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HENRY BEARD DELANY
(1858-1928)
Born in Georgia of
slave parents, Delany grew up in Fernandina FL where he went to
school and learned brick laying and plastering trades from his
father. In 1881 Delany entered Saint Augustine’s School in Raleigh
in theology. After graduating in 1885, he joined the faculty,
remaining there until 1908. He married Nannie James Logan of
Danville, Virginia, another St. Augustine's faculty member, who
taught home economics and domestic science. The couple had ten
children including Sarah Louise and Annie Elizabeth who became famous
with their 1993 joint autobiography Having Our Say: The Delany
Sisters' First 100 Years.
Delany joined Raleigh’s Ambrose
Episcopal Church, and in June 1889 was ordained a deacon. Three
years later he was ordained as a priest. He steadily rose in the
Episcopal Church hierarchy, becoming Archdeacon in 1908 and Bishop in
1918. He was a tireless organizer for black education, setting
up schools across the state. Because of his education work, Shaw
University in Raleigh awarded Delany an honorary doctor of divinity
degree in 1911.
Although not formally trained as an
architect, Delany designed Saint Augustine’s Chapel in 1895, now the
only surviving nineteenth century building on the campus. He also
helped in the design of Saint Agnes Hospital on St. Augustine's
campus in 1909. This hospital was, through the 1940s, the only
black-owned hospital in North Carolina and the only hospital open to
black people in eastern North Carolina. The boxer Jack Johnson died at
Saint Agnes in 1946 after an automobile
accident. Although not the main designer, Delany was the on-site
architect and construction supervisor.
Adapted from
BlackPast, African-American
Architects: a Biographical Dictionary, 1865-1945.
John
Merrick was born a slave in Clinton NC. His white father, the
plantation owner’s son, disavowed any responsibility for John, his
brother Richard, or his mother Margaret. In 1871 Margaret Merrick
left the plantation and moved her family to Chapel Hill to work as a
domestic while John worked in the local brickyard and went to school.
After six years in Chapel Hill, the family moved to Raleigh and John
worked in various construction jobs including the first large
buildings at Shaw University.
When construction became hard to get, he worked shining shoes in a
black barbershop and eventually learned barbering.
In 1880 Merrick married Martha Hunter
of Raleigh and they had five children. He became the favorite
barber of Durham industrialist Washington Duke who traveled to
Raleigh because of the poor-looking haircuts he got in Durham. Duke
persuaded Merrick to relocate to Durham and provide the professional
barbering that Duke's wealthy white colleagues wanted. Merrick
opened in Durham in 1880 with a partner, John Wright, and by 1892 had
as many as nine locations.
Merrick began investing in real
estate. The profits from his barbershops subsidized his land
purchases and the construction of houses for rent. He was his own architect, drayman, foreman, and
carpenter. By 1910, he owned 60 houses.
In 1898, he was one of seven founders
of North Carolina Mutual and Provident Association, an insurance
company. He was President until his death. Merrick, shown at
left along with Dr. Aaron M. Moore and Charles C. Spaulding, built
the company into the largest black business in the nation. As
the company expanded into real estate development in 1903, Merrick
was North Carolina Mutual’s realtor, architect, and builder.
Further expanding, North Carolina
Mutual established Mechanics and Farmers Bank in 1907 as a depository
for customer premiums and mortgages. As many banks would not lend to
minorities, Mechanics and Farmers filled an huge need in the
community.
In 1908, no drug stores were
easily accessible black neighborhoods or businesses. Merrick
and five other men founded the Bull City Drug Company. The first Bull
City Drug store opened near North Carolina Mutual and later a second
store opened in Hayti.
In 1910, Merrick designed and
supervised the construction of a large Queen Anne-style house with a
wraparound porch and polygonal tower for his family at 506
Fayetteville Street, since destroyed. Also that year, North
Carolina Mutual formed a real estate subsidiary, the
Merrick-Moore-Spaulding Land Company, building hundreds of low-cost
rental houses across southeast Durham up until the 1940s.
Merrick died in 1919. He is
buried in White Rock Baptist Church cemetary in Durham. In his
memory, the Liberty Ship #1990 SS
John Merrick was
launched into wartime service in 1943 (and scrapped in
1967). The Merrick-Moore Elementary School in Durham was dedicated in
1950.
Sources include:
North Carolina History Project,
Spaulding Family History;
African American Architects: A Biographical
Dictionary 1865-1945.
WILLIAM W. SMITH
(1862–1937)
Smith was born in Mecklenburg County
where he lived all his life. With no formal education, Smith
appeared in the Charlotte City Directory as a brick mason in
the early 1890s and at the end of the decade he was briefly a partner
in a brickmaking yard. By the 1900s, he had emerged as a mason,
contractor, and architect -- and a leader of Charlotte's black
community. In 1886 he and his wife Keziah were instrumental in
founding Grace African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church. In 1902,
Smith built a sanctuary for the church at 223 South Brevard Street.
Smith was not the designer, but was the on-site architect. The plans
were prepared by Hayden, Wheeler, and Schwend. Just down the street
from the church, Smith did the masonry work for North Carolina's
first public library founded for black citizens, the Brevard Street
Branch of the Charlotte Public Library (destroyed),
About the same time, Smith began his
association with Livingstone College in Salisbury, which was
financially supported by the African Methodist Episcopal Zion
denomination. In 1906 Smith designed and built Hood Hall.
It is believed that Smith was the architect for the renovations to
Ballard Hall, which was damaged in a 1905 storm. Smith was also the
architect and contractor for Goler Hall, the college’s largest
building, a women's dormitory with ninety sleeping rooms, a
dining room, post office, and staff quarters.
