|
|
|
![]() |
|
NGE >> The Arts >> Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and Historic Preservation >> Architecture: Design >> Suburban Historicism, 1920-1935 >> P. Thornton Marye (1872-1935) |
|
|
P. Thornton Marye (1872-1935) Architect
Philip Thornton Marye was born in 1872 in Alexandria, Virginia, and raised at Brompton, the family mansion built in 1836 by John Lawrence Marye. (The mansion was later home to the dean of Mary Washington College in Fredericksburg, Virginia.) He studied from 1888 to 1889 at Randolph-Macon College in Ashland, Virginia, and from 1889 to 1890 at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. During the Spanish-American War (1898), Marye served in Cuba and was a member of the Fourth Virginia Volunteers. In World War I (1917-18) he rose to the rank of major, serving in the U.S. Army Constructional Division and in the American Expeditionary Forces Transport Corps until 1919. His future partner, Barrett Alger, who began working with Marye in 1915, also served in the army during World War I. Early Career During
Exactly contemporary with Auguste Perret's concrete apartment building at 25 rue Franklin in Paris, France, the Atlanta Terminal Station was also a pioneer work in reinforced concrete. Marye structured wide-span enclosures for offices and waiting rooms, and he developed a sawtoothed roof over
After the Atlanta Terminal Station was completed, Marye established his office in the Equitable Building, a noted skyscraper built in the Chicago style during the early 1890s by Burnham and Root. In association with A. Ten Eyck Brown, Marye built St. Luke's Episcopal Church in Atlanta (1906), one of the fine Gothic revival churches of the early twentieth century in Georgia. The church is notable for its altar mural of the Good Shepherd by Edwin H. Blashfield, as well as for its stained
In 1910 Marye built the Walton Building in the Fairlie Poplar district of Atlanta, where he later maintained his practice with Barrett Alger and his son Richard Alger in various partnerships. Marye built his home (1913-14) on Lafayette Drive in the newly developed Ansley Park suburb, and at the same time he designed the Gentry-McClinton House on East Lake Drive, now considered an Atlanta landmark. Soon after World War I, he designed an Italian palazzo (ca. 1918) on West Paces Ferry Drive for T. B. Dillard, a house originally surrounded by thirty acres that still stands somewhat aloof from the no-longer rural road beyond its ample front lawn. Partnerships During the 1920s the firm of Marye, Alger, and Alger built the Joseph E. Brown Junior High School (1922-24) and the Georgian revival Randolph-Lucas House (1924), one of the few surviving great houses of Peachtree Street. Marye's son John Nisbet Marye, an engineer, worked in the office from 1926 to 1935, the year Marye died. In
Preservation Marye also played an important role in historic preservation in Georgia, serving as district officer of the Historic American Buildings Survey and as consultant to the American Institute of Architects Commission for the Preservation of Historic Buildings in America. He traveled statewide to photograph and sketch Georgia landmarks of note, and his work provided an important archive documenting the state's historic buildings during the 1930s. Suggested Reading Franklin M. Garrett, Atlanta and Environs: A Chronicle of Its People and Events (New York: Lewis Historical Publishing, 1954; reprint, Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1969). Elizabeth A. Lyon, Atlanta Architecture: The Victorian Heritage, 1837-1918, 2d ed. (Atlanta: Atlanta Historical Society, 1986). Robert M. Craig, Georgia Institute of Technology Published 5/29/2008 |
|
|||||||||||||
|
Home | What's New | Index | Quick Facts | About NGE | Help | Contact A project of the Georgia Humanities Council, in partnership with the University of Georgia Press, the University System of Georgia/GALILEO, and the Office of the Governor.
|