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Ralph Adams Cram

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Ralph Adams Cram Famous memorial

Birth
Hampton Falls, Rockingham County, New Hampshire, USA
Death
22 Sep 1942 (aged 78)
Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial
Sudbury, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Architect, Author. Inspired by the influential English critic John Ruskin, he became an ardent advocate of and authority on English and French Gothic styles. He produced many collegiate and ecclesiastical works in a neo-Gothic style. Winning the West Point competition brought national attention to him, and in 1907 he was appointed Campus Architect, a position created for him by then University president Woodrow Wilson. Church commissions followed across the country as far west as Denver, Colorado, south to Florida, and north to Canada. Notable works in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, include Calvary Episcopal Church, Shadyside (1905-1907); Holy Rosary Roman Catholic Church, Homewood, (1921-1931); and East Liberty Presbyterian Church, built for the Mellon banking family (1930-1935). In 1911, he was appointed architect for the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, a commission the office holds to the present day. The same year, he was commissioned to design a new church for St. Thomas on Fifth Avenue in New York City. He was the architect for the South Dining Hall at the University of Notre Dame, (1927-1928). His last great works were the 1923-29 St. George's Chapel with his friend John Nicolas Brown, the 1931 plan for the Cathedral, the 1938 Monastery for the Cowley ­Fathers next to Harvard Yard, and the Campus for Boston University. He died after a brief bout with pneumonia, leaving behind 26 books and close to five hundred commissions, great and small.
Architect, Author. Inspired by the influential English critic John Ruskin, he became an ardent advocate of and authority on English and French Gothic styles. He produced many collegiate and ecclesiastical works in a neo-Gothic style. Winning the West Point competition brought national attention to him, and in 1907 he was appointed Campus Architect, a position created for him by then University president Woodrow Wilson. Church commissions followed across the country as far west as Denver, Colorado, south to Florida, and north to Canada. Notable works in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, include Calvary Episcopal Church, Shadyside (1905-1907); Holy Rosary Roman Catholic Church, Homewood, (1921-1931); and East Liberty Presbyterian Church, built for the Mellon banking family (1930-1935). In 1911, he was appointed architect for the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, a commission the office holds to the present day. The same year, he was commissioned to design a new church for St. Thomas on Fifth Avenue in New York City. He was the architect for the South Dining Hall at the University of Notre Dame, (1927-1928). His last great works were the 1923-29 St. George's Chapel with his friend John Nicolas Brown, the 1931 plan for the Cathedral, the 1938 Monastery for the Cowley ­Fathers next to Harvard Yard, and the Campus for Boston University. He died after a brief bout with pneumonia, leaving behind 26 books and close to five hundred commissions, great and small.

Bio by: MC



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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Added: Apr 25, 1998
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/240/ralph_adams-cram: accessed ), memorial page for Ralph Adams Cram (16 Dec 1863–22 Sep 1942), Find a Grave Memorial ID 240, citing Saint Elizabeth's Memorial Churchyard, Sudbury, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA; Maintained by Find a Grave.