The best example of Smith’s design work
in Charlotte is the 1922 Mecklenburg Investment Company Building,
left, on South Brevard at 3rd Street. The building was funded by a
group of black professionals who wanted to rent office space
downtown, but were denied by white building owners due to race. The
ground floor held shops, the second floor held offices flanking a
central corridor, and the third floor held a doctor’s office and a
large lodge hall with a coffered wooden ceiling. Two other
commercial buildings that stood near the Mecklenburg Investment
Company Building were the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Publishing
House (1911) and the Afro-American Mutual Insurance Company building
(1911). Both buildings were two stories tall with massing and
lively polychrome that stamped them as Smith designs. They were
demolished during the city’s urban renewal activities. Smith is
buried in a mausoleum he designed in Charlotte’s Pinewood Cemetery.
Adapted from
NC Architects and Builders,
African American Architects: A Biographical
Dictionary 1865-1945.
ROBERT ROBINSON TAYLOR (1868-1942)
  The
first professionally trained black architect in the
United States was Robert Robinson Taylor, a native of Wilmington NC.
The Taylor family resided at
112 North 8th Street (now destroyed)
and Taylor went to high school at the abolitionist American
Missionary Association’s Gregory Institute in Wilmington.
Taylor was the first
black Architecture student at MIT, graduating in 1892. From
1899-1902 Taylor worked on his own and for the architectural firm of
Charles W. Hopkinson in Cleveland OH. He
spent most of his career teaching and designing the
buildings on Tuskegee University’s campus, including the original
Tuskegee Chapel erected between 1895 and 1898 and The Oaks, built in
1899, home of the Tuskegee University president. In North Carolina, Taylor designed the Carnegie Library
in 1906 on Livingstone College’s campus in Salisbury. He retired in 1933 and
returned to Wilmington. He was appointed by the Governor of
North Carolina to the Board of Trustees of what is now Fayetteville
State University. He died in 1942 attending services in
the Tuskegee Chapel.
Robert Rochon Taylor, his son, became an
architect in Chicago. His granddaughter is Valerie Jarrett,
senior advisor to President Obama.
GASTON ALONZO EDWARDS
(1875-1943)
Gaston Alonzo Edwards was the
first black architect licensed in North Carolina and the only
registered black architect in the state for many years.
According to his granddaughter and biographer, Hazel Edwards, he was
born in Belvoir, Chatham County, North Carolina, one of six children
of Mary Edwards, a black woman, and William Gaston Snipes, a white
farmer. His parents were forced to live as neighbors; state law at
the time forbade marriage between races.
When he was 21, Edwards
entered what is now North Carolina A&T University in Greensboro,
graduating in architecture in 1901. After graduation
Edwards took coursework at Cornell. Edwards moved to Raleigh
around the turn of the century where
he established the mechanical department at the state school for the
Deaf, Dumb, and Blind for black students. Soon after this he joined
the faculty at Shaw University to teach and later responsible for the
University's building program. His
Raleigh buildings include Shaw's Tyler Hall (then the Leonard
Medical School Hospital); and the Masonic Building on South Blount
Street.
In 1909, Edwards married Catherine Ruth Norris, a music student at Shaw,
and they had five children. In 1917 the family moved to Kittrell
NC where Edwards
became president of Kittrell College. Edwards attained considerable
recognition in the state. In 1912
he was appointed by the Governor of North Carolina as a
delegate for the Negro National Educational Congress.
When licensure became mandatory for North
Carolina
architects in 1915, he became the state's first registered black architect
and was the only one for
over 30 years.
In 1929, the family moved to Durham and Edwards
ran a small design practice. His wife founded and was the first chairman of NCCU's
Music Department. With the onset of the Depression, Edwards re-entered educational employment as
principal of the Lyon Park Elementary School and the Whitted Junior
High School
(later Hillside High School),
while continuing to design houses. He was prominent
in Durham as a board member of Mechanics and Farmers Bank, Bankers
Fire Insurance Company, and what is now the Durham
Committee on the Affairs of Black People. The family resided in a house
at
1712 Fayetteville Street, left, now
part of the NCCU campus. Both the Edwards are buried in
Mount Hope Cemetery in Raleigh along with several of their children.
Adapted from
NC Architects and Builders,
African American Architects: A Biographical
Dictionary 1865-1945.
WILLIAM HENRY PITTMAN
(1875-1958)
  Pittman was born in Montgomery AL.
In 1892, he enrolled at Tuskegee Institute, finishing in mechanical
and architectural drawing in 1897. With financial support from
Tuskegee's, Booker T. Washington, Pittman continued his education at
Drexel Institute in Philadelphia with a diploma in architectural
drawing in 1900. Returning to Tuskegee Institute as assistant in the
Division of Architectural and Mechanical Drawing, he supplied
blueprints for several buildings on the Tuskegee campus.
In May 1905 Pittman left Tuskegee for
Washington DC as a draftsman in the office of John Anderson Lankford.
Within a year he opened his own office. In the fall of 1906, he
entered and won the competition for the design of the Negro Building
at the 300th Anniversary Jamestown VA Exposition, the first known
federal contract with a black architect.
In 1907 Pittman married Portia
Marshall Washington, daughter of Booker T. Washington. She was
a professional pianist who had been educated in Europe and taught
music. During these years in DC, Pittman designed several schools and
a notable YMCA whose cornerstone was placed in November 1908 by
President Theodore Roosevelt.
