Edward Clarke Cabot (August 17, 1818 – January 5, 1901) was an American architect and artist.
Life and career
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Edward Clarke Cabot was born April 17, 1818, in Boston, Massachusetts to Samuel Cabot Jr. and Eliza (Perkins) Cabot. He was the third of their seven children. He was educated in private schools in Boston and Brookline, Massachusetts. Cabot was self-taught as an artist and did not attend college. At the age of 17, in about 1835, Cabot went west to Cairo, Illinois to raise sheep. This venture faltered and failed about 1840. In 1842, Cabot returned east and moved to Windsor, Vermont, where he again raised sheep. When in 1846 the Boston Athenaeum solicited for plans for its new building, Cabot submitted a proposal. His design was selected by the trustees with the condition that Cabot associate himself with George Minot Dexter, an experienced architect and engineer, to execute the design. The Athenaeum design, influenced by the contemporary English work of Charles Barry, was begun in 1847 and completed in 1849. Once construction was complete, Cabot established himself as an architect in Boston. To handle the business of architecture, he formed a partnership with his younger brother, James Elliot Cabot. They were associated from 1849 to 1858 and again from 1862 to 1865. He otherwise practiced independently until 1875 when he formed a new partnership with Francis Ward Chandler, known as Cabot & Chandler. Cabot soon retired from Cabot, Everett & Mead, but his name remained associated with the firm until his death in 1901. His partners continued the business as Everett & Mead for several years.
When the Boston Society of Architects was organized in 1867, Cabot was elected the first president. He continued to fill this office until 1896, when he declined to be renominated.
Personal life
Cabot was twice married. He married first in 1842, to Martha Eunice Robinson (born December 9, 1818; died November 28, 1871) of Salem, Massachusetts. She died at home in Brookline, Massachusetts in 1871. He married second in 1873 to Louisa Winslow Sewall (born June 3, 1846; died August 10, 1907) of Roxbury, Massachusetts. With his first wife he had five children: Thomas Handasyd (born April 1, 1843; died June 13, 1843), Martha Robinson (born May 27, 1844), Elizabeth Perkins (born January 6, 1847; died May 11, 1865), William Robinson (born November 11, 1853) and George Edward (born February 22, 1861). With his second wife he had three additional children: Sewall (born March 8, 1875), Norman Winslow (born July 1, 1876) and Lucy Sewall (born February 17, 1890). His youngest son, Norman Winslow Cabot, would become noted as a football player.
Cabot enlisted in the Union Army on September 12, 1862, with the 44th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment, which saw action during the Civil War. This regiment was mustered out on June 18, 1863.
- First Parish Church (former), Brookline, Massachusetts (1848, demolished 1891)
- "Holmesdale" for Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr., Pittsfield, Massachusetts (1849)
- House for Samuel Cabot Jr., Brookline, Massachusetts (1849)
- Massachusetts Charitable Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston, Massachusetts (1849, demolished)
- House for Charles Larkin, Milton, Massachusetts (1852)
- House for Thomas Handasyd Perkins, Nahant, Massachusetts (1853)
- House for John Murray Forbes, Milton, Massachusetts (1853)
- Boston Theatre, Boston, Massachusetts (1854, demolished)
- Richards Block, Boston, Massachusetts (1858)
- Harvard Gymnasium, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1859–60, demolished 1933)
- Houses for Samuel Hammond Russell and Catherine (Hammond) Gibson, Boston, Massachusetts (1859–60)
- President's House, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1860, demolished)
- Stone Library at "Peacefield" for Charles Francis Adams Sr., Quincy, Massachusetts (1869–70)
- "Morningside" for William Barton Rogers, Newport, Rhode Island (1871)
- House for Walter Channing Cabot, Brookline, Massachusetts (1873, demolished)
- Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland (1877–89)
- Snow Library, Orleans, Massachusetts (1877–78, burned 1952)
- House for Georgiana Lowell, Boston, Massachusetts (1879)
- Merrill Hall, Doane University, Crete, Nebraska (1879, burned 1969)
- House for Elbridge Torrey, Dorchester, Boston, Massachusetts (1880, demolished)
- Insurance Company of North America Building, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1880, demolished)
- House for Samuel Cabot III, Brookline, Massachusetts (1881)
- Brown Building, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1882, demolished)
- House for Francis Ward Chandler, Boston, Massachusetts (1883–84)
- Gaylord Hall, Doane University, Crete, Nebraska (1884)
- Hotel Florence, Bar Harbor, Maine (1887, burned 1917)
- House for Louis Cabot, Dublin, New Hampshire (1887, NRHP 1983)
- House for Lois Lillie (White) Howe, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1887, NRHP 1983)
- Walter Hastings Hall, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1888)
