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NGE >> The Arts >> Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and Historic Preservation >> Architecture: Design >> Early Victorian Period, 1850-1895 >> Fay and Eichberg |
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Fay and Eichberg Although the partnership of
Born in upstate New York in 1819, Calvin Fay began his southern career in Savannah, as the supervising architect for St. John's Episcopal Church, one of the first
In
Their practice quickly grew during the prosperous 1880s. They obtained major commissions for the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce (an eclectic building combining both Gothic revival and classical features) and two large buildings in Savannah: the strongly Italianate Telfair Hospital for Females and a Central of Georgia Railway building (today known as Eichberg Hall, of Savannah College of Art and Design),
By the late 1880s Fay was in failing health, and Eichberg continued the practice on his own, becoming one of Savannah's most successful designers. He developed a large clientele among prominent Jewish businessmen and other wealthy individuals. He expanded his practice to North Carolina, South Carolina, and Florida. Although an excellent designer in the Queen Anne style and very familiar with the Italianate, which had been Fay's forte, Eichberg was especially proficient in the popular Romanesque Revival style as expressed in the South with its extensive use of red brick and terra-cotta, a variety of arches, often spiky rooflines, and
Despite substantial business in the early 1890s, it appears that Eichberg's commissions fell off dramatically after the depression of 1893. There is also no evidence that he embraced the new styles of that decade, which called for neoclassical and Colonial Revival forms. Nor does he seem to have done any work in the newly popular Chicago style of high-rise commercial building. By the end of the century he had returned to Atlanta to help run a family manufacturing business and had retired from active architectural pursuits. Suggested Reading Elizabeth A. Lyon, "Business Buildings in Atlanta: A Study in Urban Growth and Form" (Ph.D. diss., Emory University, 1971). Roulhac Toledano, The National Trust Guide to Savannah: Architectural and Cultural Treasures (New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1997). Richard D. Funderburke, Atlanta Updated 5/17/2010 |
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