His practice expanded to NC and TX,
and the family moved to Dallas in 1912. As Dallas' first black
architect, he was initially the toast of the town, gaining a
commission for the Knights of Pythias building, an important black
social center. By the 1920's, however, Pittman was unable to
get design work. He was demanding, eccentric, and ultimately
unpopular. The descent of his brief architecture career was
accelerated by a combination of arrogance and personal frustration.
Few whites used his services, and that blacks who could afford his
services usually took their business to white architects. A
large part of Pittman's problem may have been his light-colored skin,
said Donald Payton, associate researcher for the Dallas Historical
Society who helped raise funds to mark Pittman's unmarked grave in
1985. "The guy looked as white as any white man, yet he was very into
issues of race. He suffered the plight fair-skinned blacks have
always suffered. He was too white to be accepted by blacks and too
black to be accepted by whites."
The Pittmans separated in 1928 and she
moved back to Tuskegee. In 1931, Pittman turned to publishing
to campaign against the hypocrisy of black leaders. He published
"Brotherhood Eyes" every Saturday, gathering gossip sent in by
correspondents called "the Eyes" across the South. His constant
criticisms both enraged and enthralled the community. There
were unsuccessful local efforts to get rid of Pittman on grounds of
libel. Ultimately, however, he was convicted for sending
obscene material, presumably his newspaper, through the mail.
He served two years of a five year sentence at Leavenworth Federal
Penitentiary in Kansas. Portia Pittman helped get him released
early through her friendship with Franklin D. Roosevelt's
housekeeper.
Pittman remained in Dallas until his
death in 1958 working primarily as a carpenter. He left a
legacy of significant buildings. In Durham, he designed Avery
Auditorium, the Central Dining Hall, a dormitory, the Theology Hall,
and the President's House at what is now NC Central University.
He also designed the 1910 White Rock Baptist Church at 3400
Fayetteville Street in Durham.
Video on
Pittman's early career.
Sources include:
Dallas Times Herald, 12/7/1986,
The Pride of Sidney Pittman by Mary Barrineau;
Portia: The Life of Portia Washington
Pittman by Ruth Ann Stewart;
African American Architects: A Biographical
Dictionary 1865-1945.
CALVIN ESAU LIGHTNER
(1877–1960)
Lightner was a native of Winsboro SC. In
1881 the family migrated to North Carolina. After high school, he played on
Shaw University’s first football team in 1906, graduating the following year. By 1909 he completed embalming
school in Nashville TN and returned to Raleigh to become the city's first licensed black
mortician.
Lightner
was also an architect. Without a formal education, Lightner designed and constructed his
1907 Raleigh home at 419 South East Street (destroyed), a modified Triple A Craftsman.
By 1911 he founded the Lightner Funeral Home, which
remains in the family to this day. He also
designed and constructed commercial Raleigh buildings on East Hargett Street.
He also designed the second version of the Davie Street Presbyterian
Church. In 1919 Lightner
designed and built the Lightner Building in the 100 block of East Hargett Street.
The mixed-use building contained dental and medical offices, apartments, beauty
salons, a barber shop, and a tailoring and
dry cleaning business.
 Encouraged by that
success, he completed the Lightner Arcade and Hotel in 1921 (left photo) in the same block
of Hargett Street.
The arcade also contained dental and medical offices, a barber shop, a drugstore,
the first home of The Carolinian, an amusement emporium, Harris Barber
College, a haberdashery, a store, a ballroom, and the first black hotel in the
state of North Carolina. The Lightner Arcade and Hotel became the social hub of
black society and hosted Duke Ellington, Count Basie, and other big bands. Lightner
designed many houses
and buildings in southeast Raleigh including the Capehart House (destroyed, now
the site of the Hargett Street YWCA. In Durham
he designed the first headquarters for the NC Mutual Life Insurance
company at 114 Parrish Street (right photo) in 1922.
Lightner's
son, Clarence Lightner, became well-established as a business, civil
rights, and community leader. He was elected to the Raleigh
City Council from 1967 to 1973 and later was elected Raleigh's first
black Mayor. In 2003 Raleigh announced it would name the new
17-story, 305,000 sf Raleigh Law Enforcement Center in his honor.
Adapted from:
African American Architects: A Biographical
Dictionary 1865-1945;
Historic Parrish Street
JULIAN FRANCIS ABELE, AIA
(1881-1950)
  Julian Francis Abele was one of the most prolific
architects in America between 1890 and 1920. He was the eighth
of eleven siblings. In 1893 he enrolled at Philadelphia’s Institute
for Colored Youth (ICY), founded by the Society of Friends or Quakers
in 1852.
In June 1897 Abele graduated from the ICY and his
aunt steered Julian toward a career in architecture. In the
fall of 1897, Abele was admitted to the Pennsylvania Museum and
School of Industrial Arts, graduating in 1898 with a Certificate in
Architectural Design, the first black graduate from that school.
In the fall of 1898 Abele was accepted into the
University of Pennsylvania School of Architecture. In 1902 Abele
became the first black graduate and only the second in America to
earn a degree in architecture, following Robert Robinson Taylor
(profile above). Abele went on to graduate from the
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in 1903. By 1906, he was
working for Horace Trumbauer transforming the extravagant demands of
his mainline Philadelphia, 5th Avenue Manhattan, and Newport clients
into huge mansions, glamarous hotels, and awe-inspiring public
libraries. By 1908 Abele was senior designer for the office, and was
responsible for the “look” of all major buildings. Abele spent his
entire forty-four-year career with the Trumbauer firm. He
designed over 200 buildings.
