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George A. Fuller

George A. Fuller (October 21, 1851 – December 14, 1900) was an American architect often credited as being the "inventor" of modern skyscrapers and the modern contracting system.

George A. Fuller
Born(1851-10-21)October 21, 1851
DiedDecember 14, 1900(1900-12-14) (aged 49)
Alma materAndover College
OccupationBusinessman
Known forThe invention of the modern skyscraper
SpouseEllen Mary Channing
The Flatiron Building, seen here in 2010, was originally called the Fuller Building, named after George A. Fuller.

Early life and career edit

Fuller was born in Templeton, Massachusetts, near Worcester. After graduating from Andover College, he took a course in architecture at the Boston School of Technology[1] and then started in the office of his uncle, J.E. Fuller, an architect in Worcester, Massachusetts. Fuller soon entered the office of Peabody & Stearns – a firm which specialized in building mansions for the rich in Newport, Rhode Island – where he soon developed a strong interest in the details of erecting a building, and was particularly interested in "skyscrapers", the name recently given to the tall buildings that had been made possible by Elisha Otis' invention of the safety elevator.[2] At the age of twenty-five he was made a partner and placed in charge of Peabody & Stearns's New York office.[2]

In New York, Fuller's design for a new club house for the Union League Club of New York, a Queen Anne mansion for the site at the corner of Fifth Avenue and 39th Street, won over eight other designs, including those submitted by noted architects Richard Morris Hunt and Charles McKim and William Rutherford Mead. Fuller also designed the United Bank Building, a nine-story building at Wall Street and Broadway, although he left Peabody & Stearns shortly after construction began, having spent four years there.[3]

George A. Fuller Company edit

Fuller moved to Chicago, the locus of much of the skyscraper construction in the United States at the time, where he formed a partnership with C. Everett Clark, another architect from Massachusetts, which lasted only two years. He then raised $50,000 and set up the George A. Fuller Company in 1882.[4] Fuller's new firm was different from the many architecture firms of the time, in that it intended to handle all aspects of building construction except for the design of the building, which would come from outside architects. In this way, Fuller created the modern concept of the general contractor.[5]

One of the new firm's first jobs was the Chicago Opera House, designed by Henry Ives Cobb and Charles S. Frost. In this building, Fuller, who was a proponent of using steel in building construction, utilized it for the floor beams, a decision which subjected him to criticism from the architectural community, which was wary of using steel and unsure of its long-term properties.[5]

Very little is really known today of the properties of steel ... and though events point strongly to [it] becoming the metal of the future, there exists among many reasonable conservative men, a wide and well-grounded distrust of its use in the higher engineer or architectural structures, on account of its mysterious behavior, and frequent erratic and inexplicable failures.[6]

Fuller's firm built the Tacoma Building in Chicago designed by Holabird & Roche and completed in 1889, which was the first skyscraper with non load bearing curtain walls.[7] By using Bessemer steel beams, Fuller created steel cages that supported all the building's weight.

Fuller's firm also built the Rookery Building (1888, Burnham and Root), the Rand McNally Building (1890, Burnham & Root), the Pontiac Building (1891, Holabird & Roche) and the Monadnock Building (1891, Burnham & Root; 1893, Holabird & Roche) in Chicago, and the New York Times Building (1889, George B. Post) in New York City.[8][9] The Fuller Company was also intensely involved in the building of the Chicago World's Fair of 1893, the Columbian Exposition, in which a temporary "White City on the Lake" was constructed under the supervision of Daniel Burnham.[10]

With the success of his firm, Fuller became a multimillionaire, and his wife and daughters entered Chicago society. He commissioned Charles P. Post to design a home on Drexel Boulevard on the South Side of Chicago, and Post created a Queen Anne style mansion.[11] His daughter, Allon, married Harry St. Francis Black in 1894, and Fuller took him into the company as vice president, despite the fact that Black was neither an architect nor an engineer.[12]

In 1892, New York City altered its building regulations to allow skeleton construction and curtain walls, in which the load created by the building was carried by the internal skeleton and not by the exterior wall, a construction method which had been allowed under the Chicago building code for years. This change prompted Fuller to open an office in New York in 1896,[13] and soon the company had contracts in Boston, Pittsburgh, St. Louis and Baltimore, as well as in Chicago and New York.[14] Future skyscraper builder William A. Starrett joined the company in 1897 as an office boy.[15]

Death edit

 
Fuller's tomb at Oak Woods Cemetery

Fuller died suddenly on December 14, 1900, from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, leaving an estate valued at $3 million (equivalent to $109.9 million in 2023).[16] His tomb at Oak Woods Cemetery in Chicago, designed by New York architect Bruce Price, is one of the largest in the cemetery.

