Joseph A. Jackson
Joseph A. Jackson | |
---|---|
Born | 1861 |
Died | 1940 |
Nationality | US |
Known for | Architect |
Joseph A. Jackson (1861–1940) was an American architect who designed many buildings for Roman Catholic clients in the Eastern United States, especially Connecticut.
Early life and education[]
Jackson was born 1861 in Waterbury, Connecticut and studied in the public schools of the city. After High school he studied for one year at St. Francis College, Brooklyn, New York. Having decided to make architecture his profession, he worked first with , and afterward with Robert W. Hill (1881–1887). Thereafter, he started his own firm with offices in Waterbury.
Architectural practice[]
At first Jackson worked on a large number of public buildings, including the Bank Street and Clay Street schools, the convents of Notre Dame and St. Mary, St. Patrick's hall, the new High school, the Judd building, and the Bohl building, all in Waterbury, CT. Around 1900 when he moved from Waterbury to New Haven, he decided to concentrate primarily on the design of churches and related buildings, mostly for catholic clients. In an advertisement from the 1921 edition of , he describes his practice as “Church Architect,” that specialized in “churches, convents, schools and ecclesiastical work. Plans and Consultations on all matters pertaining to Church Designing and Construction.”[1] He maintained a satellite office at 184 Livingstone Street, New Haven, Connecticut, as well as his main office in the Townsend Building, 1123 Broadway New York City.
Works[]
- (first church, dating from 1902. demolished 1969)
- SS. Cyril and Methodius Church Bridgeport, Connecticut
- , Bristol, Connecticut
- St. Michael Church, Derby, Connecticut
- , Madison, Connecticut
- , Meriden, Connecticut
- , Meriden, CT
- , New Haven, Connecticut
- St. Joseph Church, New Haven, Connecticut
- , Plainfield, Connecticut
- , Simsbury, Connecticut
- St. Joseph Church, South Norwalk, Connecticut
- , Torrington, Connecticut
- , Waterbury, Connecticut
- St. Casmir Church, Newark, New Jersey
- , North Plainfield, New Jersey
- St. Leo Church, Irvington, New Jersey
- , Ware, Massachusetts
- , Ridgefield, Connecticut[2]
- St. Bernard Church and School, Rockville, Connecticut[3]
- St. Bridget Church, Manchester, Connecticut
- Our Lady of Mt. Carmel School and Convent, Bayonne, New Jersey[4]
References[]
- ^ James Andrew Corcoran; Patrick John Ryan; Edmond Francis Prendergast, eds. (2010) [1920 (Republished by General Books LLC, March 2010)]. The American Catholic Quarterly Review. 45. Hardy and Mahony. pp. 741, 754. ISBN 978-1-153-90619-7. Retrieved 18 January 2011.
- ^ http://www.livingplaces.com/CT/Fairfield_County/Ridgefield_Town/Ridgefield_Center_Historic_District.html Ridgefield, Connecticut, Center Historic District
- ^ https://npgallery.nps.gov/NRHP/GetAsset/NRHP/84001173_text City of Rockville Historic District
- ^ "Pamiętnik Parafji Matki Boskiej Szkaplerznej w Bayonne, N.J :: Polish American Pamphlets". content.library.ccsu.edu. Retrieved 2020-04-13.
- 1861 births
- 1940 deaths
- Artists from Waterbury, Connecticut
- Companies based in Manhattan
- Defunct architecture firms based in New York City
- Architects of Roman Catholic churches
- American ecclesiastical architects
- Gothic Revival architects
- Architects from New Haven, Connecticut
- St. Francis College alumni