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John A. Fox

John A. Fox (1835–1920) was an American architect. Fox practiced in Boston for fifty years and is best remembered for his works in the Stick Style.

Life and career

John Andrews Fox was born December 23, 1835, in Newburyport, Massachusetts, to Thomas Bayley Fox, pastor of the First Religious Society, and Feroline Walley (Pierce) Fox. In 1845 the family moved to Dorchester, where Fox was educated. He initially trained as a civil engineer and surveyor, working for Garbett & Wood and Whitwell & Henck, with whom he worked on the initial surveys for the Back Bay. In 1858 he joined the office of Boston architect Benjamin F. Dwight, with whom he remained until the outbreak of the Civil War. In 1862 he was commissioned second lieutenant of the 2nd Massachusetts Infantry Regiment, and was promoted to first lieutenant and later adjudant. He participated in the Chattanooga campaign and Sherman's March to the Sea. He was mustered out July 26, 1865. For two years he worked for Ware & Van Brunt before returning to Dwight in 1867. He remained with Dwight until 1870, when he established his own practice in Boston.

His experience with Dwight, known as an architect of theatres, led to several major theatre and hall projects for Fox in the 70s and 80s. In his later career he designed major buildings for several state institutions. Fox would become known primarily as an architect of suburban homes in Dorchester and elsewhere, though he did not consider himself a specialist. Fox practiced architecture for fifty years, until his death in 1920.

Fox joined the American Institute of Architects in 1875, and was elevated to Fellow in 1889.

Personal life

In 1867 Fox was brevetted a major for his "faithful and meritorious services." Fox married Josephine Clapp of Boston in 1878. They had no children. The couple lived in a house of Fox's own design at 25 Trull Street in Dorchester. Fox died May 4, 1920, at home in Dorchester.

Legacy

The Boston historian Anthony Mitchell Sammarco has referred to Fox as the "Father of Stick Style architecture." Vincent Scully has identified him as an early innovator of the style, though his Stick Style works are preceded by a decade by those of Richard Morris Hunt, Henry Hobson Richardson and others.

Architect S. Edwin Tobey worked in Fox's office in the late 1870s before opening his own office in 1880. Curtis W. Bixby was a later associate, and was involved on several of Fox's projects for state institutions.

Several of Fox's works, including the campus of the Tewksbury Hospital, have been listed on the United States National Register of Historic Places. Others contribute to listed historic districts.

Architectural works

Gallery of architectural works

Notes

References

External links