Gridley James Fox Bryant

Portrait of G.J.F. Bryant (courtesy Brookline Public Library)

Gridley James Fox Bryant (often referred to as G.J.F. Bryant) (August 29, 1816 June 8, 1899) was a 19th-century Boston architect and builder. His work was seen in custom houses, government buildings, churches, schoolhouses, and private residences across the United States.[1]

Bryant was born to Maria Winship Fox and Gridley Bryant, noted railway pioneer. He studied in his father's engineering office and that of Alexander Parris, then opened his own architect's office at the corner of Court and Washington streets. His first achievement was the design for the Broadway Savings Bank, South Boston, in the early 1830s. He married Louisa Bryant on September 9, 1839.[1]

Bryant was a leading proponent of the Boston "Granite Style", and together with Arthur Gilman devised the Back Bay's gridiron street pattern. Some idea of his popularity as an architect may be had from the fact that 152 buildings that he designed were destroyed in the Boston fire of 1872, and he received commissions to rebuild 110 of them.[1] Several architects worked with Bryant including Alexander Rice Esty, a church designer, and Edward H. Kendall, later in practice in New York.

His only known commission in the south was Thornbury, a plantation house built in the 1840s for Henry King Burgwyn, in Northampton County, North Carolina.[2]

Bryant's Works

Images

References

  1. 1 2 3 Roger G. Reed, Building Victorian Boston: the architecture of Gridley J.F. Bryant (Univ of Massachusetts Press, 2007) ISBN 1-55849-555-X, 9781558495555
  2. Robert B. MacKay and Catherine W. Bishir (2009). "North Carolina Architects & Builders: Bryant, Gridley James Fox (1816-1899)". North Carolina State University Libraries.
  3. Meeks, Carroll Louis Vanderslice (1956). The Railroad Station: An Architectural History. Yale University Press. p. 54. ISBN 0300007647.
  4. Southworth & Southworth. AIA Guide to Boston, 3rd ed. 2008
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