Abele married white Paris émigré musician Marguerite
Bulle in 1925. Their marriage unravelled when she had an affair with
another musician. Julian Abele kept the children but did not remarry.
He was known in the community as a staunch Republican, religious but
not a church-goer.
James Duke, president of both the American Tobacco
Company and Southern Power Company, was one of Trumbauer’s top
patrons. Abele designed Duke’s eighteenth-century 5th Avenue
townhouse in 1909.
According to legend, Abele never set foot on Duke University’s
campus to avoid the dehumanizing Jim Crow laws in North Carolina.
Despite this, he amazingly designed eleven Georgian-style and thirty-eight
Collegiate Gothic-style buildings for the new university from 1925 to
1940. Duke remained a white-only institution until 1961.
However, research Susan Tifft reported in 2005 that
Abele's remote administration of Duke may have not been true. "In the
early 1960s, John H. Wheeler, a prominent black banker in Durham
told George Esser, then executive director of the North Carolina
Fund, that he recalled Abele coming to visit the campus during
construction. What’s more, in a 1989 interview, Henry Magaziner, son
of Abele’s friend and Penn classmate Louis Magaziner, recalled Abele
telling him that a Durham hotel had
refused to give him a room during a trip to the University, while
accommodating his white associate, William Frank."
Abele died alone in his Philadelphia row house after
suffering a heart attack.
His son Julian Abele, Jr., and his nephew Julian
Abele Cook both became architects. Julian Abele Cook studied
architecture at Penn with the Class of 1927; two of his grandchildren
have continued the family tradition, Susan Cook as an architectural
engineer and Peter Cook as an architect.
It was Susan Cook,
while a student at Duke University during the 1986 student protests
against apartheid in South Africa, who wrote the letter to the
student newspaper which made public Julian Abele's role in the
creation of the Duke campus.
Adapted from:
African American Architects: A
Biographical Dictionary 1865-1945, Penn Archives,
Free Library of Philadelphia,
Duke Archives.
JOHN AYCOCKS MOORE
(1888-1939)
Moore was
born in Rock Hill NC near Wilmington. Moore’s father was a farm
worker and his mother was a homemaker. There is no data on how
Moore escaped the farming life to become an architect or where he
received his education. By 1911 Moore was in Washington DC
working for one year as a draftsman for the Supervising Architect’s
Office in the US Treasury. Beginning in 1912, Moore listed
himself as an “architect” in Boyd’s Directory of the District of
Columbia and had a private
practice until 1917. Moore designed a laundry and model home,
and constructed several complicated carpentry projects for the
National Training School for Women and Girls. Don Speed Smith
Goodloe, the first principal of what is now Bowie State University
commissioned Moore to design his 1915 house, which still stands
northwest of the campus.
From 1918 to 1919 he was in the Army
with the 28th Construction Company Air Services Aeronautics stationed
at Langley Field in Virginia. His honorable discharge states that he
was thirty years of age when he joined and his occupation was a
carpenter. In Washington, he stopped advertising himself as an
architect.
In 1920, Moore married Susan Brown. Her father, William A.
Brown, was the proprietor of the Plaza, a popular black restaurant in
Wilmington. Shortly after the wedding, he left Washington and
they moved in with his in-laws. They lived at 19 South 12th Street in
Wilmington, left, until his death. From 1922-1938, he is listed variously
as an architect, contractor, carpenter, and recreation worker.
Working with brother Joshua, who was also a carpenter, he is credited
with designing and building the 1929 Dr. Frank W. Avant house at
either 710 or 813 Red Cross Street. Avant was the first black
physician to practice in the state of North Carolina.
According to oral family history, the
Moore brothers were responsible for the design and construction of
many houses in Wilmington’s Forest Hills neighborhood. Poor health was
perhaps the reason that Moore took an indoor job at
the County Recreation Office because he died the next year in
Columbia SC.
Adapted from:
African American Architects: A
Biographical Dictionary 1865-1945.
 HILYARD ROBERT ROBINSON
(1899-1986)
A native Washingtonian, Robinson graduated in 1916
from the M Street High
School. He studied at the Philadelphia School of Industrial Arts, leaving
in 1917. From there he went into the Army, serving in France during WWI. Robinson
was in Paris for the Armistice and was so profoundly impressed by the
architecture that upon returning home in 1919 he transferred to the architecture
program at the University of Pennsylvania.
During the summers of 1921 and 1922, while working as a draftsman for Vertner
Woodson Tandy in Harlem, Robinson met
Paul B. LaVelle, a friend of Tandy’s and practicing architect and Professor of Architecture at Columbia University. LaVelle assisted Robinson’s
transfer to
Columbia in 1922 and employed him as an architectural draftsman from
1922 to 1924.
Prior to receiving his BA in Architecture from Columbia
in
1924, Robinson began a long relationship with Howard University teaching at its
new School of Architecture.
Subsequently, Robinson served as instructor an Chair until 1937. He also
designed eleven Howard buildings that helped establish a distinct
Modernist feel to the campus.
Robinson's significant buildings include the Langston Terrace Dwellings,
left, built
with architect Paul Williams in 1936 and considered the first public black housing
project. He drew a number of residences for fellow faculty at Howard University, including
the Nobel Peace Prize winner Ralph Bunche and Rayford Logan. Both residences are
located in the Brookland neighborhood of Washington DC.
Another highly significant project was the Tuskegee Army Air Field,
the first defense contract given to a black person.