The Fuller Company after Fuller edit

Following the death of Fuller, Harry S. Black, Fuller's son-in-law, took over as president of the Fuller Company and aggressively expanded its capitalization and operations, merging it with smaller companies, and bringing on to the company's board of directors such men as Henry Morgenthau, Sr., former New York City mayor – and Tammany Hall man – Hugh J. Grant, and banker James Stillman and creating what became known as the "skyscraper trust".[17] In 1902, he took the company public, listing it on the New York Stock Exchange,[18] and then put together a merger with Alliance and New York Realty to create a new $66 million company, the United States Realty and Construction Company; the Fuller Company – which by then had offices in New York, Chicago, Boston, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Washington DC, and Pittsburgh – would remain an independent company under the umbrella of the new entity.[19]

 
The Fuller Company moved into the Fuller Building at 57th Street and Madison Avenue in 1929.

Black announced:

The new company will undoubtedly enter foreign fields, with the view of introducing steel construction in cities like London, Paris and Berlin. Its relations will be very close to the United States Steel Corporation, and naturally, as we will be the largest consumers of structural steel in the world, our terms as to price and delivery will be most favorable.[20]

Indeed, Black had constructed the new company's board of directors with an eye for its need for steel and rail transport. It included Charles Schwab of U.S. Steel, Cornelius Vanderbilt, Charles Tweed of Southern Pacific, Charles Francis Adams, former head of Union Pacific, and representatives from J.P. Morgan and the Mutual Life Insurance Company. Since Black had put together U.S. Realty, he naturally expected to be named the company's president, but the board passed over him and selected Bradish Johnson, president of New York Realty, one of the firms folded into the new conglomerate.[19]

U.S. Realty's stock never performed as expected, although the members of the board did receive substantial salaries and large dividends on the stock they owned, even as the company was underperforming. When the Fuller Company was implicated in the corruption of the building trades union leader, Samuel Parks, its stock fell. Board members dumped their stock and left the company, but Black was buying up stock at the same time. He took control of the company, naming a new board which made him president.[21]

 
Manchuria Railway Hospital in Mukden

In 1920, together with Mitsubishi, he founded the George A.Fuller Company of The Orient Ltd. in Tokyo and built several private and government office buildings in the far east Asia.[22][circular reference]

Among the many buildings constructed by the Fuller Company under Black were the Lincoln Memorial (1914–22), Arlington Memorial Amphitheater (1915–20), Tomb of the Unknown Soldier (Arlington) (1921), Freer Gallery of Art (1916–23), Pennsylvania Station (1910), Hotel Pennsylvania (1919), the Flatiron Building (1902), Macy's Herald Square on Broadway and 34th Street (1902), the New York Times Building (1905), the Plaza Hotel and the Savoy-Plaza Hotel (across Fifth Avenue from it).[23] In Chicago, Fuller built the Stevens Hotel, designed by Holabird & Roche.[24]

The Fuller Company was acquired by the Northrop Corporation in 1971.[25]

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ Alexiou, p. 2
  2. ^ a b Alexiou, p. 3
  3. ^ Alexiou, pp. 5–8
  4. ^ Alexiou, p. 9
  5. ^ a b Alexiou, p. 10
  6. ^ American Architect and Building News (1889), quoted in Alexiou, p. 11
  7. ^ Leland M. Roth, in: Joan Marter (Ed.), The Grove Encyclopedia of American Art, Oxford University Press 2011, p. 528 (s.v. Holabird & Roche)
  8. ^
  9. ^ Alexiou, pp. 10–12
  10. ^ Alexiou, pp. 15–16
  11. ^ Alexiou, pp.12–13
  12. ^ Alexiou, pp. 23, 29
  13. ^ Alexiou, pp.15–16, 29
  14. ^ Alexiou, p. 30
  15. ^ United States War Dept 1919, p. 2530.
  16. ^ Alexiou, pp. 31, 34
  17. ^ Alexiou, pp. 34–36
  18. ^ Alexiou, p. 103
  19. ^ a b Alexiou, pp.103–104, 112–116
  20. ^ Alexiou, p.114
  21. ^ Alexiou, pp. 161–162,169–173
  22. ^ Fura Kenchiku, Ja.Wikipedia.
  23. ^ "Savoy Plaza" on New York Architecture. Accessed:2011-02-12
  24. ^ Alexiou, passim
  25. ^ "PCAD - Publication: Northrop Corp. To Buy the George A. Fuller Co".

