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McKissack & McKissack

McKissack & McKissack is an American design, program management and construction firm based in New York. It is the oldest Black-owned architecture and construction company in the United States.[7]

McKissack & McKissack
IndustryArchitecture
Engineering
Construction
Founded1905; 118 years ago (1905), as solo firm
1922, as McKissack & McKissack partnership
FounderMoses McKissack III
Calvin Lunsford McKissack
Headquarters
United States 
Area served
New York,[1] Pennsylvania,[2] New Jersey,[3] Connecticut,[4] Georgia,[5] and Louisiana[6]
Key people
Services
Websitehttps://www.mckissack.com

The firm was founded in 1905 in Nashville, Tennessee by Moses McKissack, the grandson of a slave who had been brought to the United States from West Africa and put to work making bricks. Moses III, the slave's grandson, became an accomplished carpenter and eventually teamed with his brother Calvin McKissack to found the company.[8][5][9]

Over its 118 year history, the company has completed over 6,000 public and privately funded, planning, design and construction projects.[10][11]

History Edit

The firm was founded by Moses McKissack III (May 8, 1879 – December 12, 1952) in 1905, who was later joined by his brother Calvin Lunsford McKissack (February 23, 1890 – March 2, 1968) to form the McKissack & McKissack partnership in 1922.[12] The brothers were natives of Pulaski, Tennessee.[13][12] Their father (Moses McKissack II) and grandfather (Moses McKissack) were both trained builders.[13][12] Moses McKissack was sold into slavery after being captured in West Africa, and was sold to an American contractor named William McKissack of North Carolina.[14] Moses was trained to make bricks for construction projects and became a master builder.[14] When Moses was eventually granted his freedom, he began to sell his bricks.[14][15]

Moses McKissack II went on to become a master carpenter, and built the gingerbread finishes on the Maxwell House Hotel.[16] Moses McKissack III entered the architecture trade by working as an apprentice to a builder in Pulaski who hired him in 1890 to assist with architectural designs, drawings and building construction.[5]: 3  His formal education was obtained at the Pulaski Colored High School.[5]: 3  Calvin McKissack was educated at Fisk University in Nashville, which he attended from 1905 to 1909.[5]: 5  Both brothers obtained architectural degrees through a correspondence course.[5]: 5 [12]

Early projects Edit

Between 1895 and 1905, Moses McKissack built houses in Decatur, Alabama, and Mount Pleasant and Columbia, Tennessee.[13] In 1905, Moses officially launched McKissack & McKissack as a construction firm.[14] Also in 1905, Moses received a commission to build a new house for the dean of architecture and engineering at Vanderbilt University in Nashville.[13] He opened his first architectural office in Nashville in 1907.[5]: 5  The firm's first major project was to design the Carnegie Library on the Fisk University campus, a two-story Classic Revival building constructed from brick with a stone columned porch, featuring an interior light well. Its cornerstone was laid in 1908 by William Howard Taft, then the U.S. Secretary of War.[17][18]

Major projects designed by Moses McKissack during the 1910s include the dormitories for Roger Williams University in Nashville and Lane College in Jackson, Tennessee.[14] From 1918 and 1922, Moses designed more than one dozen residences in Nashville and Belle Meade, largely in the Colonial Revival style.[5]: 5 

Calvin McKissack started an independent practice in Dallas, Texas, in 1912, specializing in the design and construction of dormitories and black schools.[5]: 5  In 1915, he returned to Tennessee, becoming superintendent of industries and a teacher of architectural drawing at the Tennessee Agricultural and Industrial State Normal School.[14] In 1918, Calvin joined the faculty of Pearl High School as director of the industrial arts department and later became the first executive secretary of the Tennessee State Association of Teachers in Colored Schools.[17][14] In 1921, McKissack & McKissack built the historic Hubbard House in Nashville.[14] When Tennessee instituted a registration law for architects in 1922, the McKissack brothers were initially denied their licenses.[5]: 6  However, after petitioning the state and obtaining architectural degrees, the brothers got their licenses and became the first licensed black architects in the United States [5]: 2 [15]

Moses McKissack III died on December 12, 1952. Calvin McKissack remained with the firm until his death in 1968.[17] William DeBerry McKissack, the youngest son of Moses III, then succeeded his uncle as president of the firm.[17][9] After suffering a stroke, he retired due to illness,[17] and his wife, Leatrice Buchanan McKissack, became chief executive officer.[19]