When
Robinson received his MA in 1931, he and his new white wife,
Helena
Rooks Robinson, embarked on an eighteen-month leave of absence touring Europe as a Kinne
Fellow.
From Berlin, Robinson attended the Ausland Insitute and traveled
extensively to examine and photograph post-WWI construction techniques and
government-sponsored housing solutions. He went frequently to
Paris and toured the 1931 exposition.
Robinson returned home to Washington with a comprehensive understanding of
housing
solutions and resumed teaching at Howard University in 1932.
His desire to apply European low-cost housing efforts to the benefit of
black Americans led
to a second leave of absence from Howard University and employment by the Public
Works Administration in 1935 as chief architect. He served on the National Capital Planning Commission from 1950 to
1955 and was director of the Washington Housing Association. He was one of DC's
most prolific and successful black architects of the first half of
the twentieth century. In North Carolina, he designed the Student Union, Harris Dormitory, Moore
Faculty House, and Varrick Auditorium for Livingstone College in Salisbury.
Adapted from:
African American Architects: A Biographical
Dictionary 1865-1945;
Wikipedia.
DEWITT SANFORD
DYKES, AIA (1903–1991)
Dykes was born in Gadsden AL. Around 1911,
the Dykes family relocated to Newport TN where DeWitt went to school and became a brick mason
by age fourteen. His interest in masonry led to a desire to become
an architect. His father was skeptical that his son could earn a living as an
architect because of racial discrimination by white individuals and institutions
and the undependable support of black individuals and institutions.
Dykes
instead chose the ministry as a profession. From 1919 to 1926,
Dykes studied in the pre-college division of Morristown Normal &
Industrial College in Morristown TN. He then entered
Clark University
in Atlanta, receiving an artrius bachelor’s degree in
1930. During his junior and senior years at Clark University, Dykes studied at
Gammon Theological Seminary in Atlanta, from which
he received a Bachelor of Divinity degree
in 1931. On a scholarship, Dykes
entered the graduate program at Boston University School of Theology and earned a
sacred theology Masters in 1932. While he was studying to become a minister,
Dykes earned money as a brick mason.
From 1932 to 1954, Dykes was the pastor of
churches in the East Tennessee Annual Conference of the Methodist church. Starting in 1954, Dykes worked as an administrator
for the United Methodist denomination. He became a staff member of the Division
of Missions from 1956 to 1968. Dykes was responsible for
determining the financial feasibility of constructing Methodist churches,
evaluating building sites, analyzing Building and Zoning Codes, performing design
reviews, supervising construction, and administering
payment draws. Because Dykes was not registered, Dykes
submitted floor plans that he had prepared
to the director of the Department of Architecture, Norman G. Byar, who was a
licensed architect in the Philadelphia office of the Division of Missions. During
his years with the Division of Missions, Dykes designed seventy-two Methodist
churches and other religious buildings, as well as a community fire hall in
Frakes, Kentucky.Independent of the Methodist church, Dykes designed six churches under the
license of Knoxville engineer Milo C. Fear.
In 1960 Dykes took courses in
architecture from the International Correspondence School of Scranton,
Pennsylvania, and received a certificate of completion in 1965. In 1968 Dykes took the oral part of the examination to become a registered
architect. A year later, he passed the written portion and became a registered architect in the state of
Tennessee in 1970. That same year he was accepted into the AIA. Dykes practiced from a home office on Dandridge Avenue in Knoxville from 1970
to 1976. He moved his practice to several office buildings from 1976 to 1986,
occasionally apprenticing architectural students
from the University of Tennessee. He designed dozens of mostly
religious buildings all over the south, including three in
Greensboro: Bass Chapel Methodist Church Education Building
(destroyed); Laughlin Memorial Methodist Church; and the Mount Tabor
Methodist Church Education Building.
Adapted from:
African American Architects: A Biographical
Dictionary 1865-1945;
Historic Parrish Street
HENRY LEWIS "ACE" LIVAS
(1912–1979)
Livas was born in Hot
Springs AR. In 1916 his father moved the family to Springfield OH and he
attended Woodward Elementary until 1922. His mother died when he was in second grade
and his father remarried his piano teacher.
The family then moved to Paris KY where Henry attended Western
Junior High School, graduated in 1929. In 1935 he graduated from Hampton
Institute with a BS degree.
From 1936 to 1937, Livas was employed by Berry Construction
Company in Durham NC, working on a
housing project. He married Cocheeys Smith of Durham in 1940
and they had one son, Henry Jr.From 1937 to 1941, Livas taught at
Arkansas Mechanical & Normal College in Pine Bluff AK and was
superintendent of buildings and grounds. From 1942 to 1943, he was a
civilian teacher at the U.S. Army Engineering School affiliated with
Virginia State College in Ettrick.
In July 1944, he was
enrolled at the Pennsylvania State College
School of Engineering, where he earned an MS in
architectural engineering with a minor in Architecture. His thesis
topic was “Building Code Requirements for Structures
Housing Selected Mixed Occupancies,” which played to his
engineering strengths instead of architectural
design. Livas
returned to Hampton in 1945 as a newly minted
associate professor and taught for seven years. He was active in campus
life as well, starting a choir. In 1952 he opened Livas &
Associates in Hampton VA and simultaneously in Burgaw NC
where he maintained a second home.
Rejected by the Virginia AIA in 1950 due to race,
he applied and was accepted in by the AIA of Washington DC. He was licensed
in NC, VA, MO, and DC. His
office has been in business for
55+ years as the Livas
Group in Norfolk VA.
