Robert Swain Peabody
Robert Swain Peabody was a prominent Boston architect who was the cofounder of the firm Peabody & Stearns.
Early life
Peabody was born in New Bedford, Massachusetts, on February 20, 1845. He was a son of Ephraim Peabody and Mary Jane Peabody. His older sister, Ellen Derby Peabody, was the wife of Charles William Eliot, the 21st President of Harvard University. Another sister, Anna Huidekoper Peabody, was the wife of Henry Whitney Bellows, president of the United States Sanitary Commission. His younger brother was the Rev. Francis Greenwood Peabody, Dean of the Harvard Divinity School.He attended Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris.
He was in 1913 a member of Harvard's Board of Overseers.
Career
He was an early supporter of the Colonial Revival style and had an affection for English styles and the Picturesque Movement and Beaux-Arts architecture. He was elected an Associate of the American Institute of Architects in 1874 and a Fellow in 1889. He was president of the Institute from 1900 to 1901. He was also a member of the Society of Beaux-Arts Architects and the Boston Architectural Club. He was chairman of the Boston Park Commission.Notable works
- Boston and Providence Railroad Station
- The Brunswick Hotel and annex
- The Boston Post Building
- The New York Mutual Life Insurance Building
- The American Unitarian Association Building
- The Assumption Church in Brookline
- The Exchange Building
- The Stock Exchange Building
- Christ Church in Waltham
- Custom House Tower.
Personal life
On June 8, 1871, Peabody married Annie Putnam, the daughter of John Phelps Putnam, a Boston Aldermen, and Harriette Putnam. Together, the couple had five children:- Ellen Peabody, who died in childhood.
- Arthur John Peabody, who died in infancy.
- Katherine Putnam Peabody.
- Mary Derby Peabody, who married Henry Russell Scott in 1910.
- Robert Ephraim Peabody.
Peabody died on September 23, 1917, aged 72, in Marblehead, Massachusetts.