Leatrice's daughter Cheryl McKissack Daniel opened a McKissack & McKissack office in New York City in 1990.[16] In 2000, Cheryl McKissack Daniel bought the company from her mother and dissolved the original business, paying out shareholders and closing their offices in the south.[16][20] She then re-established McKissack & McKissack as sole owner of the company.[16] The company closed its Nashville office in May 2002, making its New York City offices its corporate headquarters.[18]

Operations Edit

McKissack & McKissack is headquartered in Manhattan, with additional offices in Philadelphia and Mount Vernon.[10] Since her 2000 purchase of the company, McKissack Daniel has served as CEO and President.[16][20] As of 2019, McKissack & McKissack has approximately 150 employees.[21]

Works Edit

As of 1975 McKissack & McKissack had completed over 3,000 building projects, including about 2,000 churches.[5] Several buildings designed by Moses McKissack, Calvin McKissack, or the McKissack & McKissack firm are listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP).[5][22]

As Moses McKissack III Edit

  • Carnegie Library (1908), 17th Avenue North, Fisk University campus, Nashville, Tennessee. NRHP-listed.
  • House residence (1919), 340 Chesterfield, Nashville, Tennessee
  • George Hubbard House (1920), 1109 First Avenue South, Nashville. Colonial Revival, NRHP-listed.
  • Comer residence (1920), 1411 Eastland Avenue, Nashville, Tennessee
  • Bastian residence (1921), 3722 Central Avenue, Nashville, Tennessee
  • Sexton residence (1921), 3506 Byron Avenue, Nashville, Tennessee

As McKissack & McKissack Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Inside the nation's oldest African-American-owned, female-run construction management firm". CBS News. June 8, 2019. Retrieved April 4, 2023.
  2. ^ Jones, Ayana (March 1, 2021). "Black-owned construction firm thrives under fifth generation leadership". Philadelphia Tribune. Retrieved April 4, 2023.
  3. ^ McKinney, Jeffrey (August 8, 2019). "She Took Over Her Family's 114-Year-Old Construction Company And Turned It Into a $50 Million Powerhouse". Black Enterprise. Retrieved April 4, 2023.
  4. ^ Lockhart, Brian (August 21, 2013). "Finch has already raised $119K for 2015 race". CT Post. Retrieved April 4, 2023.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m (PDF). National Park Service (1985). November 21, 1984. Archived from the original on October 15, 2012.
  6. ^ La Guerre, Liam (February 14, 2018). "Why Construction Firm McKissack Added Natural Disaster Relief to Its Repertoire". Commercial Observer. Retrieved April 4, 2023.
  7. ^ "Inside the nation's oldest African-American-owned, female-run construction management firm". CBS News. June 8, 2019. Retrieved 2021-02-23.
  8. ^ "From Slave Labor to Thriving Business › Family Business Magazine". www.familybusinessmagazine.com. Retrieved 2021-02-23.
  9. ^ a b . AT&T Tennessee African-American History Calendar. AT&T. July 2013. Archived from the original on January 5, 2014. Retrieved January 4, 2014.
  10. ^ a b "WELCOME". mckissack.com. Retrieved 15 August 2023.
  11. ^ "The Legacy of Black Entrepreneurship in Tennessee: McKissack & McKissack with Cheryl McKissack Daniel". Tennessee State Museum. Retrieved 15 August 2023.
  12. ^ a b c d Flynn, Katherine (2021-08-11). "Pioneering Architects: The McKissack Family - AIA". The American Institute of Architects. Retrieved 2023-05-01.
  13. ^ a b c d Wynn, Linda T. "McKissack and McKissack Architects". Tennessee Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2023-05-01.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h Arntz, Sarah (2021-04-01). "Building Nashville: A History of the McKissack & McKissack Architecture Firm". Nashville Public Library. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  15. ^ a b Lauria-Blum, Julia (2022-03-08). "The Keeper of a Storied Legacy". Metropolitan Airport News. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  16. ^ a b c d e "From Slave Labor to Thriving Business › Family Business Magazine". www.familybusinessmagazine.com. Retrieved 2021-02-23.
  17. ^ a b c d e Wynn, Linda T. "McKissack and McKissack Architects (1905- )". Tennessee State University. Retrieved January 4, 2014.
  18. ^ a b Daverman, Richard (2002-05-01). . Archived from the original on 2023-01-28. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  19. ^ Sources disagree on the date of his retirement. The AT&T Tennessee African-American History Calendar gives it as 1975, while the National Visionary Leadership Project gives it as 1983.
  20. ^ a b Johnson, Derrel Jazz. "Cheryl McKissack Daniel Keeps the Family's Fifth-Generation business Thriving as President & CEO of McKissack & McKissack". The Harlem Times. Retrieved 2023-05-19.
  21. ^ Kohler, Katie (2019-09-26). "Five Generations of Company Growth, One Strong Leader : CEG". Retrieved 2023-06-13.
  22. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  23. ^ Daverman, Richard (May 1, 2002). "McKissack & McKissack, historic African-American architecture firm, files Chapter 7". Nashville Post.
  24. ^ Daverman, Richard (May 1, 2002). "McKissack & McKissack, historic African-American architecture firm, files Chapter 7". Nashville Post. Retrieved 2023-01-28.
  25. ^ Lind, J. R. "Historic Buildings in Nashville's Black Neighborhoods Are Disappearing". Nashville Scene. Retrieved 2023-01-29.
  26. ^ "President's House at Texas College". NPGallery, Digital Asset Management System.