Adapted from:
African American Architects: A
Biographical Dictionary 1865-1945.
JASMINIUS "J. W. R." WILSONI
RUDOLPHUS GRANDY III (1919-2001)
Grandy was born in Windsor NC in a family
with 16 brothers and sisters. They raised cotton, corn,
soybeans, and a garden grown from seeds purchased mail-order from
Sears. Encouraged by his father and mother, J.W.R. would later
expand on his agricultural upbringing to study horticulture and
landscape architecture. After his father died, Grandy graduated
from the public schools of Bertie County and went on to attend NC A&T
University, earning a BS in Horticulture in 1940. He and
a few classmates opened the first black-owned floral shop in
Greensboro around 1939.
Grandy pursued graduate school in
landscape architecture at Cornell University between 1940 and 1942
while working as a chef for several white-only fraternities on
campus. Before graduating, he had to return home to save the
family farm, threatened with foreclosure. He was successful and kept
the farm in the family for another generation. With an interest
in teaching, Grandy obtained a faculty position at Southern
University School of Architecture in Baton Rouge LA teaching
horticulture. After a year, he returned to teach at NC A&T and
taught horticulture and landscape architecture design until his
retirement forty-two years later. By 1975 Grandy had become
Superintendent of Grounds at NC A&T University. He led the
University to become the first black campus to earn accreditation for
its undergraduate program in landscape architecture. Grandy was
the landscape archtiect for the Kenneth Lee House designed by
Blue Jenkins.
Adapted from African-American
Architects: a Biographical Dictionary, 1865-1945.
FLOYD
A. MAYFIELD (1898-1975)
Mayfield grew up in Lake Providence LA. He graduated from
Howard University with post-grad work at the University of
Michigan in Ann Arbor. In 1930, Mayfield was head of the
Contracting and Building Department of NC A&T in the College of
Architecture and Engineering. In 1941, he headed the
Department of Architecture, where he stayed until 1947 and went
into private practice. He was one of the first black
candidates for Greensboro City Council. His buildings
include the Skating Rink on West Lee Street, the Maurice Lytell
House on Benbow Road (photo below), and the York Home on Young
Estate.

GERARD
E. GRAY, AIA
(1919-2001)
Gray was born in Cheraw SC and graduated from A&T in 1942 with
honors. He served in the US Army during WWII as a commissioned
officer in the Army Corps of Engineers. His unit saw action in
Africa, Europe, and the South Pacific and later participated in
the liberation of the Philippine Islands. Mr. Gray also served in
the Army Corps during the Korean War. He received his
Master's Degree in Architectural Engineering from the University
of Illinois and conducted post-graduate studies at Penn State,
the Universities of Illinois and Colorado, Michigan Tech and the
US Navy Civil Engineering School. His professional career
included serving as Associate Professor and Full Professor of
Architectural Engineering at NC A&T from 1942 to 1974. He
also worked occasionally with
Blue Jenkins
on projects. From 1974
to 1981, he served as Director of NC A&T's Physical Plant. In
1982, he left to serve as VP and Director of Physical Plant at
Prairie View A&M where he retired in 1984. Upon retirement, Gray moved to Philadelphia, where he died in 2001. There is an
endowed scholarship in his name at NC A&T.
More on Gray's houses.
Sources
include: 1970 AIA Directory, NC A&T University Ayantee
Yearbook, Major Sanders.
WILLIAM ALFRED STREAT, JR., AIA
(1920-1994)
Streat was born in Clover
VA and spent his childhood on the campus
of Saint Paul’s College in Lawrenceville VA where his
parents William A.Streat Sr. and Marie Green Streat were faculty. Streat
completed Saint Paul’s high school in 1937 and received a BS in
Building from what is now Hampton University in 1941. During World War II, Streat served in the U.S. Corps of
Engineers and in the Army Air
Corps with the 99th U.S. Pursuit Squadron, the legendary “Tuskegee Airmen.”
He earned a BS in Architecture from the University of
Illinois in 1948 and an MS in Architectural
Engineering from MIT in 1949. Streat completed additional study in
civil engineering at Duke University, the
University of California at
Berkeley; architectural
criticism at Harvard University/MIT, and city and regional planning at Columbia University.
From 1950 to 1952, he was
Structural Consultant for Edward Loewenstein in Greensboro. In 1951, Streat married Louise Guenveur of Charleston
SC who was professor and chair of the Department of Home Economics
at Bennett College in Greensboro.
In 1952 he became the second black architect licensed to practice
in North Carolina (Gaston Alonzo Edwards was the first). Streat
spent the summer of 1957 at Columbia University in City Planning and
Architectural History.
He travelled extensively, with visits to Mexico City in 1958 and
Portugal, Gibraltar, Spain, Italy, Switzerland, Germany, France,
England in 1967.
Streat had
a long career in academia. He was Professor and Chair of the
Architectural Engineering Department at NCA&T University in
Greensboro from 1949 until retirement.
The department grew from twenty students to 200 under his leadership
and included a tenfold increase in faculty and the addition of a
master’s program in architectural engineering. He applied for
membership in the all-white AIA North Carolina in 1961 and was
accepted, although not without protest from several white members.
After retirement from teaching in
1985, he continued a limited architectural practice and became actively involved
with his wife as a benefactor to the United Negro
College Fund, Saint Paul’s College, Hampton University, and
NCA&T. Since her husband’s death, Louise Streat endowed
scholarships in his name at NCA&T, Saint Paul’s College, and Bennett
College.
More on
Streat and his houses.
