Shepard S. Woodcock
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Shepard S. Woodcock (1824–1910)"Shepard S. Woodcock," ''Massachusetts Charitable Mechanic Association: Proceedings of the One Hundred and Sixteenth Annual Meeting, January 18, 1911, Including Biographical Sketches of Members Deceased During the Year 1910'' (Boston: C. M. Barrows Company, 1911): 46-47. was an American architect practicing in Boston, Massachusetts during the second half of the nineteenth century.


Early life and training

Shepard S. Woodcock was born on October 6, 1824, in Sidney, Maine. At the age of seventeen he went to Stow, Massachusetts to serve as an apprentice to a carpenter. After his apprenticeship ended, he moved to Boston, where he carried on the carpentry trade for more than ten years. During this period he studied architecture on his own time.


Professional career

In 1854, Woodcock retired from the carpenter's trade and opened an architect's office in Boston."S. S. Woodcock," ''Boston and Bostonians'' (New York: American Publishing and Engraving Company, 1894): 195. In 1857 he was joined by
George F. Meacham George Frederick Meacham (July 1, 1831 - December 4, 1917) was an architect in the Boston, Massachusetts, area in the 19th century. He is notable for designing Boston's Public Garden, the Massachusetts Bicycle Club, and churches, homes, and mo ...
,''Boston Directory for the Year 1857'' (Boston: George Adams, 1857) and they had formed a partnership by 1858. The firm of Woodcock & Meacham was dissolved in 1864, when Meacham opened his own office. Woodcock practiced independently for the remainder of his career. By 1888 his reputation was such that he was called as an expert witness in an inquiry into the construction of the High Service Pumping Station at Chestnut Hill."Report of Committee on an Investigation of the Freestone Work at the Chestnut-Hill Pumping Station," ''Documents of the City of Boston for the Year 1888'', vol. 3 (Boston: Rockwell & Churchill, 1889) At this time he estimated that he had designed at least 140 churches. Indeed, the bulk of his identifiable projects are churches for Protestant denominations, though he was also responsible for town halls, libraries, schools, office and mercantile buildings, banks, private residences and monuments. Woodcock was admitted to the Massachusetts Charitable Mechanic Association in 1857, and was an active member of the organization until his death. He was elected to fellowship in the Boston Society of Architects in 1867, which became affiliated with the American Institute of Architects in 1870. He resigned from the organization in 1877.H. Langford Warren, "Annual Report of the Boston Chamber A. I. A.," ''Proceedings of the Twenty-Seventh Annual Convention of the American Institute of Architects'', ed. Alfred Stone (Chicago: Inland Architect Press, 1893): 49-57.


Personal life

Woodcock was first married to Adeline Ryder, who died in 1850 at the age of 21. In the following year he married Julia Ann Swett, born in 1828 in Wales, Maine. They had at least seven children together, and she died in 1885. At his death he was survived by three daughters. During the early phase of his career, Woodcock was a resident of
Chelsea, Massachusetts Chelsea is a city in Suffolk County, Massachusetts, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, United States, directly across the Mystic River from the city of Boston. As of the 2020 census, Chelsea had a population of 40,787. With a total area of just 2.46 s ...
. In the early 1860s he relocated to Somerville,''Somerville, Past and Present: An Illustrated Historical Souvenir,'' ed. Edward A. Samuels and Henry H. Kimball (Boston: Samuels and Kimball, 1897) where he remained until his death. In addition to his professional affiliations, Woodcock was also a member of several Masonic and social organizations.


Legacy

In addition to Meacham, other notable architects who worked in Woodcock's office include Alfred Stone (1855),Jean A. Follett, "The Hotel Pelham: A New Building Type for America," ''American Art Journal'' 15, no. 4 (Autumn 1983): 58-73.
John C. Cochrane John Crombie Cochrane (1835–1887) was a prominent architect in the 19th century practicing in Chicago, Illinois. He formed Cochrane and Garnsey with George O. Garnsey. He began work in Davenport, Iowa in 1856, moving to St. Louis in 1858 aft ...
(1862-1863) and Alberto F. Haynes (1871-1877 and 1883–1884). At least eight of his works are individually listed on the United States National Register of Historic Places, and others contribute to listed historic districts.


Architectural works


See also

* O.P. Woodcock


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Woodcock, Shepard S. Architects from Maine Architects from Boston 1824 births 1910 deaths