External links Edit

  • McKissack & McKissack (Washington, DC)
  • McKissack and McKissack Architects, Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture
  • (PDF). National Park Service (1985. November 21, 1984. Archived from the original on October 15, 2012.
  • Wynn, Linda T. "McKissack and McKissack Architects". Tennessee Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2023-05-01.
  • Wynn, Linda T. "McKissack and McKissack Architects (1905- )". Tennessee State University. Retrieved January 4, 2014.

mckissack, mckissack, american, design, program, management, construction, firm, based, york, oldest, black, owned, architecture, construction, company, united, states, industryarchitectureengineeringconstructionfounded1905, years, 1905, solo, firm, 1922, part. McKissack amp McKissack is an American design program management and construction firm based in New York It is the oldest Black owned architecture and construction company in the United States 7 McKissack amp McKissackIndustryArchitectureEngineeringConstructionFounded1905 118 years ago 1905 as solo firm 1922 as McKissack amp McKissack partnershipFounderMoses McKissack IIICalvin Lunsford McKissackHeadquartersUnited States Area servedNew York 1 Pennsylvania 2 New Jersey 3 Connecticut 4 Georgia 5 and Louisiana 6 Key peopleCheryl McKissack Daniel President CEO ServicesConstruction managementProgram managementProject managementWebsitehttps www mckissack comThe firm was founded in 1905 in Nashville Tennessee by Moses McKissack the grandson of a slave who had been brought to the United States from West Africa and put to work making bricks Moses III the slave s grandson became an accomplished carpenter and eventually teamed with his brother Calvin McKissack to found the company 8 5 9 Over its 118 year history the company has completed over 6 000 public and privately funded planning design and construction projects 10 11 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early projects 2 Operations 3 Works 3 1 As Moses McKissack III 3 2 As McKissack amp McKissack 4 References 5 External linksHistory EditThe firm was founded by Moses McKissack III May 8 1879 December 12 1952 in 1905 who was later joined by his brother Calvin Lunsford McKissack February 23 1890 March 2 1968 to form the McKissack amp McKissack partnership in 1922 12 The brothers were natives of Pulaski Tennessee 13 12 Their father Moses McKissack II and grandfather Moses McKissack were both trained builders 13 12 Moses McKissack was sold into slavery after being captured in West Africa and was sold to an American contractor named William McKissack of North Carolina 14 Moses was trained to make bricks for construction projects and became a master builder 14 When Moses was eventually granted his freedom he began to sell his bricks 14 15 Moses McKissack II went on to become a master carpenter and built the gingerbread finishes on the Maxwell House Hotel 16 Moses McKissack III entered the architecture trade by working as an apprentice to a builder in Pulaski who hired him in 1890 to assist with architectural designs drawings and building construction 5 3 His formal education was obtained at the Pulaski Colored High School 5 3 Calvin McKissack was educated at Fisk University in Nashville which he attended from 1905 to 1909 5 5 Both brothers obtained architectural degrees through a correspondence course 5 5 12 Early projects Edit Between 1895 and 1905 Moses McKissack built houses in Decatur Alabama and Mount Pleasant and Columbia Tennessee 13 In 1905 Moses officially launched McKissack amp McKissack as a construction firm 14 Also in 1905 Moses received a commission to build a new house for the dean of architecture and engineering at Vanderbilt University in Nashville 13 He opened his first architectural office in Nashville in 1907 5 5 The firm s first major project was to design the Carnegie Library on the Fisk University campus a two story Classic Revival building constructed from brick with a stone columned porch featuring an interior light well Its cornerstone was laid in 1908 by William Howard Taft then the U S Secretary of War 17 18 Major projects designed by Moses McKissack during the 1910s include the dormitories for Roger Williams University in Nashville and Lane College in Jackson Tennessee 14 From 1918 and 1922 Moses designed more than one dozen residences in Nashville