Not only was he the first American
born professional architect, he
was the most important until the dawn
of modernism and the technological revolutions of the late 19th
and early 20th Centuries. He set the tone for both religious
and public buildings and left his direct stamp on two great cities.
Charles Bulfinch was born in Boston on August 8, 1763. His
father Thomas was one of the city’s leading physicians and the
family was prominent in social
circles. He grew up and came of age during the American Revolution
rooted in the spirit of the city’s liberal
Congregationalism and a sense of civic
life and republican virtue.
He attended Boston Latin School and Harvard University graduating
in 1781 following up with Master’s degree in 1784.
The next year his father sent him on
the grand tour of Europe. He met Thomas Jefferson
who was serving as Minister to France. Jefferson took the young
man under his wing. The two shared a passion for architecture,
particularly the classic buildings
of Rome. In England he was impressed by the neo-classical
style of Sir Christopher Wren, Robert Adam, William
Chambers and the Palladian style being developed in Dublin.
Returning to Boston in 1787 his
first venture was not as an architect, but as a businessman and investor.
He was a prime backer and organizer
for Captain Robert Gray’s voyage on the Columbia Rediviva,
the first circumnavigation of the globe by and American ship which helped
set the stage for a golden age of Yankee
trade.
Bulfinch in the early 19th Century. |
He used the profits from that voyage
to set himself up as an architect. It was uncharted territory. Previously master builders designed buildings based on well-established styles and books of elevations and floor
plans imported from Europe. A few amateurs dabbled, mostly designing
buildings for their own use. No one was making a living creating new designs for clients—and nobody knew if
it was even possible.
His first commission was for the Hollis Street Church in 1788.
When their original building burned, the congregation took a chance on you
Bulfinch. He built a fine, handsome, building with a neo-classical
central columned pediment symmetrically flanked by matching
towers. Constrained by the budget of the church, the building was
executed in wood. But Bulfinch
was clearly dreaming in stone and masonry.
Bulfinch's New North Church, now St. Stephen's Catholic Church, over looks a plaza featuring an equestrian state of Paul Revere. |
Building churches in and around
Boston would be a mainstay of his
practice. He was soon able to realize his vision in red brick with white plaster
for his signature columns. His
designs became both simpler and more
elegant, usually incorporating a central tower, often doubling as a clock
tower and belfry and capped with a cupola or occasionally a spire.
Most of his church buildings have been lost but the New North Church in
the North End built in 1804 still stands. It has now been restored and is
the home of St. Stephen’s Catholic Church. A late example,
regarded by many as among Bulfinch’s finest work is First Church, Unitarian in
Lancaster, Massachusetts. His style of church architecture
was widely copied for decades in New England and wherever the New
England diaspora settled.
The elegant simplicity of First Church, Unitarian in Lancaster, Massachusetts show how the Federalist style grew out of neoclassic design. |
Bulfinch’s bread and butter in the
early years of his practice was designing elegant
homes for Boston’s elite in the
fashionable new neighborhood of Beacon
Hill. Several still dot the area including two homes built for his
friend and near contemporary Harrison Gray Otis, a leader of
the Federalist Party and future Mayor of Boston.
In fact, the association of Bulfinch with
Boston’s leading Federalists gave a new name for the architectural style which
he was evolving out of the neo-classical—the Federal style. It
also led to important public commissions and his own political career.
He married his first cousin Hannah Apthorp, a common practice
among Boston’s in-bread elite, in
1788. The young couple had two sons, Thomas Bulfinch future author
of Bulfinch’s Mythology, and Stephen Greenleaf Bulfinch
who became a leading Unitarian clergyman
and author. The family aspired to live like Bulfinch’s wealthy
clients.
Unfortunately, despite impeccable breeding they did not have the fortune of the merchants and top
lawyer/politicians like Otis. They had to rely on his commissions, which
even though he was in great demand, proved unreliable—many
clients delayed payments or never paid in full, including his civic
projects. As a result he was periodically in financial straits. He was even imprisoned for debt
while working on the Massachusetts State House because the legislature dallied about authorizing his fees. In 1811, while serving in public office he was jailed for the month of July in a prison he built himself.
Bulfinch’s public commissions began with the Memorial Column to the
Revolution erected on Beacon Hill in 1789. His election to the Board of
Selectmen in 1791 would lead to more work. But he was a busy and
effective public servant during two stretches on the Board, 1791 to 1795 and
again from 1799 to 1817 when he served as Chairman. The two terms were
interrupted when one of his financial crises compelled him to concentrate on
business.
During his second term he also served as Police Commissioner and
took a major role in redeveloping
central Boston including overseeing the of the remodeling and enlargement of
Faneuil Hall in 1805, the construction of India Wharf, and the preservation
as open land and planning of Boston
Common as the city’s central park.
He also worked on drainage and sanitation improvement. Much of
the handsome central city enjoyed by tourists today on Boston’s Freedom
Trail is owed directly to Bulfinch’s work and foresight.
The Old State House in Hartfoed, Connecticut seen year in an early 1950s color postcard. |
Other important commissions in Boston and New England included the Federal
Street Theater (1793); the Tontine Crescent, a curved row of 16
townhouses around a central garden (1793–1794); the Massachusetts State
Prison (1803); Boylston Market
(1810); Harvard’s University Hall (1813–1814); and the Bulfinch
Building of Massachusetts General Hospital (1818).
Bulfinch’s life was changed when as Chairman of the Board of Selectmen he
entertained President James Monroe on his 1817 tour of New England. The two men were constant companions during the President’s week long stay in the Hub
of the Universe where his mission was restoring regional loyalty strained by the War of 1812 and reconciling
his Democratic Republicans with the dying Federalists. He found a
willing partner in Bulfinch and the two also bonded over personal admiration for Thomas Jefferson who had mentored them both.
Within months Monroe called Bulfinch to Washington D.C. to become
the third official Architect of the Capital replacing Benjamin
Latrobe. The position paid a handsome $2,500 per year plus the golden perk of “expenses” which rescued the architect from yet another financial
emergency stemming from the depression
of the New England economy caused by Jefferson’s Embargo of trade with European combatants and the
War of 1812 which ground construction in Boston nearly to a halt.
Bulfinch left completion of the hospital to an associate, resigned from the
Board of Selectmen and moved his
family to the nation’s capital.
He found a big job there. The first task was re-constructing the
Capital building itself which was damaged
in the burning of Washington by
the British in 1814. He completed the Capitol’s wings and central portion
including the rotunda, designed the western approach and portico,
and original low wooden dome, the one replaced by the present cast-iron dome in the mid-1860s.
He completed work on the Capital in 1829.
Bulfinch also doubled as Commissioner of Public Buildings and
oversaw the construction of other public buildings in the city. His
vision of a harmonized Federal presence built around Jeffersonian neo-classic
style and impressive stone construction not only preserved and extended the
grand visions of Pierre L’Enfant for the city, but became a model for public buildings across the
country for more than a century.
Bufinch designed the first home of All Souls Unitarian Church in Washington. |
This plaque adorns Bulfinch's birthplace home. |
In 1830 Bulfinch and his wife returned to Boston where he lived in honored retirement. He died there
on April 15, 1844 at the age of 80. He was laid to rest in the crowded burial grounds of Unitarian King’s
Chapel. His family later had his remains removed to a family tomb
at Mount Auburn Cemetery, the final resting place of a who’s who of the Boston political,
religious, and literary elite.
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