Harry Allan Jacobs Explained

Harry Allan Jacobs
Significant Buildings:22 East 29th Street, 129 East 73rd Street, Hotel Marseilles, Andrew Freedman Home, Hotel Elysee, 820 Park Avenue, New York Friars Club

Harry Allan Jacobs (1872–1932) was an American architect from New York City. He designed the hotel building at 22 East 29th Street, now the James New York - NoMad, a New York City Landmark. He also designed Hotel Marseilles (1905), a New York City Landmark,[1] [2] and the wings added to 1125 Grand Concourse (Andrew Freedman Home).[3]

Jacobs was born and raised in New York City. He trained to be an architect at the Columbia School of Mines graduating in 1894 and continued his studies in Paris at the Ecole des Beaux Arts. He won the Prix de Rome.[1]

Jacobs redesigned the house at 26 West 56th Street in Midtown Manhattan for Henry Seligman in 1907.[4] He designed several residential buildings in what is now the Upper East Side Historic District including an Italian Renaissance Revival style residence for Charles Guggenheimer at 129 East 73rd Street (1907).[5] He designed a new façade for philanthropist R. Fulton Cutting's home at 22 East 67th Street (1908) and a residence for theater producer Martin Beck at 13 East 6th Street (1921)[1] Jacobs also designed the Andrew Freedman Home (1925) at 1125 Grand Concourse in the Bronx with Joseph H. Freedlander. He designed the Hotel Elysee at 54-60 East 54th Street in 1927.[1] He designed a residential building that included the home of publisher Andrew J. Kobler at 820 Park Avenue (1926).[6] He also designed the original New York Friars Club building.[7]

His son Robert Allan Jacobs was also an architect and worked in partnership with Ely Jacques Kahn.

A collection of his photographs are held by the Columbia University libraries.[8]

Work

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hotel Marseilles: A Beaux-Arts Beauty Since 1905 - Famoushotels.org. famoushotels.org.
  2. Web site: Daytonian in Manhattan: The 1905 Hotel Marseilles - 2689-2693 Broadway. Tom. Miller. 21 March 2017.
  3. Web site: Lehman College Art Gallery: Architecture/Andrew Freedman Home for Men and Women. www.lehman.edu.
  4. August 10, 1907. Improvements to the Henry Seligman Residence. The Real Estate Record: Real estate record and builders' guide. 80. 214. columbia.edu. 2056.
  5. Web site: The New York Architect. 10 October 2018. pages 165-168.
  6. Web site: 820 Park Avenue, Building Review.
  7. Book: Alpern, Andrew. Luxury Apartment Houses of Manhattan: An Illustrated History. 10 October 1992. Courier Corporation. Google Books. 9780486273709.
  8. Web site: Harry Allan Jacobs photographs, 1910-1930. www.columbia.edu.
  9. 427.