty years, Mr. Litchfield sought to have the Navy remove the stigma of that decision. On Sept. 8 he won his fight when the Navy presented to him at St. Barnabas a certificate of restoration of Mr. Cox's commission authorized by the President and the Congress."[2]
He was a lifetime New Yorker, residing at 171 East Seventy-third Street. He died aged 80 at St. Barnabas Hospital (Bronx, New York). He was survived by his widow Elizabeth, daughter Mrs. Elizabeth Lamble of Sarasota, Florida, and son, Burnham Litchfield of Edgartown, Massachusetts.[2]