MCKIM, MEAD, AND WHITE

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'McKim, Mead, and White' was a prominent architectural firm in the eastern United States at the turn of the twentieth century. The firm consisted of Charles McKim, William Mead, and Stanford White. McKim and White studied under Henry Hobson Richardson before forming their own firm. They were associated with the City Beautiful and Beaux Arts movements, which aimed to clean up the visual confusion of American cities and imbue them with a sense of order and noble formality.
Seth Low Memorial Library, Columbia University, built 1895
Rhode Island State House, Providence, completed in 1904


Their works include:

110 Livingston Street, Brooklyn, New York, former Elks Lodge, and former headquarters of the New York City Department of Education

998 Fifth Avenue, New York City

★ The Agricultural Building at the World Columbian Exposition (1893,Chicago, Illinois)

American Academy in Rome (Main Building)

John F. Andrews Mansion, 32 Hereford Street, Boston, Massachusetts

Isaac Bell House, Newport, Rhode Island

Bellevue Hospital Center

Boston Public Library, Boston

Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, New York

★ The Cable Building, 611 Broadway 1892, New York City

Century Club, New York City

Columbia University's Morningside Heights campus: general design and individual buildings including Low Memorial Library, Philosophy Hall, John Jay Hall, Hamilton Hall

Harvard Club of New York, New York

Johnston Gate, Harvard University, Cambridge MA.

James Farley Post Office (often regarded as the architectural twin of New York City’s Pennsylvania Station)

★ Faunce House (then Rockefeller Hall), Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island (1904)

Fayerweather Hall, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts, (1890)

The Garden City Hotel, Garden City, New York

Grand Army Plaza, Brooklyn, New York

Hall of Fame for Great Americans at Bronx Community College (formerly New York University)

Harbor Hill on Long Island, New York, built 1899-1902, destroyed 1947.

★ Hill-Stead, estate of Alfred Atmore Pope, designed in collaboration with Theodate Pope Riddle (now known as Hill-Stead Museum), Farmington, Connecticut

Hotel Pennsylvania

★ Levermore Hall, Blodgett Hall, and Woodruff Hall, Adelphi University, Garden City, New York

★ Liggett Hall, Governors Island, New York

Lullwater Bridge, Prospect Park, Brooklyn, New York

Madison Square Garden II at Madison Square, New York City (the second of four buildings known by this name)

The Manhattan Municipal Building, 1 Centre Street, New York City

Maryland Monument, Lookout Hill, Prospect Park, Brooklyn, New York

Cyrus McCormick summer estate, shingle-style Richfield Springs, New York (1882; razed 1957)

Metropolitan Club, 1 East 60th St, New York City

Morgan Library, New York City

Milwaukee County Courthouse, Milwaukee, Wisconsin (1931)

The Minneapolis Institute of Arts, Minneapolis, Minnesota

Narragansett Pier Casino, Narragansett, Rhode Island

Newport Casino, Newport, Rhode Island

Omaha Building, Omaha, Nebraska (originally the New York Life Building) [1]

★ Old Cabell Hall, Cocke Hall, and Rouss Hall, University of Virginia, Charlottesville

Olin Memorial Library, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut

Parade Place, Lookout Hill, Prospect Park, Brooklyn, New York

Park Circle granite fixtures, Prospect Park, Brooklyn, New York

Pennsylvania Station, Newark, New Jersey

Pennsylvania Station, New York City (above-ground structure destroyed in 1965)

★ Peoples State Bank, Detroit, Michigan

Peristyle, Prospect Park, Brooklyn, New York

Prison Ship Martyrs' Monument, Brooklyn, New York

Racquet and Tennis Club, New York City

Rhode Island State House, Providence, Rhode Island

Rosecliff, Newport, Rhode Island

Savoy-Plaza Hotel New York City

University Club of New York, New York City

University Cottage Club Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey

Villard Houses, 451 Madison Avenue, New York City

★ Walker Art Building, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine, (1894)

Washington Arch, Washington Square Park, New York City

★ The West Wing and East Wingof the White House, 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington D.C. - 1903

★ The renovation of the Theodore Roosevelt White House, 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington D.C. in 1903.

★ English Building, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois

Contents
Noted architects who once worked at the firm
External links

Noted architects who once worked at the firm



Harrie Thomas Lindeberg- started at the firm in 1895 as an assistant to Stanford White and remained with the firm until White's death in 1906.

Lewis Colt Albro- who later partnered briefly with Lindeberg for several commissions.

Charles Lewis Bowman- a draftsman at the firm, noted for his large volume of private residences concentrated in Eastchester, New York, worked for the firm until 1922.

External links



Hill-Stead Museum, Farmington, Connecticut

McKim, Mead and White flickr group

Randall's Lost New York City Cable Building is included as a special resource.

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