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James Gallier

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Occupation
  
Architect

Name
  
James Gallier


Role
  
Architect

Children
  
James Gallier, Jr.

James Gallier James Gallier Architecture List of James Gallier Buildings


Born
  
July 24, 1798
Ravensdale, Ireland

Died
  
October 3, 1866, Tybee Island, Georgia, United States

Books
  
Autobiography of James Gallier, Architect

Buildings
  
Gallier Hall, Preservation Resource Center, Christ Church Cathedral

People also search for
  
James H. Dakin, James Gallier, Jr., Micaela Almonester, Baroness de Pontalba

Structures
  
Gallier Hall, Pontalba Buildings, Barton Academy, Government Street Presbyter, Christ Church Cathedral

DabneyHouse 100117 FINAL 1


James Gallier (July 24, 1798 – October 3, 1866) was a prominent 19th-century New Orleans architect.

Contents

James Gallier 9780306712470 Autobiography Of James Gallier Architect

Early life

He was born James Gallagher in Ravensdale, County Louth, Ireland in 1798. He changed his last name to a French surname when he moved to New Orleans (1834).

Career

He worked in England during his early career, designing the Godmanchester Chinese Bridge which crosses a mill stream of the River Great Ouse in 1827, and then working on the redevelopment of the Grosvenor Estate in Mayfair. He became bankrupt, and emigrated to America in 1832.

He was one of a group of architects who created the idea of Architectural Practice, with the architect working for the clients, and managing those who actually build the structures that have been designed.

His significant works that are National Historic Landmarks include:

  • Gallier Hall on St. Charles Avenue (1851), at Lafayette Square in the Central Business District, which was New Orleans' City Hall for nearly a century. It is a National Historic Landmark.
  • Pontalba Buildings, with Henry Howard, a National Historic Landmark.
  • St. Charles Hotel
  • Government Street Presbyterian Church (1836), a National Historic Landmark in Mobile, Alabama.
  • His other significant works include:

  • The Second Christ Church Cathedral on St. Charles Avenue (1837), an Episcopalian Church and later a synagogue. No longer exists.
  • Barton Academy (1836) in Mobile, Alabama.
  • Belle Helene (1850) in Ascension Parish, Louisiana.
  • Personal life and death

    In 1823, while in England, he met and married Elizabeth Tyler. Their only surviving child was James Gallier, Jr., who also became an architect. Elizabeth died in July 1844, in her mid-forties.

    On June 23, 1850, in Charleston, South Carolina, he married Catherine Maria Robinson of Mobile, Alabama, who was born November 18, 1822, in Hardwick, Massachusetts, to Colonel Joseph Robinson and Ann Maria Ruggles Walton. She was 24 years his junior.

    On October 3, 1866, Mr. and Mrs. Gallier were passengers on board the Evening Star, a paddle-wheel steamer en route from New York City to New Orleans, when it sank in a hurricane about 175 miles east of Savannah, Georgia. There were only a half-dozen survivors out of approximately 250 people.

    References

    James Gallier Wikipedia