H. A. Overbeck
American architect (1861–1942) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Harry A. Overbeck (1861–1942)[1] was an American architect. He was active in Omaha, Nebraska and then for most of his career in Dallas, Texas. He designed several prominent buildings including a Mississippi Landmark and properties on the National Register of Historic Places.
Harry A. Overbeck | |
---|---|
Born | July 19, 1861 Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S. |
Died | January 20, 1942 |
Resting place | Restland Memorial Park |
Education | Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Ohio Architectural and Mechanical Institute |
Occupation | Architect |
Spouse | May B. Pettigrew |
Early life and education
Harry A. Overbeck was born on July 19, 1861, in Cincinnati, Ohio.[2][3] He father was a contractor,[2] whom he worked under for few early years. His brother J. Edward Overbeck was also an architect.[4]
Overbeck continued his studies at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT),[5] and the Ohio Architectural and Mechanical Institute.[6] He married May B. Pettigrew from Kansas City, Missouri.[5]
Career
Summarize
Perspective
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In his early career he worked briefly in Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minnesota, before established an architecture firm around 1885 in Omaha, Nebraska.[5] His work for the state fair in Omaha led to a commission for the Texas State Fair Association and brought him to Dallas in 1895.[6] He had an office in the Slaughter Building in Dallas.[7]
In 1914, Overbeck was chosen as the president of the Texas State Association of Architects.[8] His 1917 plans for designing a "humane" county jail in Dallas (known as Tom Green County Jail), included a pipe organ for music; but the state commissioners bailed on raising the funds, and his fundraising efforts stopped due to the activities around World War I.[3][9] He was involved in overseeing the removal of the clock tower from the Dallas County Courthouse in 1919.[10] In 1927, he became a member of the American Institute of Architects (AIA) College of Fellows.[11]
He died on January 20, 1942, and is buried in Restland Memorial Park in Dallas. The Southern Methodist University (SMU) libraries houses The George W. Cook Dallas/Texas Image Collection, which contains a 1900s photograph of Overbeck's office and its staff.[12]
List of works
- Linz Building (1898), Dallas, Texas; demolished in 1963[6]
- Temple Emanu-El (c. 1898), Dallas, Texas; synagogue that became a Unitarian church, before being demolished in 1961 for a highway project[13]
- Temple B'nai Israel (1905), Natchez, Mississippi; listed as a Mississippi Landmark[14]
- Hebrew Union Temple (1906), Greenville, Mississippi[14]
- Levi–Topletz House (c. 1914), Dallas, Texas; listed on the National Register of Historic Places[15]
- Levi–Moses House (c. 1915), Dallas, Texas; listed on the National Register of Historic Places
- Dallas Fire Station No. 16 (1917), Dallas, Texas
- Missouri–Kansas–Texas Railroad (MKT) headquarters (1912–1914), 701 Commerce Street in West End Historic District, Dallas, Texas;[6][16] now known as the Katy Building
- Crane Building (1909), Dallas, Texas; which was fireproof[5]
- Hale County Courthouse (1910), Plainview, Texas
- Hughes Brothers Manufacturing / Gulf Cone Building (1903), Dallas, Texas[17]
- Texas Moline Plow Building (1903), at 302 North Market, Dallas, Texas[17][18]
- Purse and Company Building (1905) at 601 Elm, Dallas, Texas[18]
- St. Paul's Hospital (1898), Dallas, Texas; formerly known as St. Paul's Sanatorium, demolished 1968[6]
- Dallas County Jail and Criminal Courts building (1915), at 500 Main Street, Dallas, Texas[3][6][19]
- Holy Trinity College building (1906), Dallas, Texas;[7] a precursor of Dallas University, demolished 1963[6]
- L. G. Bromberg House in the South Boulevard-Park Row Historic District, Dallas, Texas[6][20]
- Peter Farrell House in Munger Place, Dallas, Texas[6]
References
External links
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