Bibliography

  • Alexiou, Alice Sparberg (2010). The Flatiron: The New York Landmark and the Incomparable City that Arose With It. New York: Thomas Dunne/St. Martin's. ISBN 978-0-312-38468-5.
  • Biography at Chicago Encyclopedia
  • Grave at Oak Woods Cemetery
  • "The History of Skyscrapers" By Mary Bellis
  • Obituary in New York Times
  • United States War Dept (1919). War Expenditures: Camps. U.S. Government Printing Office.

george, fuller, october, 1851, december, 1900, american, architect, often, credited, being, inventor, modern, skyscrapers, modern, contracting, system, born, 1851, october, 1851templeton, massachusetts, usdieddecember, 1900, 1900, aged, chicago, illinois, usal. George A Fuller October 21 1851 December 14 1900 was an American architect often credited as being the inventor of modern skyscrapers and the modern contracting system George A FullerBorn 1851 10 21 October 21 1851Templeton Massachusetts USDiedDecember 14 1900 1900 12 14 aged 49 Chicago Illinois USAlma materAndover CollegeOccupationBusinessmanKnown forThe invention of the modern skyscraperSpouseEllen Mary Channing The Flatiron Building seen here in 2010 was originally called the Fuller Building named after George A Fuller Contents 1 Early life and career 2 George A Fuller Company 3 Death 4 The Fuller Company after Fuller 5 ReferencesEarly life and career editFuller was born in Templeton Massachusetts near Worcester After graduating from Andover College he took a course in architecture at the Boston School of Technology 1 and then started in the office of his uncle J E Fuller an architect in Worcester Massachusetts Fuller soon entered the office of Peabody amp Stearns a firm which specialized in building mansions for the rich in Newport Rhode Island where he soon developed a strong interest in the details of erecting a building and was particularly interested in skyscrapers the name recently given to the tall buildings that had been made possible by Elisha Otis invention of the safety elevator 2 At the age of twenty five he was made a partner and placed in charge of Peabody amp Stearns s New York office 2 In New York Fuller s design for a new club house for the Union League Club of New York a Queen Anne mansion for the site at the corner of Fifth Avenue and 39th Street won over eight other designs including those submitted by noted architects Richard Morris Hunt and Charles McKim and William Rutherford Mead Fuller also designed the United Bank Building a nine story building at Wall Street and Broadway although he left Peabody amp Stearns shortly after construction began having spent four years there 3 George A Fuller Company editFuller moved to Chicago the locus of much of the skyscraper construction in the United States at the time where he formed a partnership with C Everett Clark another architect from Massachusetts which lasted only two years He then raised 50 000 and set up the George A Fuller Company in 1882 4 Fuller s new firm was different from the many architecture firms of the time in that it intended to handle all aspects of building construction except for the design of the building which would come from outside architects In this way Fuller created the modern concept of the general contractor 5 One of the new firm s first jobs was the Chicago Opera House designed by Henry Ives Cobb and Charles S Frost In this building Fuller who was a proponent of using steel in building construction utilized it for the floor beams a decision which subjected him to criticism from the architectural community which was wary of using steel and unsure of its long term properties 5 Very little is really known today of the properties of steel and though events point strongly to it becoming the metal of the future there exists among many reasonable conservative men a wide and well grounded distrust of its use in the higher engineer or architectural structures on account of its mysterious behavior and frequent erratic and inexplicable failures 6 Fuller s firm built the Tacoma Building in Chicago designed by Holabird amp Roche and completed in 1889 which was the first skyscraper with non load bearing curtain walls 7 By using Bessemer steel beams Fuller created steel cages that supported all the building s weight Fuller s firm also built the Rookery Building 1888 Burnham and Root the Rand McNally Building 1890 Burnham amp Root the Pontiac Building 1891 Holabird amp Roche and the Monadnock Building 1891 Burnham amp Root 1893 Holabird amp Roche in Chicago and the New York Times Building 1889 George B Post in New York City 8 9 The Fuller Company was also intensely involved in the building of the Chicago World s Fair of 1893 the Columbian Exposition in which a temporary White City on the Lake was constructed under the supervision of Daniel Burnham 10 With the success of his firm Fuller became a multimillionaire and his wife and daughters entered Chicago society He commissioned Charles P Post to design a home on Drexel Boulevard on the South Side of Chicago and Post created a Queen Anne style mansion 11 His daughter Allon married Harry St Francis Black in 1894 and Fuller took him into the company as vice president despite the fact that Black was neither an architect nor an engineer 12 In 1892 New York City altered its building regulations to allow skeleton construction and curtain walls in which the load created by the building was carried by the internal skeleton and not by the