George F. Meacham

Last updated
George F. Meacham
BornJuly 1, 1831
DiedDecember 4, 1917
NationalityAmerican
OccupationArchitect
South Congregational Church, New Britain, Connecticut (1865-1868) South Congregational Church, New Britain, Connecticut.jpg
South Congregational Church, New Britain, Connecticut (1865-1868)
1862 advertisement for Woodcock & Meacham, Architects 1862 Woodcock Meacham Architects BostonDirectory.png
1862 advertisement for Woodcock & Meacham, Architects

George Frederick Meacham (July 1, 1831 - December 4, 1917) was an architect in the Boston, Massachusetts, area in the 19th century. He is notable for designing Boston's Public Garden, the Massachusetts Bicycle Club, and churches, homes, and monuments in greater Boston and elsewhere in New England.

Contents

Early life and career

George F. Meacham was born in 1831 in Watertown, Massachusetts to Giles A. and Jane A. Meacham. [1] In 1849, after attending schools in Newton, Waltham and Cambridge, he entered Harvard College. He graduated in 1853. [1] After college he trained and worked as a civil engineer, at one point working on the Water Works of Jersey City, New Jersey. In 1855 he entered the office of an unnamed architect in Boston. [1] By 1857 he was associated with architect Shepard S. Woodcock, [2] and by 1858 they had formed a partnership. [3] Meacham established an independent firm in Boston in 1864. [4]

Meacham was appointed architect of Boston's new Masonic Temple in 1866, after the health of the original architect, Merrill G. Wheelock, failed. [5] Construction had begun in 1865, and Meacham completed the exterior of the building to Wheelock's design and was responsible for the design of the interior. [6] The building was dedicated in 1867. It has been demolished. In 1867 a set of plans for an apartment house designed by Meacham was published in an overview of charity work in France, though it does not indicate whether it was intended to be built in France or Boston, where the book was printed. [7] Meacham continued in Boston until 1891, when he retired from active practice. [1] He continued to work on a few projects from his home in Newton in the following years.

Though most of Meacham's work was architectural, he did his best known work in the capacity of landscape architect. In 1859 his design was adopted for the reconstruction of the Public Garden, his plan for which has remained largely intact. [8] [9] He was also responsible, in 1865, for an extension to the Center Cemetery of Shirley, [10] and for Farlow Park in Newton in 1882. [11]

Personal life

In 1859 Meacham married Mary J. Warren of New Boston, New Hampshire. In 1870 they moved from Watertown to Newton. They had two children together, who both died in their youth. Mary J. Meacham died in 1877. Meacham remarried in 1881, to Ellen Louisa Frost, who survived him. Meacham died on December 4, 1917. At the time of his death he was a resident of Boston. [12]

Legacy

Following his association with Woodcock, several architects who would become notable trained in his office. These include Henry M. Francis (1864-1865) [13] and George R. Pyne (1870s). [14]

Several of his works have been individually listed on the United States National Register of Historic Places.

