Thomas Henry Poole
Thomas Henry Poole (1860 – 31 July 1919[1]) was British-born architect who designed numerous churches and schools in New York City.
Poole was born in Shrewsbury, England, in 1860. He was educated at Rugby and Christ Church, Oxford.[2] Poole is listed in a Manhattan city directory as an architect in 1887, when he was 27, suggesting that he may have had a substantial apprenticeship.[3] In 1886 he resided at 127 West 56th Street. In 1900 he was listed at 15 West 30th Street. In 1918, the T. H. Poole Co. had offices at 13 West 30th Street.
Works (partial list)
Poole was a Roman Catholic, and most of his commissions were for the archdiocese in and around New York. He seldom designed Protestant churches; but these too were in the city.
Brooklyn
Bronx
Manhattan
- One of the earliest Poole designs is the Holy Name of Jesus Roman Catholic Church on the northwest corner of West 96th Street and Amsterdam Avenue, begun in 1891 and dedicated in 1900. The Gothic design features an interior hammerbeam roof.
- Poole was a parishioner at the Church of Our Lady of Good Counsel, at 232 East 90th Street. It is also Gothic but with huge Tudor-style paired turrets at each end. The church is executed in an unusual Vermont marble, a filmy blue-white with rich veining. It was completed to Poole's design in 1892.
- One of his few commissions not for a Catholic parish was the Harlem Presbyterian Church in 1905. Located at West 122nd Street and Mount Morris Park West, it boasts a strikingly eclectic design with a dome on top of a Romanesque lower section. It is in the Mount Morris Park Historic District.
- The wildly ornate neo-Gothic facade of the 1907 St. Thomas the Apostle, on 118th Street just west of Saint Nicholas Avenue, was for many years a neighborhood landmark. In 2008 it is slated for demolition.[4]
- St. Catherine of Genoa, 1887, 506 West 153rd Street, Hamilton Heights. The Archdiocese of New York closed the parish school in 2006.
- St. Columba Catholic School, 1910, at 331 West 25th Street in Chelsea. Gothic style, pressed brick with terra cotta trimmings. In 2006, the Archdiocese of New York closed the school.
- Sacred Heart Academy, 1884, 49 West 17th St. 4-story brick. Demolished.
- St. Joseph of the Holy Family School, 1912, 125th Street and Morningside Avenue, Harlem. Closed.
Queens
Long Island
Outside New York City
- The Church of the Transfiguration, 268 S. Broadway, Tarrytown, New York. Built by the Carmelites and dedicated in October 1898, it is a Gothic design done in granite.[9]
- Saint Cecilia's Church, 55 West Demarest Avenue, Englewood, New Jersey, completed 1910. Also a Carmelite church in the Gothic tradition, it was built for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Newark.
- Gibbons Hall at The Catholic University of America, 620 Michigan Avenue, Northeast, Washington, D.C. Built in 1911 and named for the University's first chancellor, James Gibbons, Cardinal Archbishop of Baltimore (1877–1921). This Gothic Revival building is a student dormitory.[10]
- Sisters of the Holy Cross Academy, 1909, 4-story brick and stone school, Northwest Washington, D.C. Demolished for Howard University campus.
Writing career
Poole also served his Catholic faith as a writer. He contributed articles to The Messenger, a church publication with offices in Manhattan. He wrote a detailed architectural review of the Westminster Cathedral when it opened in London, England, in 1903:
“…outside of its practical character it ought certainly to lead to the further development of all that is beautiful in art and to the better interior adornment of our churches… giving us the best possible facilities for the carrying out of all the requirements of our religion to the fullest possible extent with all the solemnity and grandeur that the service of man can invoke and the offering of our best works and thoughts as well as of our bodies and souls to God the Lord and Master of all.” [11]
Poole’s name also appears as a contributor in the Catholic Encyclopedia: An International Work of Reference, published in 1913. He wrote entries about architectural terms, such as apse chapel, also known as the lady chapel.[12]
Poole died July 31, 1919, at his Manhattan office, 13 West 30th Street. His funeral was held at Saint Cecilia's in Brooklyn, one of his churches.[13]
Gallery
References
- ^ The American Review of Reviews: An International Magazine, July–December 1919, page 252
- ^ "Thomas H. Poole (obituary)". New-York Tribune. August 2, 1919. http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030214/1919-08-02/ed-1/seq-8/. Retrieved 2011-04-20.
- ^ Streetscapes, by Christopher Gray, The New York Times, December 22, 2002
- ^ Streetscapes, by Christopher Gray, The New York Times, December 22, 2002
- ^ "About Us". Our Lady of Mount Carmel Parish (Queens, NY). http://mountcarmelastoria.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=category&layout=blog&id=1&Itemid=2. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. 2009-03-13. http://nrhp.focus.nps.gov/natreg/docs/All_Data.html.
- ^ http://www.sacredheartsofjesusandmary.org
- ^ St. Lawrence parish history
- ^ Blessed by the Archbishop, The New York Times, October 17, 1898, p. 7
- ^ The Catholic University of America Facilities Operations - Gibbons Floorplans
- ^ The Messenger, 1903, page 498
- ^ The Catholic Encyclopedia, 1913, page 660
- ^ Obituary 2, The New York Times, August 2, 1919, page 7
Persondata |
Name |
Poole, Thomas Henry |
Alternative names |
T. H. Poole |
Short description |
Architect of numerous New York churches and schools |
Date of birth |
1860 |
Place of birth |
Shrewsbury, England |
Date of death |
31 July 1919 |
Place of death |
Manhattan, New York City, New York State |