Thomas Podmore
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Thomas Podmore (1859–1948) was an architect from Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. In addition to his lengthy architectural career as an architect, Podmore is noteworthy for his experiments with the fabrication of concrete products.


Early life

Thomas Podmore was born at Cherrington, Shropshire, England in 1859, the son of a farmer, and was baptized at the nearby village of Tibberton on March 23, 1859. In 1881, he was living on St. Ann Street in Stoke-upon-Trent, Staffordshire, employed as an "architect's assistant."


Career in America

Podmore emigrated to the United States about 1883, worked for a few years in New York, then moved to Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. There, in 1886, he joined forces with
Albert Hamilton Kipp Albert Hamilton Kipp (November 14, 1850 – May 22, 1906) was an architect from Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. Career Albert Hamilton Kipp was born in New York City on November 14, 1850, but grew up at Mount Pleasant, New York where his step-father, ...
(1850–1906) to form the architecture firm Kipp & Podmore. The firm dissolved by mutual consent at the end of 1891. In 1903, Podmore received a patent for a "machine for molding concrete blocks," and in 1907 founded the Podmore Concrete Co., for the manufacture of concrete blocks by a method of Podmore's own devising. Podmore retired in 1928 after the completion of his last building, Sprague Memorial Hall, in Kingston, Pennsylvania. He died in 1948.


Principal Architectural Works

* Nelson Memorial Hall, Wyoming Seminary, Kingston, Pennsylvania, built in 1887 — as Kipp & Podmore. * Methodist Episcopal Church, Dallas, Pennsylvania, completed in 1889 — as Kipp & Podmore. * Armory, Gaylord Avenue, Plymouth, Pennsylvania, built in 1891 — as Kipp & Podmore. * State Street School, Nanticoke, Pennsylvania, built in 1891 — as Kipp & Podmore. * St. Peter's Episcopal Church, Plymouth, Pennsylvania, built in 1893. * Wyoming Valley Country Club, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, built 1896. * W. G. Eno Residence, Ross Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, built 1899. * J. B. Woodward Residence, Northampton Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, built 1899. * Town Hall, Edwardsville, Pennsylvania, built 1899. * Wyoming Valley Country Club Enlargement, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, built 1903. * Grace English Lutheran Church, 500 S. Franklin St, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, dedicated May 1911. * R. R. M. Carpenter Residence, Wilmington Delaware, built in 1911. * Wilkes-Barre Contagious Hospital, East Division Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, completed 1918. *
Walter S. Carpenter Jr. Walter Samuel Carpenter Jr. (January 8, 1888 – February 2, 1976) was an American corporate executive from Wilmington, Delaware, who oversaw the DuPont company's involvement in the Manhattan Project to produce an atomic bomb for use during Wo ...
Residence, Wilmington, Delaware, completed in 1918. * Nesbitt Memorial Athletic Field, Wyoming Seminary, Kingston, Pennsylvania, dedicated October 1922. * Sprague Hall, Wyoming Seminary, Kingston, Pennsylvania, completed in 1928.''The Wilkes-Barre Record'', March 21, 1928, page 17.


Gallery

File:Nelson Memorial.jpg, Nelson Memorial Hall, Wyoming Seminary, Kingston, Pennsylvania, completed 1887. File:Wyoming Seminary tower LuzCo PA.JPG, Nelson Memorial, Wyoming Seminary, Kingston, Pennsylvania, photographed in 2013. File:M. E. Church Dallas PA.jpg, Methodist Episcopal Church, Dallas, Pennsylvania, completed 1889. File:Plymouth_PA_Armory_1898.jpg, Armory, Gaylord Avenue, Plymouth, Pennsylvania, completed 1891. File:St. Peter's Church Plymouth PA.jpg, St. Peter's Episcopal Church, Plymouth, Pennsylvania, completed 1893. File:Wilkes-Barre Country Club 1896.jpg, Wyoming Valley Country Club, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, built 1896. File:Edwardsville PA Town Hall.JPG, Town Hall, Edwardsville, Pennsylvania, completed 1899. File:Wilkes-Barre Country Club 1903.jpg, Wyoming Valley Country Club Enlargement, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, completed 1903. File:Sprague Memorial Kingston PA.jpg, Sprague Memorial, Wyoming Seminary, Kingston, Pennsylvania, completed 1928.


See also

* Architecture of Plymouth, Pennsylvania


References


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Podmore, Thomas Architects from Pennsylvania 19th-century American architects 20th-century American architects American neoclassical architects