Adapted from
African American Architects: A
Biographical Dictionary 1865-1945;
CRS Archives.
WILLIE EDWARD "BLUE" JENKINS
(1923-1988)
Jenkins was
born in Raleigh.
He graduated from Washington High School and
served in the
Army Corps of Engineers from
1943 to 1946. He married Gladys Rand in 1945 and they had one
daughter, Miltrine. Following the Army, he entered NC A&T
University and earned a BS degree in
architectural engineering
with high honors in 1949.
That year,
Edward Loewenstein
hired Jenkins as his firm's first black architect. In 1953, Jenkins
was the third black architect to be registered in North Carolina.
Under Loewenstein, among many other projects,
Jenkins served as design
architect for the Dudley High School gymnasium in Greensboro,
innovative because of its intersecting roof arches and many windows.
In 1962 Jenkins left
Loewenstein and opened his own practice
with many projects at NC A&T, including the football stadium and the Ronald
McNair School of Engineering
(with J. Hyatt Hammond Associates). He also designed the NCCU Law School Building. In
1972 he received the Outstanding Achievement Award from the NC A&T School of
Engineering. In 1975 Jenkins was appointed to the North
Carolina Board of Architecture.
More on Jenkins and his houses.
Adapted from:
African American Architects: A
Biographical Dictionary 1865-1945.
WILLIAM GUPPLE
(1923-2002)
As a boy, Gupple
drew constantly and
always dreamed of becoming an architect. He graduated from NC
A&T University and was hired by Edward Loewenstein, a white
architect in Greensboro. This made Gupple the second black
architect to be hired by a white firm. Blue Jenkins, who also
was hired by Loewenstein, was the first. Gupple worked there
until leaving for New York City in the early 1960's. For the
next 37 years, he worked for several design firms plus American Home
Products. He moved back to Greensboro in 1997 and retired.
WILLIEX (WILL) EMMANUEL MERRITT JR.
(1928-2008)
Merritt was born in Elizabeth City NC. He served in the Army during WWII as a First Lieutenant. Upon release he earned a degree in Architecture from Hampton University in 1949. He worked for
Ed Loewenstein in Greensboro for a few years, then when
that firm's work slowed he was loaned to Voorhees and Everhart in High Point. This is according to Ruth Summey who worked with
Merritt at the latter firm. The photo
is from a Voorhees and Everhart office picture in 1954. After a few years on his own in High Point,
Merritt left for Michigan.
Merritt
was the first black architect in Lansing MI. He worked for the City of Lansing and the State of Michigan for over fifty years. He also had a private practice called Omega Designs and was a Lector and Eucharistic Minister at Holy Cross Catholic
Church.
 CLINTON EUGENE GRAVELY, AIA
(1935-) Gravely grew up in Reidsville
NC where his father
and grandfather were contractors. Frequently they got
design requests and during high school, Gravely drew up simple plans
which the company would then build. In 1955, he entered
Architecture at Howard
University, finishing in 1959.
After eight
months in the military he returned to NC and worked for his father
until a position came open with the Greensboro architecture firm Loewenstein Atkinson. They
were the most progressive in the state for hiring minorities.
When Gravely joined,
Ed Loewenstein already had
two black architects, Willie Edward Jenkins and William Gupple. Gravely
took Gupple's position when the latter left for New York in 1961.
Gravely recalls, "The AIA was
very supportive of black architects. However, there was a
white group called Greensboro Registered Architects and they did not want
black members." Eventually the group admitted him and
a few years later it disbanded.
Gravely opened his
own firm in 1967 and over the years amassed a portfolio of over
800 projects, including 100 churches and the NC A&T
Library. He was the original architect for Greensboro's
International Civil Rights Museum which was completed by the Freelon Group.
He continues in practice in Greensboro.
More on Gravely and his houses.
MAJOR SPENCER SANDERS, JR., AIA
(1943-)
Sanders was born in
Concord NC. He started studying Architectural Engineering at NC A&T
University in 1961 and worked as a bottle inspector for Sundrop while in school.
Later, he worked for Blue Jenkins
starting in 1966, starting a long association with the firm. Contrary to
some accounts, he never worked for
Ed Loewenstein.
Graduating from NC A&T in 1971, he
continued to work for Jenkins through 1978. He moved to Wisconsin and worked
for American Medical Buildings from 1978 to 1980 and for Shephard Legan Aldrian
from
1980 to 1982 before again returning to Jenkins' firm from 1982 to 1986.
Sanders broke off to start his own company in 1986
which continue today. Currently he is President of Quality
Housing Corporation in Greensboro, specializing in passive solar and
low-cost energy solutions using SIP's - structurally insulated panels, a continuous core
of energy-efficient rigid foam insulation laminated between two layers of
structural board.
More on Sanders and his houses.
   
HARVEY BERNARD
GANTT, FAIA
(1943-)
Gantt grew up in Charleston SC,
graduating from Burke High School second in his class. His father was a carpenter,
plus an early talent for drawing led to Gantt's choice of a career architecture.
After attending Iowa State University 1960-1962, he was repeatedly
denied admission into Clemson University's Architecture program.
After exhausting all administrative channels, he took Clemson to court on
charges of discrimination and won,
gaining admission and graduating in 1965.
From 1965 to 1968, he
interned at
Odell in Charlotte, the first black architect the firm
had ever hired. He graduated
in 1970 from MIT with a Masters in Architecture and became founding partner of
Gantt Huberman
in Charlotte in 1971. That firm continues today as one of the
most successful firms in North Carolina.
