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Harold Van Buren Magonigle

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Name
  
Harold Buren

Role
  
Architect

Died
  
August 29, 1935


Harold Van Buren Magonigle wwwaaasieduassetsimagescharscrsreferenceAA

Buried
  
William McKinley Tomb, Canton, Ohio, United States

Books
  
Architectural Rendering in Wash

People also search for
  
William McKinley, Isaac Newton Seligman, Carol Brooks MacNeil

Structures
  
Liberty Memorial, William McKinley Tomb, National World War I Museum

Harold Van Buren Magonigle (1867–1935) was an American architect, artist, and author best known for his memorials. He achieved his greatest success as a designer of monuments, but his artistic practices included sculpture, painting, writing, and graphic design.

Born in New Jersey, Magonigle worked for Calvert Vaux, Rotch & Tilden, Schickel and Ditmars and McKim Mead & White before opening his own practice in 1903. He was the designer of the McKinley Memorial Mausoleum in Canton, Ohio and the Liberty Memorial in Kansas City, Missouri both commissions won through competitions. He designed the Core Mausoleum (1910–1915) at Elmwood Cemetery.

Magonigle and sculptor Attilio Piccirilli collaborated as architect and artist on two familiar monuments in New York City: the Monument to the USS Maine in Columbus Circle, and on the Fireman's Memorial on Riverside Drive and West 100th Street. He also designed the setting for Albert Weinert's Stevens T. Mason Monument in Detroit, Michigan, and for Robert Atken's Burritt Memorial in New Britain, Connecticut.

Magonigle's wife, Edith, was a muralist who collaborated with her husband on a number of his projects.

Magonigle's papers are held by the New York Public Library and by the Drawings and Archives Department in the Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library at Columbia University.

References

Harold Van Buren Magonigle Wikipedia