Albert Davis Taylor
Albert Davis Taylor was an American landscape architect and author, notable for his many gardens and his promotion of garden shows. He designed parks and other public works, subdivisions and private estates, primarily in Ohio.
Taylor was born July 8, 1883, in Carlisle, Massachusetts to Nathaniel A. Davis and Ellen F. Taylor. He received his Bachelor of Arts from Boston College in 1905 and his Master of Landscape Architecture from the New York State [College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Cornell University|College of Agriculture] at Cornell University in 1906, where he taught until 1908. He then joined the office of Warren H. Manning, where he was influenced by Manning’s informal and naturalistic approach to landscape design as he worked on such projects as Stan Hywet Hall in Akron.
In 1914 Taylor established his own practice in Cleveland, eventually opening a second office in Florida. His firm provided landscape design for the Van Sweringens’ Daisy Hill Estate in Cleveland, J. J. Emery’s Peterloon Estate in Cincinnati, the H. H. Timken Estate in Canton, and Julius Fleischmann’s Winding Creek Farm. The office also designed the Avondale subdivision in Akron and the Rookwood subdivision in Cincinnati. During the Great Depression, Taylor participated in a number of CWA projects. The following is a partial list of public works on which his firm worked:
- Alms Park, Cincinnati, Ohio
- Ault Park, Cincinnati, Ohio
- Baldwin Filtration Plant Reservoir, Cleveland, Ohio
- Boys Town, Nebraska
- Cumberland Park, Cleveland Heights, Ohio
- Mt. Echo Park, Cincinnati, Ohio
- Forest [Hill Park (Ohio)|Forest Hill Park], Cleveland Heights and East Cleveland, Ohio
- Marine Hospitals, Cleveland, Ohio, Baltimore, Maryland, and New Orleans, Louisiana
- The Pentagon, Virginia
Taylor died January 8, 1951, in Cleveland, Ohio. He was buried at Riverside Cemetery in Cleveland.