• Source: Adolphus Druiding
    • Adolphus Druiding (1838–1900) was a German-born American architect who was best known for his work in creating Roman Catholic churches, schools, rectories and convents. Druiding’s work along with that of fellow German immigrant Franz Georg Himpler (1833–1916) makes up the largest body of German Catholic architecture in the United States between the end of the Civil War and 1900.


      Early life and career


      Druiding was born May 29, 1838, in Aschendorf, a province of Hanover, Germany. He studied at the Secondary School in Papenburg and at the Polytechnic School in Munich where he graduated with honors. He worked briefly at a French architect’s office and then entered government service in Munich. After this he studied in Berlin under Strach, Adler and Local. He built one church in Schoenwalde and was employed erecting government stations in the Netherlands.


      Architectural practice


      In 1865 after completing his work in the Netherlands, Druiding came to the United States where he enjoyed an extensive practice in the design of Roman Catholic Churches throughout the Midwest.
      Druiding was noted as an aggressive businessman who was prepared to assume projects large and small. This was quite unlike his countryman and fellow architect Franz Georg Himpler who designed far fewer buildings than Druiding, but more of Himpler's buildings survive to the present day.


      Legacy


      Druiding was one of perhaps 20 American architects who contributed most of the Roman Catholic ecclesiastical architecture throughout the later part of the 19th century. His church buildings are much admired locally, have been featured in books on church architecture and have found their way to some of the National Registers.


      Works




      = Alabama

      =

      Cathedral of St. Paul, Birmingham, Alabama


      = Arkansas

      =
      Immaculate Conception Church, Fort Smith, Arkansas


      = District of Columbia

      =
      St. Anthony of Padua Church, Washington, DC


      = Iowa

      =
      Blessed Sacrament Church, Sioux City, IA


      = New York

      =
      St. Michael Church, Rochester, NY
      Queen of the Most Holy Rosary Church, Bridgehampton, NY
      Church of the Guardian Angel, Brooklyn, NY
      Our Lady of Sorrows Church, Buffalo, NY (now King Urban Life Center)
      Blessed Sacrament Church, Buffalo, NY


      = Ohio

      =

      Immaculate Conception, Ottoville
      Sacred Heart of Jesus Church, Camp Washington, Cincinnati
      St. Charles Borromeo Church, Carthage, Cincinnati
      St. Aloysius-on-the-Ohio Church, Cincinnati
      St. Michael Church, Cleveland
      St. Henry Church, Harriettsville
      St. John the Baptist Catholic Church, Maria Stein
      St. Henry Catholic Church, St. Henry
      St. Joseph Church, Plymouth
      St. Lawrence Church, Cincinnati
      Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church, Cincinnati
      Mt. St. Joseph Sisters of Charity Convent and Mother House, Cincinnati
      St. Mary, Delaware
      Franciscan Sisters of the Poor – St. Clare Convent & Chapel near Hartwell/ Cincinnati – Springfield Township
      St. Patrick Church, Toledo


      = Illinois

      =
      St. Hyacinth Church Chicago, IL (first church constructed in 1895 and replaced by much larger church by Worthmann and Steinbach)
      St. George Church, Chicago, IL
      St. John Cantius Church, Chicago, IL
      St. Hedwig Church, Chicago, IL


      = Indiana

      =
      St. Benedict Church, Terre Haute, Indiana (destroyed by fire 1930, partially rebuilt)


      = Kentucky

      =
      St. Peter Church, Lexington, KY
      St. Stephen Church, Newport, KY


      = Minnesota

      =
      Saints Peter and Paul, Glencoe, MN (now St. Pius X)
      Saint Michael, Prior Lake, MN (1890 church)
      Saint Michael Church, Saint Michael, MN
      Saint Mary Church, Waverly, MN


      = Missouri

      =

      St. Agatha Church, St. Louis, MO
      Shrine of St. Joseph, St. Louis, MO
      St. John Nepomuk Church, St. Louis, MO
      St. Alphonsus Liguori Church, St. Louis, MO
      St. Peter's Church, Jefferson City, MO


      = New Jersey

      =
      St. Joseph Chapel, Seton Hall University, South Orange, NJ


      = Pennsylvania

      =
      Ss. Peter and Paul Church, Pittsburgh, PA
      St. Joseph Church, Oil City, PA
      St. Patrick Church, Philadelphia, PA


      = South Dakota

      =
      St. Paul Church, Marty, SD


      = Wisconsin

      =
      St. Francis Xavier Cathedral, Green Bay, Wisconsin
      St. Joseph's Church, Waukesha, Wisconsin
      St. Mary Oratory. Wausau, WI
      St. Mary Church, Oshkosh, WI
      St. Mary (originally “of the Immaculate Conception”) Catholic Church, Menasha, Wisconsin
      St. Mary's Church, Kaukauna, WI


      References

    Kata Kunci Pencarian: