William Strickland (November 1788 – April 6, 1854) was a noted American architect and civil engineer in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and Nashville, Tennessee. A student of Benjamin Latrobe and mentor to Thomas Ustick Walter, Strickland helped establish the Greek Revival movement in the United States. A pioneering engineer, he wrote a seminal book on railroad construction, helped build several early American railroads, and designed the first ocean breakwater in the Western Hemisphere.

Life and career

Early life

Strickland was born in Navesink, New Jersey, to John and Elizabeth Strickland. About 1790, when William was still a child, the family moved to Philadelphia, where his father, a master carpenter, helped found the Practical House Carpenters' Society in 1811.

Architect

In his youth, Strickland was a landscape painter, illustrator for periodicals, theatrical scene painter, engraver, and pioneer aquatintist. His Greek Revival designs drew much inspiration from the plates of The Antiquities of Athens.

thumb|[[Second Bank of the United States, Philadelphia (1819-24)]]

Strickland and Latrobe competed to design the Second Bank of the United States in Philadelphia (1819–1824), a competition that called for "chaste" Greek style. Strickland, who was still copying classical prototypes at this point, won with an ambitious design modeled on the iconic Parthenon of Athens. Proud of the building, Strickland had it included in the background of his 1829 portrait by Philadelphia society painter John Neagle.

The oldest building designed by W. Strickland, which is preserved to this day, is the Holy Trinity Romanian Orthodox Church, located at 222-230 Brown Street Philadelphia (Northern Liberties Area), formerly known as St. John's Episcopal Church. An anonymous report from its consecration, published on September 21, 1816, in Relf’s Philadelphia Gazette and Daily Advertiser, describes the church as a “neat and elegant edifice” whose “design was given by Mr. William Strickland, of this city,” and whose “execution has done justice to the taste of the Architect.” (Jeffrey. A. Cohen, 1983).

In 1825, several Philadelphia philanthropists, including former ambassador William Short, financed a voyage to Europe, where Strickland aimed to "bring back with him a knowledge of all the modern improvements in civil engineering." Upon returning to Pennsylvania, Strickland became chief engineer of the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal Company, a position he resigned in the 1830s to concentrate on his architectural practice and railroad surveys.

Strickland's evolving talent and confidence is seen in the later Merchants' Exchange (1832–34). Also in Philadelphia, the Merchant Exchange is built on classical example — for example, the cupola is based on the Choragic Monument of Lysicrates — but is a unique building styled to fit the site. It was to be located on a triangular plot at the intersection of two major thoroughfares between the waterfront and the business district. The elegant, curved east façade faces the waterfront, and reflects the carriage and foot traffic that would have been circulating in front of the building. This elevation is unique — Greek Revival, but modern — while a more staid and formal elevation can be found on the west side, facing Third Street. In the same year he designed the Merchants' Exchange, 1832, Strickland entered a project in the competition for Philadelphia's Girard College, which won the second prize.

thumb|[[Merchants' Exchange Building (Philadelphia)|Merchants' Exchange, Philadelphia (1832-34)]]

Strickland's 1836 National Mechanic Bank at 22 South 3rd Street, set on a narrow plot between two taller neighbors, has strong, square pilasters to support the portico and ornate stone carving at their tops to defend the building against its taller and bulkier neighbors. One of Strickland's last Philadelphia designs and among his smallest, the building is now occupied by National Mechanics Bar and Restaurant.

Strickland also executed works in other styles, including very early American work in the Gothic Revival style, including his Masonic Hall (1808–11, burned 1819) and his Saint Stephen's Church (1823), both in Philadelphia. He also made use of Egyptian, Saracenic and Italianate styles. He later moved to Nashville, Tennessee, where his Egyptian-influenced design of the First Presbyterian Church (now the Downtown Presbyterian Church) was controversial but today is widely recognized as a masterpiece and an important evocation of the Egyptian Revival style.

Engineer

Strickland was also a civil engineer

In 1835, the Wilmington and Susquehanna Railroad hired Strickland to survey a route from Wilmington, Delaware, to Charlestown, Maryland. Later that year, he was named chief engineer of the Delaware and Maryland Railroad. In 1838, the W&S and D&M merged with two other railroads to create the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad, the first rail link from Philadelphia to Baltimore—a line that survives today as part of Amtrak's Northeast Corridor. His service with the railroads is noted on the 1839 Newkirk Viaduct Monument in Philadelphia.

Strickland designed and built the Delaware Breakwater, the first breakwater in the Americas and the third in the world.

Death and interment

Strickland died in Nashville and is buried within the walls of his final, and arguably greatest work, the Tennessee State Capitol. A cenotaph for him exists in the family plot in Laurel Hill Cemetery in Philadelphia.

Legacy

Several architects and engineers of note began or developed their careers in Strickland's employ, including Thomas Ustick Walter, Gideon Shryock, and John Trautwine.

Selected works

thumb|[[Tennessee State Capitol, Nashville (1845-59). Strickland is buried in a crypt within.]]

