William Appleton Potter
William Appleton Potter was an American architect who designed numerous buildings for Princeton University, as well as municipal offices and churches. He served as a Supervising Architect of the Treasury from 1874 to 1877.
Biography
Born in 1842 in Schenectady, New York, Potter grew up in Philadelphia, where he attended Episcopal Academy. He then returned to his birthplace to matriculate at Union College as a member of the Class of 1864. Potter was the son of Bishop Alonzo Potter and had eight brothers, including:- Clarkson Nott Potter, Democratic member of the House of Representatives after the Civil War
- Howard Potter Banker, Senior Partner in Brown Shipley
- Robert Brown Potter, United States General in the Civil War
- Henry Codman Potter, succeeded Horatio Potter as Bishop of New York in 1887
- Eliphalet Nott Potter, professor and president of Union College and Hobart College
- Potter's half-brother Edward Tuckerman Potter, architect who designed the Nott Memorial at Union College
Potter died February 19, 1909. Among his apprentices was the architect James Brown Lord.
Career
Chancellor Green Library for Princeton University was Potter's first major commission. In it, he took the High Victorian Gothic vocabulary and octagonal form used by his half-brother for the Nott Memorial at Union College, and elaborated it into a complex interplay of octagons of various sizes and shapes. For Princeton, retaining Potter represented a shift from dependence on Philadelphia architects to a New York practitioner. He would receive from the college an honorary Master of Arts degree in 1872, and go on to design several other buildings on campus.From 1874 to 1877, Potter served as supervising architect of the United States Treasury. Under his supervision, designs were produced for customhouses, courthouses, and post offices in Kentucky, Indiana, Massachusetts, Georgia, and Tennessee.
Concurrent with his years at the U.S. Treasury, Potter formed a partnership with Robert Henderson Robertson. From 1875 to 1881, along with major public projects, the firm produced summer vacation cottages in Newport, Rhode Island, and the Jersey Shore, as well as the Adam-Derby House at Oyster Bay, New York.
Commissions
- South Congregational Church, Springfield, Massachusetts
- Chancellor Green Library, Princeton University
- John C. Green School of Science, Princeton
- Berkshire Athenaeum, Pittsfield, Massachusetts
- Belleville Avenue Congregational Church, Newark, New Jersey
- Witherspoon Hall, Princeton
- Stuart Hall at Princeton Theological Seminary
- The University Hotel, Princeton
- Charles H. Baldwin House, Newport, Rhode Island
- St. James Protestant Episcopal Chapel; known as the Church of the Presidents, Elberon, New Jersey
- , Shelburne, Vermont
- Christ Church, Poughkeepsie, New York
- St. Martin's Church, 230 Lenox Avenue
- St. Mary's-in-Tuxedo Episcopal Church, Tuxedo Park, New York
- St. Agnes Chapel, New York City
- Alexander Hall, Princeton
- , 236 West 86th Street
- First Reformed Dutch church, Somerville, New Jersey
- East Pyne Building, Princeton
- Church of the Divine Paternity (Fourth Universalist Society in the City of New York), 160 Central Park West
- Advent Lutheran Church (New York City)
- Townhouse, 33 East 67th Street, New York, New York
- St. John's Episcopal Church, Stamford, Connecticut
- Massena House, Barrytown, New York