Tracy and Swartwout was a prominent New York City architectural firm headed by Evarts Tracy and Egerton Swartwout .
Evarts Tracy (1868–1922) was the son of first cousins Jeremiah Evarts Tracy and Martha Sherman Greene. His paternal grandmother Martha Sherman Evarts and maternal grandmother Mary Evarts were the sisters of William M. Evarts. Evarts Tracey graduated from Yale in 1890.
Egerton Swartwout (1870–1943) was the first son of Satterlee Swartwout and Charlotte Elizabeth Edgerton (daughter of Ohio Representative Alfred Peck Edgerton). Swartwout graduated from Yale University in 1891.
Both Swartwout and Tracy had trained and worked as draftsmen with the renowned firm, McKim, Mead and White.
From 1904-1909, Tracy and Swartwout were joined by architect James Riely Gordon, forming the firm Gordon, Tracy & Swartwout.
In 1909-1912 the firm was joined by Electus Darwin Litchfield, a graduate of the Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute and the Stevens Institute of Technology. The firm was at this time named Tracy, Swartwout & Litchfield.
Evarts Tracy died January 31, 1922, in France, of chronic myocarditis. Egerton Swartwout continued working on his own after Evarts Tracy's death.
Date | Name | Image | Location | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1900 | Former Yale Club | | 30 West 44th Street, New York | Former Yale Club, now the Penn Club | |
1901 | home for Evarts Tracy | 1009 Hillside Ave. Plainfield NJ | |||
1902 | The Webster Hotel | ![]() | 40 West 45th Street, New York | Added to National Register of Historic Places, 1984 | |
1903 | Muhlenberg Regional Medical Center | Park Ave. and Randolph Road Plainfield, NJ | currently in danger of being demolished | ||
1906 | Pliny Fisk House | New York City (11, 13, 15 E. 45th Street) | [1] | ||
1906 | Skull and Bones, cloister-garden | New Haven, Connecticut | For the Yale University secret society. Evarts Tracy is believed to have been an 1890 member of the society, and William M. Evarts was an 1837 member [2] | ||
1905-1907 | National Metropolitan Bank Building | ![]() | Washington, D.C. | designed by B. Stanley Simmons added to National Register of Historic Places, 1978 | |
1907 | Albert Moyer House | 324 N. Ridgewood Rd. S. Orange, NJ | |||
1907-1909 | Somerset County Courthouse | ![]() | Somerville, New Jersey | ||
1908 | Stamford YMCA | 909 Washington Blvd, Stamford, CT | now Hotel Zero Degrees attached to YMCA | ||
1908-1911 | Cathedral of St. John in the Wilderness, Denver | ![]() | Denver, Colorado | Added to National Register of Historic Places, 1975 | |
1915 | Astor Market | ![]() | 95th and Broadway NY, NY | demolished | |
1915 | George Washington Memorial Hall | Washington, D.C. | construction was started but never completed | [3] | |
1916 | U.S. Post Office and Federal Building | ![]() | Denver, Colorado | Added to National Register of Historic Places, 1973 | |
1917 | Missouri State Capitol | ![]() | Jefferson City, Missouri | Beaux-Arts | |
1919 | Ridgewood High School | ![]() | Ridgewood, New Jersey |
Skull and Bones, also known as The Order, Order 322 or The Brotherhood of Death, is an undergraduate senior secret student society at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. The oldest senior-class society at the university, Skull and Bones has become a cultural institution known for its powerful alumni and various conspiracy theories. It is one of the "Big Three" societies at Yale, the other two being Scroll and Key and Wolf's Head. The society is known informally as "Bones," and members are known as "Bonesmen," "Members of The Order" or "Initiated to The Order."
William Maxwell Evarts was an American lawyer and statesman from New York who served as U.S. Secretary of State, U.S. Attorney General and U.S. Senator from New York. He was renowned for his skills as a litigator and was involved in three of the most important causes of American political jurisprudence in his day: the impeachment of a president, the Geneva arbitration and the contests before the electoral commission to settle the presidential election of 1876.
Jeremiah F. Evarts, also known by the pen name William Penn, was a Christian missionary, reformer, and activist for the rights of American Indians in the United States, and a leading opponent of the Indian removal policy of the United States government.
Rebecca Minot Prescott (1742–1813) was the second wife of United States Founding Father Roger Sherman.
William Adams Delano was an American architect and a partner with Chester Holmes Aldrich in the firm of Delano & Aldrich. The firm worked in the Beaux-Arts tradition for elite clients in New York City, Long Island and elsewhere, building townhouses, country houses, clubs, banks and buildings for colleges and private schools. Moving on from the classical and baroque Beaux-Arts repertory, they often designed in the neo-Georgian and neo-Federal styles, and many of their buildings were clad in brick with limestone or white marble trim, a combination which came to be their trademark.
Tapping Reeve was an American lawyer, judge, and law educator. In 1784 he opened the Litchfield Law School, the first law school in the United States, in Litchfield, Connecticut.
The Litchfield Law School was a law school in Litchfield, Connecticut, that operated from 1774 to 1833. Litchfield was the first independent law school established in America for reading law. Founded and led by lawyer Tapping Reeve, the proprietary school was unaffiliated with any college or university. While Litchfield was independent, a long-term debate resulted in the 1966 recognition of William & Mary Law School as the first law school to have been affiliated with a university.
Maxwell Evarts was an American lawyer and politician.
McKim, Mead & White was an American architectural firm based in New York City. The firm that came to define architectural practice, urbanism, and the ideals of the American Renaissance in fin de siècle New York City.
Evarts can refer to:
Henry Joel Scudder was a United States Representative from New York.
James Gould was a jurist and an early professor at the Litchfield Law School.
Alfred Peck Edgerton was an American businessman who served as a member of the United States House of Representatives from Ohio for two terms from 1851 to 1855.
The Byron White United States Courthouse is a courthouse in Denver, Colorado, currently the seat of the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit. It formerly housed courthouses of the United States District Court for the District of Colorado. Completed between 1910 and 1916, the building was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1973, as U.S. Post Office and Federal Building. In 1994, it was renamed in honor of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Byron White (1917–2002) a native of Fort Collins, Colorado.
Francis Asbury, also known as the Francis Asbury Memorial, is a public equestrian statue, by American artist Augustus Lukeman, located at 16th Street and Mt. Pleasant Street, Northwest, Washington, D.C., in the Mount Pleasant neighborhood.
Egerton Swartwout was an American architect, most notably associated with his New York City architectural firm Tracy and Swartwout and McKim, Mead & White. His buildings, numbering over 100, were typically in the Beaux-Arts style. Six of his buildings are recognized on the National Register of Historic Places, and three others have been given landmark status by their city commissions.
Brigadier General Robert Swartwout was an American military officer, merchant, alderman, and Navy agent of New York City. He was born in Poughkeepsie, New York, the son of the American Revolutionary War military veteran Captain Abraham Swartwout (1743–1799) and descendant of Tomys Swartwout.
Robert Egerton Swartwout was an American-born writer, poet, cartoonist, and coxswain. He was the only son of American architect Egerton Swartwout and British-born Geraldine Davenport Swartwout. He drew from his rowing experience to produce a locked room mystery about The Boat Race and many poems.
Martha Tracy served as dean of the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania (WMCP) from 1917 to 1940, leading the institution through the Great Depression. She created a department of preventive medicine within the college and was the first professor of preventive medicine at WMC.
Colonel Francis Laurens Vinton Hoppin was a prominent American architect and painter from Providence, Rhode Island.