and Belle Meade largely in the Colonial Revival style 5 5 Calvin McKissack started an independent practice in Dallas Texas in 1912 specializing in the design and construction of dormitories and black schools 5 5 In 1915 he returned to Tennessee becoming superintendent of industries and a teacher of architectural drawing at the Tennessee Agricultural and Industrial State Normal School 14 In 1918 Calvin joined the faculty of Pearl High School as director of the industrial arts department and later became the first executive secretary of the Tennessee State Association of Teachers in Colored Schools 17 14 In 1921 McKissack amp McKissack built the historic Hubbard House in Nashville 14 When Tennessee instituted a registration law for architects in 1922 the McKissack brothers were initially denied their licenses 5 6 However after petitioning the state and obtaining architectural degrees the brothers got their licenses and became the first licensed black architects in the United States 5 2 15 Moses McKissack III died on December 12 1952 Calvin McKissack remained with the firm until his death in 1968 17 William DeBerry McKissack the youngest son of Moses III then succeeded his uncle as president of the firm 17 9 After suffering a stroke he retired due to illness 17 and his wife Leatrice Buchanan McKissack became chief executive officer 19 Leatrice s daughter Cheryl McKissack Daniel opened a McKissack amp McKissack office in New York City in 1990 16 In 2000 Cheryl McKissack Daniel bought the company from her mother and dissolved the original business paying out shareholders and closing their offices in the south 16 20 She then re established McKissack amp McKissack as sole owner of the company 16 The company closed its Nashville office in May 2002 making its New York City offices its corporate headquarters 18 Hubbard House 1920 Nashville Capers C M E Church 1925 Nashville Morris Memorial Building 1925 Nashville Martin Luther King Magnet at Pearl High School 1937 St John s Baptist Church 1940 Miami D R Glass Library 1948 at Texas CollegeOperations EditMcKissack amp McKissack is headquartered in Manhattan with additional offices in Philadelphia and Mount Vernon 10 Since her 2000 purchase of the company McKissack Daniel has served as CEO and President 16 20 As of 2019 McKissack amp McKissack has approximately 150 employees 21 Works EditAs of 1975 McKissack amp McKissack had completed over 3 000 building projects including about 2 000 churches 5 Several buildings designed by Moses McKissack Calvin McKissack or the McKissack amp McKissack firm are listed on the National Register of Historic Places NRHP 5 22 As Moses McKissack III Edit Carnegie Library 1908 17th Avenue North Fisk University campus Nashville Tennessee NRHP listed House residence 1919 340 Chesterfield Nashville Tennessee George Hubbard House 1920 1109 First Avenue South Nashville Colonial Revival NRHP listed Comer residence 1920 1411 Eastland Avenue Nashville Tennessee Bastian residence 1921 3722 Central Avenue Nashville Tennessee Sexton residence 1921 3506 Byron Avenue Nashville TennesseeAs McKissack amp McKissack Edit Capers C M E Church 1925 319 15th Ave N Nashville Tennessee Completed in 1925 NRHP listed Morris Memorial Building 1925 330 Charlotte Ave Nashville Tennessee NRHP listed National Civil Rights Museum 1925 Memphis Tennessee Washington Junior High 1927 Nashville Tennessee 23 Tennessee State University Memorial Library 1927 Nashville Tennessee C M E Publishing House 1931 1970s Jackson Tennessee Art Deco demolished in the 1970s A M E Publishing House Eighth Avenue South Nashville Tennessee Art Deco demolished in the 1970s Bridgeforth High School 1936 1095 Bledsoe Road Pulaski Tennessee NRHP listed Ford Green Elementary 1937 Nashville Tennessee 24 Pearl High School 1937 613 17th Avenue North Nashville Tennessee NRHP listed Henry Allen and Georgia Bradford Boyd House 1930s 1601 Meharry Boulevard Nashville Tennessee 25 Cameron School 1940 1034 First Avenue South Nashville Tennessee NRHP listed St John s Baptist Church 1940 1328 N W 3rd Ave Miami Florida NRHP listed President s House at Texas College 1942 2404 North Grand Avenue Tyler Texas NRHP listed 26 Taborian Hospital 1942 US 61 jct of McGinnis St Mound Bayou Mississippi NRHP listed D R Glass Library 1948 at Texas College 2404 N Grand Avenue Tyler Texas NRHP listed Universal Life Insurance