Philip Hooker
Philip Hooker was an American architect from Albany, New York, known for Hyde Hall, the facade of the Hamilton College Chapel, The Albany Academy, Albany City Hall, and the original New York State Capitol building.
Early life
Hooker was born on October 28, 1766, to Samuel Hooker and Rachel Hinds, the eldest of at least six children. His father is said to have brought his family to live in Albany in 1772 from Massachusetts.Career
In the New York City directories of 1792 and 1793, he was listed as a "house carpenter" where he likely learned architecture from European architects and engineers who were working in the City. Hooker assembled a library during this period and when his parents and the rest of his family moved to Utica in 1797, he stayed behind in Albany.He became a prominent member of Albany serving as alderman assessor, city architect, city superintendent, and city surveyor. During his career, he designed Hyde Hall, the facade of the Hamilton College Chapel, The Albany Academy, Albany City Hall, and the original New York State Capitol building. He is believed to have designed the Gen. John G. Weaver House at Utica, New York. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989.
Notable buildings
An existing National Register of Historic Places building that he designed, with John H. Lothrop, is:- Hamilton College Chapel on the Hamilton College campus.
- Hyde Hall, at Otsego Lake
- Roscoe Conkling House, in Utica, New York
- New York State Arsenal
- St. Peter's Episcopal Church
- New York State Bank
- Bank of Albany
- Mechanics and Farmers Bank
- Aiken House, Rensselaer, New York
- St. Mary's Roman Catholic Church
- Albany City Hall
Private residences
He was also a politician and a member of the "Albany Regency."
Monographs
Two monographs have been written on Hooker's work:- Edward W. Root. Philip Hooker: A Contribution to the Study of the Renaissance in America, 1929.
- Douglas G. Bucher and Walter Richard Wheeler. A Neat Plain Modern Stile: Philip Hooker and His Contemporaries, 1796-1836, 1993.
Personal life
Neither of his marriages produced children, therefore his estate was left to his widow upon his death on January 31, 1836. His will indicated that "Sarah, who has by her industry and frugality assisted me in an essential manner to acquire what I possess, the whole of my estate of every kind and description whatsoever and wheresoever the same may be, which I may own, be in possession of or be entitled to at the time of my decease; to be and remain her sole property so long as she remains a widow..."
He was originally buried in the State Street Burial Grounds in Albany; his body was reinterred in the 1860s at the Albany Rural Cemetery, in lot 12, section 49, in Menands, New York.