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Equitable Life Assurance Building, 1868–70: the exterior cladding belied the fact that there were eight floors
'George Browne Post' (
December 15,
1837 –
November 28,
1913) was an
American architect trained in the
Beaux-Arts tradition. Post was a student of
Richard Morris Hunt (1858-60), but unlike many architects of his generation, he had previously received a degree in
civil engineering (Scientific School, New York University, 1858). In 1860 he formed a partnership with a fellow-student in Hunt's office, Charles D. Gambrill, with a brief hiatus for service in the Civil War.
Many of his most characteristic projects were for commercial buildings where new requirements pushed the traditional boundaries of design. Many of them have also been demolished, since their central locations in
New York and other cities made them vulnerable to rebuilding in the twentieth century. Some of his lost buildings were landmarks of their era, nevertheless. His eight-story Equitable Life Assurance Society (1868–70), was the first office building designed to use elevators; Post himself leased the upper floors when contemporaries predicted they could not be rented.
[1] His Western Union Telegraph Building (1872–75) at Dey Street in Lower Manhattan, was the first office building to rise as high as ten stories, a forerunner of
skyscrapers to come. When it was erected in "Newspaper Row" facing
City Hall Park, Post's twenty-story World Building (1889–90) was the tallest building in New York City.
His vast New York Produce Exchange (1881–84) at Number Two Broadway faced
Bowling Green. Its grand skylighted hall, based on French retail structures, cast daylight into the lower floors.
At the
World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893, Post produced was named to the architectural staff by
Burnham and Root[2] and assigned the Manufactures and Liberal Arts Building, which exceeded by a few feet the clear span of the Machinery Building at the Paris Exposition of 1889. Post's on-site engineer E.C. Shankland of Chicago, has been over-credited in its design, Winston Weisman noted in 1973.
He also designed more staid public and semi-public structures: the
New York Stock Exchange Building and the
Wisconsin State Capitol. Among the prominent private houses by Post were the French chateau for
Cornelius Vanderbilt II (1879–82) that once stood at Fifth Avenue and 57th Street, and the palazzo that faced it across the street, for
Collis P. Huntington (1889–94). In
Newport, Rhode Island he built for the president of the
Louisville and Nashville Railroad, C.C. Baldwin, "Chateau-Nooga" or the Baldwin Cottage (1879–80), a polychromatic exercise in the "Quaint Style" with bargeboards and half-timbering;
John La Farge provided stained glass panels.
A true member of the
American Renaissance, Post employed noted artists and artisans to produce decorative sculpture and murals. Among those who worked with him were the sculptor
Karl Bitter and the painter
Elihu Vedder. he was a founding member of the National Arts Club and served as its president from 1898 to 1905. In 1905 his two sons were taken into the partnership. The firm carried on under Post's grandson Edward Everett Post (1904-2006)
[3] until the late twentieth century.
Post served as President of the