Herman Lee Meader
Herman Lee Meader was an American architect and author.
Life and career
Meader was born in New Orleans, the son of Herman Frederick Louis Meader and Susanne Lee Meader. He was educated at Soule Business College and Tulane, Cornell and Harvard Universities, and received a Bachelor of Science from Harvard in 1898. He worked as an architect in New York, first in the office of Ernest Flagg until 1905, and then Raymond Almirall afterwards for about four years. Both Flagg and Almirall were known for terra cotta and color effects in their architecture.Meader married Queenie Ethel Carr in New York on March 17, 1909. After travelling abroad, he returned to New York in 1913 to start his own practice, receiving commissions to design several prominent buildings in Manhattan, both commercial and residential. He also did much work for the Astor estate, including the Waldorf Hotel at 8 West 33rd Street, then the heart of the fashionable shopping district. Meader lived in the Waldorf Hotel penthouse, where he created a surrounding rooftop Italian garden. There he held elaborate parties which attracted musicians, artists, writers, prizefighters, chess players and others - at one, Meader staged a fight between a black snake and a king snake.
Meader was a member of the Harvard Club, the Strollers Club, the Astor Masonic Lodge, the National Geographic Society and the New York Southern Society. He was also a yachtsman.
Architecture
Meader was intensely interested in Mayan and Aztec architecture and made regular expeditions to Chichén Itzá in the Yucatán and other sites. Among the buildings he designed are:- 1907: - Patton House in Greenville, South Carolina, for his sister Bertha E. Meader and her husband, Avery Patton. The American foursquare is platform framed.
- 1913: - 154-160 West 14th Street, a loft building on the corner of Seventh Avenue; designated a List of [New York City Landmarks|New York City landmark] on June 28, 2011.
- 1914: - The Cliff Dwelling apartment building at 243 Riverside Drive at 96th Street
- 1915: - 37 West 37th Street between the Avenue of the Americas and Seventh Avenue
- 1915: - 10 East 39th Street
- 1915-1916: - B.W. Mayer Building at 130 East 25th Street at Lexington Avenue. Originally an office building, it is currently the Friends House of Rosehill.
- 1917: - 509 Fifth Avenue
- 1917: Greenwich Village Theatre in Sheridan Square at 4th Street and Seventh Avenue; an intimate theatre that seated 450, no longer extant.