Philadelphia buildings

  • Masonic Hall, Philadelphia (1808–11, burned 3 March 1819)
  • Holy Trinity Romanian Orthodox Church, Philadelphia, also known as the former St. John's Episcopal Church (1815–16)
  • Second Bank of the United States, Philadelphia (1819–24)
  • St. Stephen's Episcopal Church, Philadelphia (1822–23)
  • Second Chestnut Street Theatre - 1822 - 1856 (burned)
  • Musical Fund Hall, The Musical Fund Society, Philadelphia - 1824, (substantially altered)
  • Wyck House - 1824 (rearranged its interior)
  • Triumphal Arches for Lafayette's visit - 1824
  • Second Congregation Mikveh Israel Synagogue, Philadelphia - 1825, (demolished)
  • United States Naval Asylum, Philadelphia - 1826–33, (now condominiums).
  • Restoration of the tower of Independence Hall, Philadelphia - 1828
  • First Unitarian Church of Philadelphia, - 1828
  • University of Pennsylvania (9th Street buildings), Philadelphia - 1829
  • Arch St. Theater - 1829 (1863 damaged by fire, demolished 1936)
  • Second Philadelphia Mint, Philadelphia - 1829–33 (demolished 1902)
  • Blockley Almshouse - 1835 (demolished 1920s - 1959)
  • Merchants' Exchange, Philadelphia 1832–34
  • Mechanics National Bank - 1837

Buildings elsewhere

  • Immanuel Episcopal Church on the Green, New Castle, Delaware (1822)
  • Delaware Breakwater and Lighthouse, Lewes, Delaware (1826-1840, lighthouse decommissioned in 1903, demolished in 1956)
  • College of Charleston, Main Building (now Randolph Hall), Charleston, South Carolina (1828, extensively altered 1850)
  • Nathanael Greene Monument, Savannah, Georgia (1830)
  • U.S. Branch Mint, Charlotte, North Carolina (1835, moved to new location 1930s). Now Mint Museum of Art
  • U.S. Branch Mint, Dahlonega, Georgia (1835, burned 1878)
  • U.S. Branch Mint, New Orleans, Louisiana (1835–38)
  • Providence Athenaeum, Providence, Rhode Island (1837–38)
  • Sussex County Courthouse, Georgetown, Delaware (1837)
  • Grace Church, Keswick, Virginia (1848–55).
  • St. John's Episcopal Church, Salem, NJ (1838).

Tennessee

  • Tennessee State Capitol, Nashville, Tennessee (1845–59).
  • Second Presbyterian Church, Nashville, Tennessee (1846, demolished 1979).
  • Wilson County Courthouse, Lebanon, Tennessee (1848, burned 1881).
  • First Presbyterian Church, Nashville, Tennessee (1848–49).
  • Belmont Mansion, Nashville, Tennessee (1849–53). Formerly Acklen Hall during Ward-Belmont College years, Belmont University (This is debated).

<gallery>

File:Masonic Hall Philadelphia LOC03503v.jpg|Masonic Hall, Philadelphia (1808–11, burned 1819).

File:View of the Chain Bridge The Port Folio June 1810.jpg|"View of the Chain Bridge invented by James Finley Esq.", William Strickland, delineator. The Port Folio, June 1810.

File:St Steves Philly 2.jpg|Saint Stephen's Episcopal Church, Philadelphia, PA (1822–23).

File:G Stephensons Patent Locomotive Engine LOC3c10386v (cropped).jpg|"G. Stephenson's Patent Locomotive Engine." William Strickland, artist and engraver (1826).

File:MAIN ENTRANCE PORTICO AND STAIRWAY, EAST ELEVATION - U. S. Naval Asylum, Biddle Hall, Gray's Ferry Avenue, Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, PA HABS PA,51-PHILA,577A-2.tif|United States Naval Asylum, Philadelphia, PA (1826–33)

File:Randolph Hall, College of Charleston, Harleston Village, Charleston, SC (49364204051).jpg|Randolph Hall at the College of Charleston, Charleston, SC (1828, altered)

File:University of Pennsylvania Medical Hall 1829 Ninth Street.jpg|University of Pennsylvania Medical Hall, 1829

File:Second Philadelphia Mint.jpg|United States Mint, Philadelphia, PA (1829–33, demolished 1902).

File:1936 Mint Museum of Art Building Charlotte, NC.jpg|United States Mint, Charlotte, NC (1835, moved to new location 1930s). Now Mint Museum of Art.

File:EsplanadeOldMintFlagpolemen.jpg|United States Mint, New Orleans, LA (1835–38). Now Louisiana State Museum.

File:Sussex County Courthouse 2020b.jpg|Sussex County Courthouse, Georgetown, DE (1837, altered)

File:Providence Atheaeum, HABS RI-156-1.jpg|Providence Athenaeum, Providence, RI (1837–38).

File:Tennessee state capitol 2009.jpg|Tennessee State Capitol (1845–59)

File:FirstPresbyterianChurchNashville.jpg|First Presbyterian Church, Nashville, TN (1848–49)

File:GraceChurchKeswick.JPG|Grace Church, Keswick, VA (1848–55)

File:Mansion Front 2010.JPG|Belmont Mansion, Nashville, TN (1849–53). Now Acklen Hall, Belmont University

</gallery>

See also

  • William Strickland Row

Notes

References

  • "Strickland, William (1788-1854)" Philadelphia Architects And Buildings
  • Strickland, William. "Reports on canals, railways, roads, and other subjects, made to 'The Pennsylvania Society for the Promotion of Internal Improvement'" (1826)