Ernest Coxhead
Ernest Albert Coxhead | |
---|---|
Born |
1863 Eastbourne, England |
Died |
27 March 1933 Berkeley, California |
Nationality | English |
Occupation | Architect |
Practice | Coxhead and Coxhead |
Ernest Albert Coxhead (1863–1933) was an English-born architect, active in the US. He was trained in the offices of several English architects and attended the Royal Academy and the Architectural Association School of Architecture, both in London.[1] He moved to California where he was the semi-official architect for the Episcopal Church. At the beginning of his career, Ernest Coxhead focused on designing churches, primarily in the Gothic Revival style. After the mid-1890s, Coxhead focused on residential designs. He was involved in the emergence of the Arts and Crafts style in California. He succeeded in designing residences that incorporated the elements and character of the English country house - shingled, Arts and Crafts style English Vernacular Cottages that combined elements from different periods for dramatic effect.[2]
Early life
Ernest Albert Coxhead was born in Eastbourne, East Sussex, the fourth of six children of William Coxhead, a retired schoolmaster. At the age of 15 Ernest became articled to civil engineer George Wallis. After five years experience in both public projects and residential developments, in 1883 Coxhead left Eastbourne for London. In London he worked for architect Frederic Chancellor, who restored gothic churches.[3]
Los Angeles
Coxhead moved with his older brother, Almeric Coxhead (1862–1928), to Los Angeles, California in 1886, where he established an independent practice, and soon secured commissions to design several Episcopal Churches in Southern California.
San Francisco
Coxhead's success with these projects led to commissions for several more churches in Northern California. He moved to San Francisco and opened the Coxhead and Coxhead office in 1890, with Almeric as his business partner. Seventeen Coxhead church buildings were constructed, of which eleven are extant. In 1893 his Episcopal Church client, Bishop William Kip, died and Coxhead started to concentrate on residential work. His residences include townhouses in San Francisco and large homes in Palo Alto, Alameda, and Berkeley. [4]
From 1918 to 1919, Coxhead went to LeMans, France, to organize and direct the American Expeditionary Force's University School of Architecture, established by John Galen Howard, for members of the United States armed forces stationed in France. He was subsequently appointed Chief of the University Extension Field Work of the Fine Arts Department at the University School of Architecture in Beaune, France.[5]
Coxhead returned to the United States and lived in Berkeley until his death in 1933. A collection of his work can be found in the Environmental Design Archives at the College of Environmental Design, University of California, Berkeley.[6][7]
Selected buildings
Residential
- Coxhead House, 37 East Santa Inez Avenue, San Mateo. (Now operated as a bed and breakfast inn, the home was occupied by Coxhead from 1891 to 1924.)
- 96 Park, San Anselmo (1892)
- Churchill house (now Cedar Gables Inn ), 486 Coombs St., Napa (c. 1892)
- Loy house, 2431 Ellsworth, Berkeley (1893)
- Goldman School of Public Policy, Berkeley (1893)
- 2710 Scott, San Francisco (1893)
- 2940 Jackson, San Francisco (1894)
- 2600 Jackson, San Francisco (1895)
- 2511 Baker, San Francisco (1895)
- 3362 Clay, San Francisco (1896)
- 2700 Scott, San Francisco (1897)
- 2800 Pacific, San Francisco (1899)
- 3647 Washington, San Francisco (1900)
- 3232 & 3234 Pacific, San Francisco (1901)
- 2535 Laguna, San Francisco (1902)
- Allenoke Manor, 1777 Le Roy Avenue, Berkeley (1903)
- Rieber house, 15 Canyon Road, Berkeley (1904)
- Torrey house, 1 Canyon Road, Berkeley (c. 1906)
- Williams house, Palo Alto (1907) [8][9]
- 76 Codornices Road, Berkeley [10]
Commercial / Public
- Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Building, San Francisco (1908)
- Public library at 1801 Green Street, San Francisco
- Prayer Book Cross in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco
Churches
- Episcopal Church of the Messiah, Santa Ana (1889)[11]
- Holy Innocents Episcopal Church, San Francisco (1890)[12]
- St. Peter's Episcopal Church, Red Bluff (1891)
- Chapel of St. John the Evangelist, Monterey (1891)[13]
- Sausalito Presbyterian Church, Sausalito, CA (1905)
- Christ Episcopal Church, Los Altos (1914), currently Foothills Congregational Church
- St. John's Episcopal Church, Petaluma, CA ( 1891).
References
- ↑ Ernest Coxhead Profile, University of California, Berkeley
- ↑ Robert Winter (1997) Toward a Simpler Way of Life, The Arts & Crafts Architects of California University of California Press.
- ↑ Pacific Heights Architects #1 - Ernest Coxhead
- ↑ Richard Longstreth (1998) On the Edge of the World: Four Architects in San Francisco at the Turn of the Century University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-21415-3
- ↑ Ernest Coxhead
- ↑ Ernest Coxhead Profile, University of California, Berkeley
- ↑ "Signature style / Ernest Coxhead / Strange talents / Idiosyncratic homes helped define bay tradition". Retrieved 30 June 2016.
- ↑ The Williams House
- ↑ "Plans for Williams house hit snag". Retrieved 30 June 2016.
- ↑ http://www.76codornices.com/76_Codornices/Welcome.html
- ↑ - History Episcopal Church of the Messiah
- ↑ Holy Innocents Episcopal Church, San Francisco
- ↑ "St. John's Chapel". Retrieved 30 June 2016.
External links
- Finding aid to the Ernest Coxhead Collection Collection at the Environmental Design Archives, University of California, Berkeley
- Description of 53 extant Bay Area buildings by Coxhead (Bay Area Architecture and Public Art Documentation Project)