Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

George I Barnett

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
American

Died
  
1898

Role
  
Architect


Name
  
George Barnett

Occupation
  
Architect

Children
  
Thomas P. Barnett

George I. Barnett

Full Name
  
George Ingham Barnett

Born
  
1815
Nottingham, England

Buildings
  
Missouri Governor's Mansion, Tower Grove House, Henry Shaw Mausoleum

Structures
  
Missouri Governor's Mansion, St. Mary of Victories Church, Samuel Moody Grubbs House

St Louis commercial Real Estate - Thomas P Barnett Presidents Office


George Ingham Barnett (1815–1898) was an architect from St. Louis, MO. He was called The Dean of St. Louis Architecture for his contributions to the buildings of St. Louis as well as for his influence on other architects in the United States.

Contents

Early life in England

Barnett was born in Nottingham, England. He completed a classical education by the age of 16, then trained with Sir Thomas Hine at a builder in Nottingham, and then took on an apprenticeship with an architectural firm in London. Barnett left England for the United States in early 1839, remaining in New York City for six months before departing for St. Louis.

Work in St. Louis and Illinois

Barnett designed hundreds of buildings in St. Louis, many in Greek Revival, Italianate, and Gothic design. Barnett did not deviate from classical designs, and his portfolio was largely responsible for establishing Classicism as St. Louis' dominate architectural influence. His works included houses, churches, commercial, and civic structures. Among his best known structures are renovations to the Old Courthouse, the Missouri Governor's mansion, the structures of the Missouri Botanical Garden, Tower Grove Park, and the Southern Hotel. The Samuel Moody Grubbs House in LItchfield Illinois. The only structure in Illinois he designed. It is a second Empire design.

Influence on other architects

Barnett's son, Thomas P. Barnett, trained with the elder Barnett and went on to design such American landmarks as the Cathedral Basilica of St. Louis and the Adolphus Hotel in Dallas. His other son, George D. Barnett, and his son-in-law, John Ignatius Haynes, joined Tom Barnett to form the architectural firm of Barnett, Haynes & Barnett. His eldest son, Absalom J. Barnett, became a successful architect in San Francisco.

Other notable architects who apprenticed under Barnett included Henry G. Isaacs, Alfred H. Piquenard, Charles F. May, William Kirchner, Isaac Taylor, and George Strafford Mills.

References

George I. Barnett Wikipedia