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Neilson record books

 Collection
Identifier: MS 0613

Abstract

This collection contains 13 voumes of record books belonging to Baltimore architect James Crawford Neilson (1816-1900).

Dates

  • 1798-1900

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Public use of this collection is restricted to microfilm.

Conditions Governing Use

The reproduction of materials in this collection may be subject to copyright restrictions. It is the responsibility of the researcher to determine and satisfy copyright clearances or other case restrictions when publishing or otherwise distributing materials found in the collections. For more information visit the MCHC’s Rights and Permissions page.

Biographical / Historical

James Crawford Neilson was born October 14, 1816 in Baltimore, Maryland, in a house on Market (now Baltimore) Street. He was the son of James Crawford Neilson (1776-1822) and Albertina A. Backer, an Englishwoman. In 1822, after the death of his father, Neilson’s mother moved her four children to England to live with her mother. Two years later, in 1824, they left for Brussels which was still part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. Young Neilson attended private school there until 1833 when, owing to the revolution in which Belgium and Holland were divided, he departed for the U.S. He arrived in Baltimore by ship from Liverpool and took up lodgings first in Hanover Street, then Fayette Street, and finally for a brief period at St. Mary’s College on Paca Street.

In 1835, at the age of 19, Neilson became a member of the survey party working on the Baltimore & Port Deposit Railroad (later the Baltimore & Philadelphia Railroad). His supervisor was Benjamin H. Latrobe. Subsequently, Neilson helped survey in the area of Martinsburg, West Virginia, for the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. It was at this time that he first became acquainted with John Rudolph Niernsee, who was chief draftsman for the railroad.

In the meantime, Neilson had married Rosa Williams, whose family owned farmland along Deer Creek in Harford County at a place called Priestford. Among their children was Charles Neilson, who attained the rank of General and became Assistant Postmaster General of the United States.

Between 1843 and 1844, Neilson worked on the U.S. Coastal Survey maps for the Eastern Shore of Maryland. He and Niernsee entered partnership in the practice of architecture in June 1848. The firm of Niernsee & Neilson first occupied an office located on Fayette Street, near Charles Street.

Architectural commissions came readily and included railroad stations for the B&O, commercial buildings, several churches, and both country homes and townhouses for the well-to-do, many of whom were in fact directors of the B&O Railroad.

Then, in 1856, Niernsee was made architect of the capitol of South Carolina and moved to Columbia. Neilson continued to practice alone in Baltimore, designing a number of public buildings as well as several structures in Harford County, where his family now resided at the Priestford farm which Mrs. Neilson had inherited.

When Niernsee returned to Baltimore in 1865, the two architects revived their partnership and took into their office a number of young interns who later became prominent themselves, including R. Snowden Andrews, Eben Faxson, Bruce Price, and, briefly, E. Francis Baldwin. Niernsee and Nielson were both founding members of the Baltimore Chapter of the AIA at its charter in 1870. Following a successful period of ten years, during which several banks, hotels, schools and houses were designed, the firm of Niernsee & Neilson was disbanded. Each continued to work on his own, Niernsee in partnership with his sons, and Neilson by himself.

From 1875 until his death in 1900, Neilson expanded his horizons into Virginia where, through his friendship with Washington Lee, Robert E. Lee’s son and successor as president of Washington & Lee University, he worked on several college buildings, the Mausoleum in the Lee Chapel, and faculty residences. Neilson also designed a number of buildings in Staunton, Virginia, and on Maryland’s Eastern Shore.

James Crawford Neilson was a man of many talents. His diaries and family tradition show that he designed a coat-of-arms for the Neilsons and the family silverware pattern. He was an accomplished figure skater and he kept copious notes on his farm as well as the surveys he made of its vicinity. All are in the Manuscript Collection of the Maryland Historical Society.

Neilson’s death came on December 21, 1900 at Priestford, where he is buried in the family cemetery.

Extent

2 Linear Feet (2 flat boxes)

Language of Materials

English

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Gift of George P.Neilson on May 15, 1946.

Bibliography

Chalfant, Randalph W., Catherine E. Black and James W. Foster, "J. Crawford Neilson", Baltimore Architectural Foundation, accessed August 15, 2019, https://baltimorearchitecture.org/biographies/j-crawford-neilson/.
Title
Guide to the Neilson record books
Status
Under Revision
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
Undetermined
Script of description
Code for undetermined script
Language of description note
English

Revision Statements

  • 2019-08-15: Manually entered into ArchivesSpace by Mallory Herberger.

Repository Details

Part of the H. Furlong Baldwin Library Repository

Contact:
H. Furlong Baldwin Library
Maryland Center for History and Culture
610 Park Avenue
Baltimore MD 21201 United States
4106853750