Noble Foster Hoggson Explained

Noble Foster Hoggson
Birth Date:27 August 1865
Birth Place:New Haven, Connecticut
Death Place:Troy, New York
Occupation:Builder, architect, writer
Children:Noble Foster Hoggson Jr.
Education:Yale University
Signature:Signature of Noble Foster Hoggson.png

Noble Foster Hoggson Sr. (1865–1939) was a builder, architect, and author in the United States. He specialized in building and planning banks in New York City.[1] He partnered with his brother William J. Hoggson to establish Hoggson Brothers. His son, Noble Foster Hoggson Jr., was a prominent landscape architect.

Biography

Hoggson was born in New Haven, Connecticut on August 27, 1865, to Samuel J. Hoggson and Luey (McLean) Hoggson. His father was from Glasgow, Scotland and was an engraver and die maker.[2]

Hoggson graduated from Yale in 1888 and then continued his studies of architecture in Europe. Hoggson worked at Charles Wellford Leavitt's firm. He established Hoggson Brothers Builders in 1889 and incorporated it in 1907.[3] His brother was the architect William J. Hoggson who, apart from their partnership, worked in Greenwich, Connecticut and Florida.

Hoggson was in charge of a 1916 remodel of the Mercantile Bank building in Jonesboro, Arkansas. He wrote articles on bank building as well as on World War I, having worked in France for the American Industrial Commission to France surveying the destruction and determining how the U.S. could assist in the rebuilding effort.[4] He was also involved as an architect with the University Club of Albany.[5] Hoggson was a strong proponent of an international survey of architecture to aid American contractors seeking to work abroad.[6] [7]

He authored: Just Behind the Front in France (1918)[3] [8] [9] Banking through the ages (1926), published in New York by Dodd, Mead & Company, The Gradual Development of State Banking (1927) and Epochs in American Banking (1929).

His son was Noble Foster Hoggson Jr. (July 8, 1899 – October 29, 1970), a landscape architect[10] who also authored a biography of railroad tycoon Horace Chapin Henry.[11] He was a consultant to Seattle's Washington Park Arboretum. The University of Washington Libraries Department of Special Collections maintains the Noble Foster Hoggson Papers, 1916–1941.[12]

Noble Foster Hoggson Sr. died at the Yale Club in Troy, New York on October 25, 1939.[13]

Hoggson Jr.'s landscape architecture

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Contractors and Engineers Monthly, Volume 4 Buttenheim-Dix Publishing Corporation, 1922 - Engineering
  2. Book: The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography . XVIII . James T. White & Company . 238 . 1922 . 2020-12-29 . Google Books.
  3. http://cambridge.dlconsulting.com/cgi-bin/cambridge?a=d&d=Tribune19180202-01.2.71# Cambridge Tribune
  4. https://books.google.com/books?id=2lI2AQAAMAAJ&dq=Noble+Foster+hoggson+builder&pg=PA453 Bankers Magazine
  5. Web site: National Register of Historic Places Registration Form . . https://web.archive.org/web/20160303221437/http://www.landmarkconsulting.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/U.Club-NR-Nomination-2011.pdf . 2016-03-03 . dead . 2020-12-29.
  6. https://books.google.com/books?id=QCUETPfCZrYC&dq=Noble+Hoggson&pg=PA81 Exporting American Architecture 1870–2000
  7. https://books.google.com/books?id=NCdYAAAAYAAJ&dq=Noble+Hoggson&pg=RA8-PA28 Hoggson report recommending international survey to aid American building engineers
  8. https://books.google.com/books?id=pCznAAAAMAAJ&dq=Noble+Foster+hoggson+builder&pg=PA125 Architecture and Building
  9. https://books.google.com/books?id=rdQzAQAAMAAJ&dq=Noble+Foster+hoggson+builder&pg=PA338 Book review and illustration of Hoggson
  10. Little Gardens: A Quarterly Magazine of the Northwest Lake Washington Garden Club., 1939 - Gardening (includes an article by Hoggson)
  11. http://www.google.com/patents?id=XmJ2AAAAEBAJ&pg=PA1&source=gbs_selected_pages&cad=1#v=onepage&q&f=false Patent application
  12. Web site: PCAD - the Pacific Coast Architecture Database - Home.
  13. News: Noble Hoggson Dies . . New York . AP . 2 . 1939-10-26 . 2020-12-29 . Newspapers.com.