exterior wall a construction method which had been allowed under the Chicago building code for years This change prompted Fuller to open an office in New York in 1896 13 and soon the company had contracts in Boston Pittsburgh St Louis and Baltimore as well as in Chicago and New York 14 Future skyscraper builder William A Starrett joined the company in 1897 as an office boy 15 Death edit nbsp Fuller s tomb at Oak Woods Cemetery Fuller died suddenly on December 14 1900 from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis leaving an estate valued at 3 million equivalent to 109 9 million in 2023 16 His tomb at Oak Woods Cemetery in Chicago designed by New York architect Bruce Price is one of the largest in the cemetery The Fuller Company after Fuller editFollowing the death of Fuller Harry S Black Fuller s son in law took over as president of the Fuller Company and aggressively expanded its capitalization and operations merging it with smaller companies and bringing on to the company s board of directors such men as Henry Morgenthau Sr former New York City mayor and Tammany Hall man Hugh J Grant and banker James Stillman and creating what became known as the skyscraper trust 17 In 1902 he took the company public listing it on the New York Stock Exchange 18 and then put together a merger with Alliance and New York Realty to create a new 66 million company the United States Realty and Construction Company the Fuller Company which by then had offices in New York Chicago Boston Baltimore Philadelphia Washington DC and Pittsburgh would remain an independent company under the umbrella of the new entity 19 nbsp The Fuller Company moved into the Fuller Building at 57th Street and Madison Avenue in 1929 Black announced The new company will undoubtedly enter foreign fields with the view of introducing steel construction in cities like London Paris and Berlin Its relations will be very close to the United States Steel Corporation and naturally as we will be the largest consumers of structural steel in the world our terms as to price and delivery will be most favorable 20 Indeed Black had constructed the new company s board of directors with an eye for its need for steel and rail transport It included Charles Schwab of U S Steel Cornelius Vanderbilt Charles Tweed of Southern Pacific Charles Francis Adams former head of Union Pacific and representatives from J P Morgan and the Mutual Life Insurance Company Since Black had put together U S Realty he naturally expected to be named the company s president but the board passed over him and selected Bradish Johnson president of New York Realty one of the firms folded into the new conglomerate 19 U S Realty s stock never performed as expected although the members of the board did receive substantial salaries and large dividends on the stock they owned even as the company was underperforming When the Fuller Company was implicated in the corruption of the building trades union leader Samuel Parks its stock fell Board members dumped their stock and left the company but Black was buying up stock at the same time He took control of the company naming a new board which made him president 21 nbsp Manchuria Railway Hospital in Mukden In 1920 together with Mitsubishi he founded the George A Fuller Company of The Orient Ltd in Tokyo and built several private and government office buildings in the far east Asia 22 circular reference Among the many buildings constructed by the Fuller Company under Black were the Lincoln Memorial 1914 22 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater 1915 20 Tomb of the Unknown Soldier Arlington 1921 Freer Gallery of Art 1916 23 Pennsylvania Station 1910 Hotel Pennsylvania 1919 the Flatiron Building 1902 Macy s Herald Square on Broadway and 34th Street 1902 the New York Times Building 1905 the Plaza Hotel and the Savoy Plaza Hotel across Fifth Avenue from it 23 In Chicago Fuller built the Stevens Hotel designed by Holabird amp Roche 24 The Fuller Company was acquired by the Northrop Corporation in 1971 25 References edit nbsp Biography portal Notes Alexiou p 2 a b Alexiou p 3 Alexiou pp 5 8 Alexiou p 9 a b Alexiou p 10 American Architect and Building News 1889 quoted in Alexiou p 11 Leland M Roth in Joan Marter Ed The Grove Encyclopedia of American Art Oxford University Press 2011 p 528 s v Holabird amp Roche Emporis Alexiou pp 10 12 Alexiou pp 15 16 Alexiou pp 12 13 Alexiou pp 23 29 Alexiou pp 15 16 29 Alexiou p 30 United States War Dept 1919 p 2530 Alexiou pp 31 34 Alexiou pp 34 36 Alexiou p 103 a b Alexiou pp 103 104 112 116 Alexiou p 114 Alexiou pp 161 162 169 173 Fura Kenchiku Ja Wikipedia Savoy Plaza on New York Architecture Accessed 2011 02 12 Alexiou passim PCAD Publication Northrop Corp To Buy the George A Fuller Co Bibliography Alexiou Alice Sparberg 2010 The Flatiron The New York Landmark and the Incomparable City that Arose With It New York Thomas Dunne St Martin s ISBN 978 0 312 38468 5 Biography at Chicago Encyclopedia Grave at Oak Woods Cemetery The History of Skyscrapers By Mary Bellis Obituary in New York Times United States War Dept 1919 War Expenditures Camps U S Government Printing Office nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to George A Fuller Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George A Fuller amp oldid 1215529896 Harry S Black, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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