Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Latrobe died September 3, 1820, from yellow fever, while working in Louisiana. [74] He was buried in the Protestant section of the Saint Louis Cemetery in New Orleans, where his eldest son, architect Henry Sellon Boneval Latrobe (1792–1817), had been buried three years earlier, having also succumbed to yellow fever.

  3. Apr 30, 2024 · Died: Sept. 3, 1820, New Orleans, La., U.S. (aged 56) Movement / Style: Federal style. Greek Revival. Benjamin Latrobe (born May 1, 1764, Fulneck, near Leeds, Yorkshire, Eng.—died Sept. 3, 1820, New Orleans, La., U.S.) was a British-born architect and civil engineer who established architecture as a profession in the United States.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Benjamin Henry Latrobe died of Yellow Fever in 1820 while working on the New Orleans Waterworks. Resources Cohen, Jeffrey A., The Architectural Drawings of Benjamin Henry Latrobe, Parts 1 and 2, Yale University Press, 1995. Biography.

  5. 1764. United Kingdom. Death. 1820. Years Served. 1803-1811; 1815-1817. Major Works. Corncob or Cornstalk Columns and Capitals. Hired by President Thomas Jefferson, March 6, 1803; construction halted by July 1, 1811; Hired by President James Madison, April 6, 1815; Resigned November 20, 1817.

  6. Penn Connection. Benjamin Henry Latrobe was born in England in 1764. The son of a Moravian clergyman, Latrobe traveled to Germany for a broad education in the liberal arts and sciences. After his return to England, he held several minor government posts and worked as an engineer and surveyor, and later he turned to architecture.

  7. Biography. One of the most influential American architects of the early 19th century, the British-born Benjamin Latrobe is famous for his work on the United States Capitol in Washington DC - when he reworked the original design by William Thornton (1759-1828), after the fire of 1814. He is also well known for his masterpiece of neoclassical ...

  1. People also search for