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NGE >> The Arts >> Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and Historic Preservation >> Architecture: Design >> Early Victorian Period, 1850-1895 >> William H. Parkins (1836-1894) |
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William H. Parkins (1836-1894)
As Atlanta grew in the postwar years, Parkins formed a number of business partnerships and gained the commissions for the most prestigious buildings in Georgia. The design work was generally Italianate, Second Empire, or a combination of the two, as in the Kimball House Hotel.
He also produced buildings in other popular styles. In Randolph County (site of his retirement "plantation"), Parkins designed a Queen Anne/shingle style college building and courthouse with strong Romanesque revival features. In Atlanta he produced a Moorish style synagogue and a wide array of business buildings in a High Victorian style, sometimes with Gothic revival details. (The 1880 Young Men's Library Building was a good example.) It was as a businessman, however, that the architect was most influential. Parkins expanded his practice by aggressively gaining commissions throughout Georgia and in several surrounding states. He also established various related businesses, including one in the 1870s with William Jennings to sell building supplies,
Suggested Reading Franklin Garrett, Yesterday's Atlanta (Miami: E. A. Seeman, 1977). Spencer Bidwell King Jr., "A Yankee Who Served the South," Atlanta Historical Bulletin, no.14 (June 1969). Elizabeth A. Lyon, Atlanta Architecture: The Victorian Heritage, 1837-1918, 2d. ed. (Atlanta: Atlanta Historical Society, 1986). Gerald Sams, AIA Guide to the Architecture of Atlanta (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1993). Richard D. Funderburke, Atlanta Updated 8/25/2006 |
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