Eggers & Higgins was a New York architectural firm partnered by Otto Reinhold Eggers (August 4, 1882 – April 23, 1964)[1][2] and Daniel Paul Higgins (September 12, 1886 – December 26, 1953).[3][4] The architects were responsible for the construction phase of the Jefferson Memorial beginning in 1939, two years after the death of its original architect, John Russell Pope, despite protests that their appointment had been undemocratic and therefore "un-Jeffersonian". Critics argued a competition should have been held to choose Pope's successor. In 1941, they also completed construction of Pope's other famous design, the West Building of the National Gallery of Art, also in Washington, D.C.
The pair were longtime associates of Pope in the firm he founded in 1903 as the Office of John Russell Pope, Architect. Eggers was a brilliant designer and renderer who served as Pope's right hand for almost thirty years.[5] They changed the name of the firm to Eggers & Higgins in 1937, soon after Pope's death. In 1958, it ranked as the fourth-largest architecture firm in the United States.[6] The firm was renamed The Eggers Partnership in 1970, and then as The Eggers Group, PC when it became a professional corporation in 1976. It eventually merged into what is now RMJM, a large architectural firm with offices in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Asia.
^Sinclair, Evelyn; Peatross, C. Ford (2005). Capital Drawings: Architectural Designs for Washington, D.C., from the Library of Congress. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN0-8018-7232-4.
^Moore, David W. Jr; Edgington, Justin B.; Payne, Emily T. (2010). "Eggers & Higgins"(PDF). A Guide to Architecture and Engineering Firms of the Cold War Era. U.S. Department of Defense. p. 111. Retrieved November 1, 2021.
^ abMorrone, Francis; Iska, James (2001). An Architectural Guidebook to Brooklyn. Layton, Utah: Gibbs Smith Publishers. pp. 13–14. ISBN1-58685-047-4.
^Morrone, Francis; Iska, James (2002). The Architectural Guidebook to New York City. Salt Lake City: Gibbs Smith Publishers. p. 265. ISBN1-58685-211-6.
^Schwartz, Joel (1993). The New York approach: Robert Moses, urban liberals, and redevelopment of the inner city. Columbus: Ohio State University Press. p. 138. ISBN0-8142-0587-9.