Company 1949 480 Linden Ave Memphis Tennessee NRHP listed References Edit Inside the nation s oldest African American owned female run construction management firm CBS News June 8 2019 Retrieved April 4 2023 Jones Ayana March 1 2021 Black owned construction firm thrives under fifth generation leadership Philadelphia Tribune Retrieved April 4 2023 McKinney Jeffrey August 8 2019 She Took Over Her Family s 114 Year Old Construction Company And Turned It Into a 50 Million Powerhouse Black Enterprise Retrieved April 4 2023 Lockhart Brian August 21 2013 Finch has already raised 119K for 2015 race CT Post Retrieved April 4 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form McKissack and McKissack Buildings in Nashville 1908 1930 Thematic Resources PDF National Park Service 1985 November 21 1984 Archived from the original on October 15 2012 La Guerre Liam February 14 2018 Why Construction Firm McKissack Added Natural Disaster Relief to Its Repertoire Commercial Observer Retrieved April 4 2023 Inside the nation s oldest African American owned female run construction management firm CBS News June 8 2019 Retrieved 2021 02 23 From Slave Labor to Thriving Business Family Business Magazine www familybusinessmagazine com Retrieved 2021 02 23 a b McKissack amp McKissack AT amp T Tennessee African American History Calendar AT amp T July 2013 Archived from the original on January 5 2014 Retrieved January 4 2014 a b WELCOME mckissack com Retrieved 15 August 2023 The Legacy of Black Entrepreneurship in Tennessee McKissack amp McKissack with Cheryl McKissack Daniel Tennessee State Museum Retrieved 15 August 2023 a b c d Flynn Katherine 2021 08 11 Pioneering Architects The McKissack Family AIA The American Institute of Architects Retrieved 2023 05 01 a b c d Wynn Linda T McKissack and McKissack Architects Tennessee Encyclopedia Retrieved 2023 05 01 a b c d e f g h Arntz Sarah 2021 04 01 Building Nashville A History of the McKissack amp McKissack Architecture Firm Nashville Public Library Retrieved 2023 05 02 a b Lauria Blum Julia 2022 03 08 The Keeper of a Storied Legacy Metropolitan Airport News Retrieved 2023 05 09 a b c d e From Slave Labor to Thriving Business Family Business Magazine www familybusinessmagazine com Retrieved 2021 02 23 a b c d e Wynn Linda T McKissack and McKissack Architects 1905 Tennessee State University Retrieved January 4 2014 a b Daverman Richard 2002 05 01 McKissack amp McKissack historic African American architecture firm files Chapter 7 Archived from the original on 2023 01 28 Retrieved 2023 05 02 Sources disagree on the date of his retirement The AT amp T Tennessee African American History Calendar gives it as 1975 while the National Visionary Leadership Project gives it as 1983 a b Johnson Derrel Jazz Cheryl McKissack Daniel Keeps the Family s Fifth Generation business Thriving as President amp CEO of McKissack amp McKissack The Harlem Times Retrieved 2023 05 19 Kohler Katie 2019 09 26 Five Generations of Company Growth One Strong Leader CEG Retrieved 2023 06 13 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service July 9 2010 Daverman Richard May 1 2002 McKissack amp McKissack historic African American architecture firm files Chapter 7 Nashville Post Daverman Richard May 1 2002 McKissack amp McKissack historic African American architecture firm files Chapter 7 Nashville Post Retrieved 2023 01 28 Lind J R Historic Buildings in Nashville s Black Neighborhoods Are Disappearing Nashville Scene Retrieved 2023 01 29 President s House at Texas College NPGallery Digital Asset Management System External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Buildings by McKissack amp McKissack McKissack amp McKissack Washington DC McKissack and McKissack Architects Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form McKissack and McKissack Buildings in Nashville 1908 1930 Thematic Resources PDF National Park Service 1985 November 21 1984 Archived from the original on October 15 2012 Wynn Linda T McKissack and McKissack Architects Tennessee Encyclopedia Retrieved 2023 05 01 Wynn Linda T McKissack and McKissack Architects 1905 Tennessee State University Retrieved January 4 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title McKissack 26 McKissack amp oldid 1170588884, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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