George Frederick Meacham (July 1, 1831 - December 4, 1917) was an architect in the Boston, Massachusetts, area in the 19th century. He is notable for designing Boston's Public Garden, the Massachusetts Bicycle Club, and churches, homes, and monuments in greater Boston and elsewhere in New England.
Early life and career
George F. Meacham was born in 1831 in Watertown, Massachusetts to Giles A. and Jane A. Meacham.[1] In 1849, after attending schools in Newton, Waltham and Cambridge, he entered Harvard College. He graduated in 1853.[1] After college he trained and worked as a civil engineer, at one point working on the Water Works of Jersey City, New Jersey. In 1855 he entered the office of an unnamed architect in Boston.[1] By 1857 he was associated with architect Shepard S. Woodcock,[2] and by 1858 they had formed a partnership.[3] Meacham established an independent firm in Boston in 1864.[4]
Meacham was appointed architect of Boston's new Masonic Temple in 1866, after the health of the original architect, Merrill G. Wheelock, failed.[5] Construction had begun in 1865, and Meacham completed the exterior of the building to Wheelock's design and was responsible for the design of the interior.[6] The building was dedicated in 1867. It has been demolished. In 1867 a set of plans for an apartment house designed by Meacham was published in an overview of charity work in France, though it does not indicate whether it was intended to be built in France or Boston, where the book was printed.[7] Meacham continued in Boston until 1891, when he retired from active practice.[1] He continued to work on a few projects from his home in Newton in the following years.
Though most of Meacham's work was architectural, he did his best known work in the capacity of landscape architect. In 1859 his design was adopted for the reconstruction of the Public Garden, his plan for which has remained largely intact.[8][9] He was also responsible, in 1865, for an extension to the Center Cemetery of Shirley,[10] and for Farlow Park in Newton in 1882.[11]
Personal life
In 1859 Meacham married Mary J. Warren of New Boston, New Hampshire. In 1870 they moved from Watertown to Newton. They had two children together, who both died in their youth. Mary J. Meacham died in 1877. Meacham remarried in 1881, to Ellen Louisa Frost, who survived him. Meacham died on December 4, 1917. At the time of his death he was a resident of Boston.[12]
Legacy
Following his association with Woodcock, several architects who would become notable trained in his office. These include Henry M. Francis (1864-1865)[13] and George R. Pyne (1870s).[14]
Hammatt Billings may have been associated with Meacham in the earliest phases of the design.[16] Meacham was also responsible for the addition of a parish house in 1889.[17] NRHP-listed.
^Proceedings of the Grand Lodge of the Most Ancient and Honorable Fraternity of Free and Accepted Masons of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts (Boston: Solon Thornton, 1871)
^Landscape Architecture and Urban Design. Encyclopedia of Urban America: The Cities and Suburbs. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 1998.
^Seth Chandler, History of the Town of Shirley, Massachusetts (Shirley, MA: Seth Chandler, 1883): 105-106.
^Annual Report of the City Engineer, for the Year 1882 (Newton, MA: 1883)
^"George F. Meacham Dead, Was Old-time Architect," Boston Daily Globe, December 5, 1917, 10.
^Ellery Bicknell Crane, Historic Homes and Institutions and Genealogical and Personal Memoirs of Worcester County, Massachusetts, vol. 4 (New York and Chicago: Lewis Publishing Company, 1907): 304.
^"Pyne, George Rovillo," Who's Who in New England, ed. Albert Nelson Marquis (Chicago: A. N. Marquis & Company, 1909): 771.
^Machine Shop Village NRHP Registration Form (1982)
^ abJames F. O'Gorman, "H. and J. E. Billings of Boston: From Classicism to the Picturesque," Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 42, no. 1 (March 1983): 54-73.
^South Congregational Church NRHP Registration Form (1990)
^Isaac S. Hartley, Historical Discourse Delivered on the Occasion of the Semi-centennial Year of the Reformed Church, Utica, N. Y. (Utica, NY: Curtiss & Childs, 1880)
^William W. Crapo, Centennial in New Bedford (New Bedford, MA: E. Anthony & Sons, 1876): 135-136.
^Charles A. Harris, Old-time Fairhaven (New Bedford, MA: Reynolds Printing, 1947): 244-245.
^Tabernacle Baptist Church NRHP Registration Form (2012)
^"Melrose," Boston Daily Advertiser, August 18, 1868, 1.
^Charles A. Nelson, Waltham, Past and Present; and its Industries (Cambridge, MA: John Ford & Son, 1878): 110.
^Auditor of Accounts' Annual Report of the Receipts and Expenditures of the City of Boston and the County of Suffolk, State of Massachusetts, For the Financial Year 1869-70 (Boston: Alfred Mudge & Son, 1870)
^ abcdRoger G. Reed, "George F. Meacham," A Biographical Dictionary of Architects in Maine (Augusta, ME: Maine Historic Preservation Commission, 1984)
^Newton: Garden City of the Commonwealth, ed. John C. Brimblecom (Newton, MA: Newton Graphic, 1902)
^"The Old and New Green School Houses," Lowell (MA) Daily Citizen, December 30, 1870, 2.
^City Documents of the City of Lowell for the Year 1870-71 (Lowell, MA: Stone & Huse, 1871)
^"Building Permits," Boston Daily Advertiser, October 11, 1873, 4.
^Auditors' One-hundred and Ninety-fifth Annual Report of the Finances of the Town of Newton, Selectmen's Report, Registrar's Report, and Record of Streets for Eleven Months Ending Dec. 31, 1873, with the Tax-list for 1873 (Boston: Rand, Avery & Company, 1874)
^"Walnut-Avenue Congregational Church," Suffolk County Journal, May 24, 1873.
^Charkes Bowdoin Fillebrown, Genealogy of the Fillebrown Family with Biographical Sketches (Boston: Charles Bowdoin Fillebrown): 122.)
Curb, stone or fence: what is the best plan for enclosing the Common? Hearing on the Subject in the City Hall, Yesterday. Boston Daily Globe, May 26, 1875. p. 8.
"George F. Meacham (1831-1917)". A Biographical Dictionary of Architects in Maine. 1984.