Albert Warren Kelsey Jr. (April 26, 1870 – May 6, 1950) was an American architect, who designed in a number of Revivalist styles.
Biography
He was born in 1870 in St. Louis, Missouri, the son of economist and writer A. Warren Kelsey and novelist Jeanette Garr Washburn.[1] His father had been a close friend of the artist Winslow Homer,[2] and his mother was the daughter of Wisconsin Governor Cadwallader C. Washburn. The family moved to the Chestnut Hill section of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where Albert Jr. grew up and went to school. He apprenticed with architects Theophilus P. Chandler Jr. and Cope and Stewardson, and participated in the drafting atelier of the T-Square Club of Philadelphia. He graduated from the University of Pennsylvania's Department of Architecture in 1895, and won the 1896 University of Pennsylvania Traveling Scholarship (now the Stewardson Traveling Scholarship).[3] He studied town planning abroad, and returned an ardent supporter of civic improvement, carrying its doctrines, as a lecturer, through the country. In 1899, he was elected the first president of the Architectural League of America, and devised the exhibit on municipal improvement for the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair. His firm employed the young architect Louis Magaziner in 1907.
Kelsey formed a partnership with French-born architect Paul Philippe Cret about 1908. The partnership was short-lived, and its only major commission was the Pan-American Union Building (now Organization of American States) in Washington, D.C.[4]
Kelsey worked on his own after 1909. Over a 16-year period he created a campus of Tudor Revival buildings for the Carson Valley School, just outside Philadelphia.[5]
Kelsey married Henrietta L. Allis, of New York. The couple lived at 8831 Crefeldt Street in the Chestnut Hill section of Philadelphia. They had a daughter, Charlotte.
References
^"Albert Kelsey," The Successful American, vol. 1, no. 1, (Press Biographical Company, 1899), p. 40.[1]