• Source: Pierce P. Furber
  • Pierce Powers Furber (May 2, 1853 – April 6, 1893) was an American architect and partner of Peabody & Stearns in charge of the firm's western commissions under the name Peabody, Stearns & Furber.


    Biography


    Furber was born May 2, 1853, in Bangor, Maine, to Samuel Winkley Furber (1819–1895) and Lucy Heywood Metcalf (1825–1856). He moved to Saint Paul, Minnesota with his father in 1858, then moved to Cottage Grove, Minnesota in 1861 where his uncle, Joseph W. Furber, was living at the time. His father was one of James J. Hill's business associates. Furber was educated at Carleton College (1871) and the University of Minnesota (1875) where he graduated as civil engineer in 1876. He was a charter member of the Alpha Nu chapter of Chi Psi. Furber attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and graduated as an architect in 1879.
    Following graduation, he entered the Boston offices of Peabody & Stearns. In 1881, he was sent by the firm to Colorado Springs to superintend the firm's projects there. In 1883, Furber went to St. Louis where he became in charge of all the firm's western work and became a local partner of the firm in 1889, under the name Peabody, Stearns & Furber. Furber's role "was to drum up trade for the Boston office and supervise construction from drawings that they sent him."
    Furber was a founder of the Architectural League of New York and on the board of directors of the American Institute of Architects. Furber was elected a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects in 1889. He was the first president of the St. Louis AIA chapter.
    Furber married Sara Kate Montgomery on November 15, 1882, and had three children. He died April 6, 1893, in St. Louis from diphtheria. He was buried at Bellefontaine Cemetery.


    Works


    Chi Psi Alpha Nu Chapter Lodge, 1515 University Avenue SE, Minneapolis, Minnesota
    Henry L. Newman House (1881) – 21 Vandeventer Place, Central West End, St. Louis, Missouri, demolished
    Turner Building (1882) – 304 N 8th Street, St. Louis, Missouri, demolished
    U.S. Signal Station (1882) – Pikes Peak, El Paso County, Colorado, demolished
    The Antlers Hotel (1883) – Cascade Avenue, Colorado Springs, Colorado, demolished
    Isaac W. Morton House (1884) – 49 Vandeventer Place & Cabanne Avenue, Central West End, St. Louis, Missouri, demolished
    St. Louis Club House (1884–1885) – T. E. Huntley Avenue & Locust Boulevard, Midtown, St. Louis, Missouri, demolished
    Dr. George Ashe Bronson House (1885) – 3201 Washington Avenue, St. Louis, Missouri, added to the NRHP in 2015
    Robert Moore House (1886) – 61 Vandeventer Place, Central West End, St. Louis, Missouri, demolished
    Thomas Howard House (1887) – 33 Vandeventer Place, Central West End, St. Louis, Missouri, demolished
    James J. Hill House (1887–1891) – 240 Summit Avenue, Saint Paul, Minnesota, added to the NRHP in 1966
    Henry L. Newman House (1889) – 21 Westmoreland Place, Central West End, St. Louis, Missouri, demolished
    Duluth Union Depot (1890–1892) – 509 W Michigan Street, Duluth, Minnesota, added to the NRHP in 1971
    Security Building (1890–1892) – 319 N 4th Street, St. Louis, Missouri, added to the NRHP in 2000
    Corinne Dyer House (1892) – 38 Westmoreland Place, Central West End, St. Louis, Missouri
    Col. Edward C. Rowse House (1892) – 10 Benton Place, Lafayette Square, St. Louis, Missouri
    Lindell Methodist Episcopal Church (1892) – Lindell Boulevard & Newstead Avenue, St. Louis, Missouri, demolished
    The Collier Building (1892–1893) – 4th Street & Washington Avenue, St. Louis, Missouri, demolished
    John T. Davis House (1893–1894) – 17 Westmoreland Place, Central West End, St. Louis, Missouri
    D. R. Wolfe House (1894) – 4046 Washington Avenue, Central West End, St. Louis, Missouri
    George M. Maverick House (1894) – 2726 Locust Street, Midtown, St. Louis, Missouri, demolished


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