McDonald Brothers (architects)

McDonald Brothers was a Louisville-based firm of architects of courthouses and other public buildings. It was a partnership of brothers Kenneth McDonald (died 1904), Harry McDonald (aka Henry P. McDonald), and Donald McDonald founded in 1878.[1]

Harry McDonald was the senior member of the firm. He served in the American Civil War as a confederate soldier. He later was elected to the Kentucky legislature and died while in office, in 1904.[1]

Donald McDonald graduated from Washington and Lee University in 1873.[1]

Kenneth McDonald died in 1904.[1]

The partnership lasted from 1874 until 1896. Kenneth McDonald practiced individually after then, until 1901.[2]

Many of their works survive and are listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places. Their Adair County Courthouse, for one example, was built in 1885.[3]

Works (with variations in attribution to both or either) include:

Post-partnership

Alfred Joseph, who later founded Joseph & Joseph architects in Louisville, worked for the McDonald Brothers firm before also working under McDonald and Sheblessy, and under McDonald and Dodd.[4]

References

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