Frank Pierce Milburn
Frank Pierce Milburn (December 12, 1868 - September 21, 1926) was a prolific American architect of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. His practice was primarily focused on public buildings, particularly courthouses and legislative buildings, although he also designed railroad stations, commercial buildings, schools and residences. Milburn was a native of Bowling Green, Kentucky who practiced as an architect in Louisville from 1884 to 1889; Kenova, West Virginia 1890-1895; Charlotte, North Carolina; Columbia, South Carolina; and Washington, D.C. after 1904. From 1902 Milburn was architect for the Southern Railway.[1]
Milburn pioneered a new approach to the marketing of architectural services, publishing sponsored books of his work, placing advertisements in trade publications, entering competitions and moving his office to suit available opportunities.[2] This resulted in work in every Southern state apart from Mississippi.
Milburn was particularly successful in obtaining commissions for significant public buildings, ranging from county courthouses to state capitols. Milburn did significant work at the South Carolina State House and the old Florida State Capitol, and unsuccessfully competed for work on the Arkansas Capitol.[3]
In 1902, Milburn did design upgrade for the Florida State Capitol[4] and designed Columbia County Courthouse in Lake City, Florida. That same year he also designed the Blanche Hotel across the street from the courthouse.
South Carolina State House[]
Milburn won a 1900 competition to complete the South Carolina State House over William Augustus Edwards and Charles Coker Wilson, as well as Gadsen E. Shand, an assistant to former State House architect .
Milburn's selection was made easier by the fact that the proposed cost for his design was the least expensive of those submitted. Plans and specifications were issued and bids accepted, but a dispute broke out immediately over differences between the competition design and that issued for bidding. Milburn had reduced the number of columns on the north portico by six and had removed a line of columns on the south portico to remain within the appropriated budget. Other changes to the dome and disputes over the quantity and accuracy of details and the quality of the work caused legal and political difficulties, but the project proceeded. Milburn, however, moved to Washington when his work with the Southern Railway offered the opportunity.[2]
In Washington[]
Once in Washington, Milburn teamed with Michael Heister (1909 - 1934) to form the firm of Milburn and Heister. Milburn's son, Thomas Y. Milburn, joined the firm in 1914 and took over the firm a year before his father's death in 1926.[5]
Work[]
- W. Hunt Harris house at 425 Caroline Street in Key West, Florida[6]
Gallery[]
State Capitol, Columbia, South Carolina
Anderson County Courthouse, South Carolina
Buchanan County Courthouse, Grundy, Virginia
Buncombe County Courthouse, Asheville, North Carolina
Dubois County Courthouse, Jasper, Indiana
Durham County Courthouse, Durham, North Carolina
Fulton County Courthouse, Fulton, Kentucky
Gaston County Courthouse, Gastonia, North Carolina
Glynn County Courthouse, Brunswick, Georgia
Hoke County Courthouse, Raeford, North Carolina
Lincoln County Courthouse, Stanford, Kentucky
Lowndes County Courthouse, Valdosta, Georgia
Mecklenburg County Courthouse, Charlotte, North Carolina
McDowell County Courthouse and jail, Welch, West Virginia
Newberry County Courthouse, Newberry, South Carolina
Pitt County Courthouse, Greenville, North Carolina
Smyth County Courthouse Marion, Virginia
Summers County Courthouse, Hinton, West Virginia
Swain County Courthouse, Bryson City, NC
Upson County Courthouse, Thomaston, Georgia
Wilcox County Courthouse, Abbeville, Georgia
Wilkes County Courthouse, Washington, Georgia
Wise County Courthouse, Wise, Virginia
Wythe County Courthouse, Wytheville, Virginia
Union Station, Raleigh, North Carolina
Southern Railway Station, Danville, Virginia
Southern Railway Station, Richmond, Virginia
Union Station, Savannah, Georgia
Southern Railway Terminal, Knoxville, Tennessee
Southern Railway Station, Salisbury, North Carolina
Southern Railway Station interior, Salisbury, North Carolina
Union Depot, Hattiesburg, Mississippi
Southern Railway Station, Lynchburg, Virginia
Durham Auditorium (Carolina Theater), Durham, North Carolina
Hotel Blanche, Lake City, Florida
Lansburgh's Department Store, Washington, District of Columbia
Powhatan Hotel, Washington, District of Columbia
Bynum Gymnasium, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina
O'Donnel House, Sumter, South Carolina
See also[]
- List of buildings by Frank Pierce Milburn, includes buildings by Milburn and Heister until Milburn's retirement in 1925
References[]
- ^ Vivian, Daniel J. and Claudia R. Brown (2009). "Milburn, Frank Pierce (1868-1926)". North Carolina Architects and Builders: A Biographical Dictionary. NCSU Libraries.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Bryan, John Morrill: Creating the South Carolina State House, page 116. University of South Carolina Press, 1999 ISBN 1-57003-291-2.
- ^ C.E. Turley (April 5, 1979). National Register of Historic Places Nomination: McDowell County Courthouse (PDF). National Park Service.
- ^ https://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/24593
- ^ "Thomas Yancey Milburn (1890-1977)". Triangle Modernist Houses. 2009-01-29.
- ^ Caemmerer, Alex (1992). Houses of Key West. ISBN 9781561640096.
External links[]
- 1901 self-published promotional book by Milburn with illustrations at the Internet Archive
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- 19th-century American architects
- 1868 births
- 1926 deaths
- People from Bowling Green, Kentucky
- Architects from Kentucky
- Railway architects
- 20th-century American architects
- Southern Railway (U.S.)