Henry Augustus Sims

Henry Augustus Sims (1832 1875) was a Philadelphia architect of the 19th century.[1]

Biography

He was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on December 22, 1832, the second son of John Clarke Sims and Emeline Marion Clark.[2]

He was educated at the Philadelphia high school; training in civil engineering. In 1851 he moved to Canada and was employed by Bytown and Prescott Railways for the construction of railroads. In 1856 he changed his profession to architecture. In 1858 in Ottawa, Canada he had a successful architectural business. He returned to Philadelphia in 1866 and continued to have a successful architectural business. He was joined by his younger brother, James Peacock Sims, and together they established the H.A. & J.P. Sims firm which functioned successfully until his death in 1875.[3] An auction catalogue of his valuable collection of architectural books survives.[4]

He mentored architects Thomas Roney Williamson and James Peacock Sims. He was a member of the American Institute of Architects, the Philadelphia chapter of the AIA, and the Philadelphia Sketch Club.

He died in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on July 10, 1875.

Selected works

United States

Canada

References

  1. Beadle, E.R. (1876). The Old and the New 1743-1876, The Second Presbyterian Church of Philadelphia. Its Beginning and Increase. Philadelphia: James B. Chandler.
  2. Philadelphia Architects and Buildings Org
  3. Montgomery County Pennsylvania Genealogy
  4. Michael J. Lewis, “The Architectural Library of Henry A. Sims,” in Kenneth Hafertepe and James F. O’Gorman, eds., American Buildings and their Architects, 1840-1915 (Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press), pp. 173-193.
  5. Building History, from First Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia.
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