Gantt is the most
politically active architect in North Carolina history. He
was on the Charlotte City Council from 1974 to 1983; the Mayor of Charlotte from 1983 to 1987;
and served on the
North
Carolina Democratic Party Executive Council, the
Democratic
National Committee, and the
National
Capital Planning Commission. Under his leadership, the commission adopted a
strategic plan for city monuments and selected sites on the National
Mall for the Martin Luther King Memorial and the World War II
Memorial.
In
1990 and 1996, he ran unsuccessfully against incumbent North Carolina Senator Jesse
Helms in two highly polarized races. Barack Obama was
a volunteer for his campaign in 1996.
Gantt received the AIANC Award of Excellence in
Architecture in 1981 and has also received received honorary degrees from Winthrop College, Queens
College, Clemson University, Johnson C. Smith University, and
Belmont Abbey College.
More on
Gantt and his houses.
GEORGE HAROLD
WILLIAMS, AIA
(1943-)
Williams grew up in Durham and
went to Hillside High School. He got interested in architecture
in the 9th grade and began to take drafting courses, earning a BA in
Architecture from Howard University in 1966. Following that was a 1968 Masters
Degree in City and Regional Planning from UNC-Chapel
Hill. He interned with Smith Smith Haines Lundberg Whaeler in New
York City. During the summers he worked for Ray Construction
in Durham on the NC Mutual Life Insurance Company building.
He served as Captain in the US Air Force
1968-1972 stationed in the Philippines designing residential, educational, and
military support facilities in the Far East and Europe. Upon return to the
US he became architect for a new town, Soul City, in Manson NC.
That position lasted three
years. He moved to Gary IN working for Mayor Dick Hatchett as
Director of Development and Planning for three years.
Williams also had a substantial career in city
management. Posts
included running the Oakland Redevelopment Agency 1979-1989; Deputy
City Manager for Richmond VA from 1989-1991; and Durham County
Manager from 1991-1996. He then started a private design firm, based in
Durham, consulting on architecture and
economic development. His Modernist houses include:


1980 -
The Taylor House, 450 Scarborough Drive, Sherwood Forest, Valparaiso IN.
Commissioned 1978.

2009 - aka the Kerr Lake House,
281 Kerr Lake Road, Henderson NC. Commissioned 2008.
JOSEPH
HENRY YONGUE, AIA (1945-)
Joseph Yongue attended
high school at Second Ward and graduated from NC A&T in 1969 in
Architectural Engineering. During the summers he worked for
Clinton Gravely. Upon graduation, he worked for IBM, entered
the Army and served in Korea. At Fort Belvoir, he worked with
Andrew Bryant and Vosbeck Vosbeck
Kendrick and Redinger. In 1972, he returned to IBM, working under
Martin Myers in the real estate and construction division. In
1975, he relocated with IBM to Research Triangle Park.
By 1978,
through IBM and the GI Bill, he earned an MBA in organizational
behavior from Iona College. He also attended the NCSU School
of Design's Graduate program. While at IBM, he ran the Design
Center and led IBM to experiment with finding the most efficient
office types, furniture, and configurations to accommodate the then-exploding use of desktop
computers and equipment, including
security areas and laboratories. He did his masters thesis on
that subject. He started his private practice in 1986 and
grew to several staff. By 1992, holding two jobs, he
retired from IBM and is now a certified home inspector and a
principal at
J. H. Yongue Architect.
ARTHUR
(ART) JOHN CLEMENT
(1948-)
Art Clement grew up in
Durham near NCCU where his mother Josephine D. Clement was on the
faculty. His father worked for NC Mutual Life Insurance, taught
in the NCCU Business School, and was on the NCCU Board of Trustees.
He is first cousin to longtime Durham City Councilman Howard Clement. A lifelong interest in
architecture began when his grandfather bought him a drafting table.
At age nine he created an exhibit on Frank Lloyd Wright, and in 1966
he was the first black student accepted into the NCSU School of
Design. "To say that it was a
racist school (at the time) was an understatement," he recalls,
although his overall college experience was positive. Clement worked for
John Latimer in Durham for five summers
while at NCSU and got interested in community
planning and urban design, ultimately working
with Henry Sanoff's Community Design Group.
Clement graduated from NCSU in 1971
and went to MIT for graduate school, finishing in 1973. At that point, he
served an Army deferment at Forts Bragg and Benjamin
Harrison. Returning from service in 1974,
Robert Burns at NCSU's School of
Design recommended him to Heery
and Heery in the early days of "design+," or project supervision. He
worked at Heery and Heery four years then moved to Charleston SC to work with cousin Bill
Clement, also an architect. After marrying in 1980, his other cousin
Mayor Maynard Jackson of Atlanta encouraged his relocation there in 1981. Jackson
was
pivotal in getting black architects major commissions in the city,
and Clement worked for DDR International, a construction consulting firm
doing project management. In 1985, the company split and
Clement went with one of the divisions, DPM. He went out on
his own in 1993, joining with Delilah Wynn-Brown to form Clement & Wynn
Program Managers.
Sources include:
Clinton Gravely, Patricia Harris, Ken Martin, Glenn Chavis, Harvey Gantt, Arthur Clement, Ruth Summey, Major Sanders, Joseph Yongue,
History of the American Negro and his Institutions
Volume 4 by Arthur Bunyan
Caldwell,
African American Architects: A Biographical Dictionary
1865-1945 by Dreck Spurlock Wilson, African-American Registry,
Wikipedia, MIT Archives, Henry Leveke Kamphoefner dissertation by David Brook;
Doris Gupple.
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