Architectural works

YearProjectAddressCityStateNotesImageReference
1864House for John A. Wiley93 Elm St North Andover Massachusetts NRHP-listed as part of the Machine Shop Village District. [15]
1864 South Congregational Church 90 Main St New Britain Connecticut Hammatt Billings may have been associated with Meacham in the earliest phases of the design. [16] Meacham was also responsible for the addition of a parish house in 1889. [17] NRHP-listed. South Congregational Church, New Britain, Connecticut.jpg [16]
1865Reformed Church of Utica276 Genesee St Utica New York Demolished. [18]
1866Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument,
Common Park
Purchase St New Bedford Massachusetts Civil War memorial, Clasky Common Park, New Bedford, Massachusetts.jpg [19]
1866Soldiers' Monument,
Evergreen Cemetery
2060 Commonwealth Ave Brighton Massachusetts Evergreen Cemetery Boston MA 03.jpg [20]
1867Silver Lake Mills320 Nevada St Newton Massachusetts [21]
1867Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument,
Riverside Cemetery
274 Main St Fairhaven Massachusetts Civil War memorial, Riverside Cemetery, Fairhaven MA.jpg [22]
1867 Tabernacle Baptist Church 8 Hopper St Utica New York NRHP-listed. Tabernacle Baptist Church, Utica NY.jpg [23]
1868 Melrose High School (former)69 W Emerson St Melrose Massachusetts Demolished. [24]
1868Soldiers' Monument,
Waltham Common
610 Main St Waltham Massachusetts Civil War Soldier's Monument, Waltham, Massachusetts.jpg [25]
1869Engine House No. 19128 Babson St Dorchester Massachusetts Demolished. [26]
1869First Baptist Church of Lewiston240 Bates St Lewiston Maine Demolished. [27]
1869Gate,
Newton Cemetery
791 Walnut St Newton Massachusetts Demolished. [28]
1870Green School (former)408 Merrimack St Lowell Massachusetts [29] [30]
1871Houses for Newton Talbot 234-236 Clarendon St Boston Massachusetts Extant but altered. [31]
1871 Lewiston City Hall 27 Pine St Lewiston Maine Burned in 1890. [27]
1872Cary Avenue Baptist Church (former)60 Tudor St Chelsea Massachusetts Later the First Methodist Church of Chelsea, and now Temple Emmanuel. [32]
1872House for Uriah H. Coffin232 Clarendon St Boston Massachusetts [33]
1872Mechanics Savings Bank Building200 Merrimack St Lowell Massachusetts Burned in 1962. [34] [35]
1873House for James W. Tobey119 Marlborough St Boston Massachusetts [36]
1873Mercantile building for Charles Duane91 Water St Boston Massachusetts Demolished. [37]
1873Underwood School101 Vernon St Newton Massachusetts Demolished. [38]
1873Walnut Avenue Congregational Church (former)120 Walnut Ave Roxbury Massachusetts Now known as the Eliot Congregational Church. NRHP-listed. Eliot Congregational Church of Roxbury.jpg [39]
1874House for Charles B. Fillebrown219 Bellevue St Newton Massachusetts House of Charles Bowdoin Fillebrown, Newton, Massachusetts.png [40] [41]
1874Newton City HallWashington and Cherry Sts Newton Massachusetts A smaller existing building was incorporated into the new City Hall. Demolished. [42]
1875Curb and fence,
Tremont Mall, Boston Common
Tremont St Boston Massachusetts Removed and replaced. [43]
1877Central Fire Station51 Main St Plymouth Massachusetts Demolished. [44]
1877Hotel Huntington25 Commonwealth Ave Boston Massachusetts Demolished. 1889 HuntingtonAve CopleySq 2388386396.jpg [45]
1877House for Edwin Morey338 Beacon St Boston Massachusetts [46]
1877Whitford Block663 Main St Waltham Massachusetts [47]
1878House for Daniel Chamberlin338 Commonwealth Ave Boston Massachusetts [48]
1879House for Frank N. Thayer325 Commonwealth Ave Boston Massachusetts [49]
1880House for John W. Field10 Melville Ave Dorchester Massachusetts [50]
1881Channing Church (former)75 Vernon St Newton Massachusetts Now the Newton Presbyterian Church. [51]
1881House for George C. Lord259 Waverley Ave Newton Massachusetts [52]
1883Hollis Street Church28 Exeter St Boston Massachusetts Later the South Congregational Church. Demolished. [53]
1884House for Hartley Lord26 Summer St Kennebunk Maine [27]
1884Y. W. C. A. Building40 Berkeley St Boston Massachusetts Demolished. [54]
1885 Massachusetts Bicycle Club (former)152 Newbury St Boston Massachusetts Incorporated into the former Boston Art Club building after the club was disbanded. 152 Newbury St BostonMA.jpg [55]
1886Tomb for Hartley Lord,
Hope Cemetery
Barnard Ln Kennebunk Maine [27]
1887Eliot Church474 Centre St Newton Massachusetts Burned. [56]
1887House for Levi B. Gay303 Franklin St Newton Massachusetts [47]
1889Home for Little Wanderers202 W Newton St Boston Massachusetts Demolished. [57]
1890"Irwinton" for Charles I. TravelliHighland and Chestnut Sts Newton Massachusetts Burned in 1898. The former stable still stands at 22 Burnham Rd. [58] [59]
1893House for William F. Bacon52 Hyde Ave Newton Massachusetts [60]
1894Dickson Memorial Chapel,
Greenlawn Cemetery
57 Orne St Salem Massachusetts NRHP-listed as part of Greenlawn Cemetery. Salem Greenlawn Cemetery 3.jpg [61]

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References

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  2. Boston Directory for the Year 1857 (Boston: George Adams, 1857)
  3. Boston Directory for the Year 1858 (Boston: Adams, Sampson & Company, 1857)
  4. Boston Post, November 23, 1864, 1.
  5. Proceedings of the Grand Lodge of the Most Ancient and Honorable Fraternity of Free and Accepted Masons of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts (Boston: Solon Thornton, 1871)
  6. "The New Masonic Temple," Freemason's Monthly Magazine 26, no. 10 (August 1, 1867): 289-302.
  7. William Richards Lawrence, Charities in France in 1866. An Account of Some of the Principal Existing Charitable Institutions in that Country (Boston: Gould & Lincoln, 1867)
  8. City of Boston (14 July 2016). "Public Garden".
  9. Landscape Architecture and Urban Design. Encyclopedia of Urban America: The Cities and Suburbs. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 1998.
  10. Seth Chandler, History of the Town of Shirley, Massachusetts (Shirley, MA: Seth Chandler, 1883): 105-106.
  11. Annual Report of the City Engineer, for the Year 1882 (Newton, MA: 1883)
  12. "George F. Meacham Dead, Was Old-time Architect," Boston Daily Globe, December 5, 1917, 10.
  13. Ellery Bicknell Crane, Historic Homes and Institutions and Genealogical and Personal Memoirs of Worcester County, Massachusetts, vol. 4 (New York and Chicago: Lewis Publishing Company, 1907): 304.
  14. "Pyne, George Rovillo," Who's Who in New England, ed. Albert Nelson Marquis (Chicago: A. N. Marquis & Company, 1909): 771.
  15. Machine Shop Village NRHP Registration Form (1982)
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  55. S. H. Day, "The New House of the Massachusetts Bicycle Club," Outing 5, no. 6 (March 1885): 435.
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  61. Greenlawn Cemetery NRHP Registration Form (2015)

Further reading