John Kellum

Kellum's A. T. Stewart residence, 34th Street and Fifth Avenue. John Kellum (1809–1871) was an American architect in practice in New York City.

Kellum, born in Hempstead, Long Island, was trained as a carpenter; he was largely self-taught in architecture, and was taken into partnership in 1846 by the well-established New York architect Gamaliel King. King was engaged in constructing Brooklyn City Hall, and Kellum, as junior partner, was his on-site supervisor. Together they established a reputation for constructing many of the new cast-iron commercial buildings that changed the aspect of New York. They remained in partnership until 1859, when Kellum left to open a practice in partnership with his son.

Kellum received his first big independent commission as the architect to Alexander T. Stewart, the department store magnate, designing the A.T. Stewart store at Broadway and 10th Street (1859–62, demolished), which occupied the entire blockfront He designed Stewart's marble mansion on the northeast corner of Fifth Avenue and 34th Street, that was the first of Fifth Avenue's marble palazzos.

Kellum designed and built for Stewart the Working Women's Hotel (1869–75, demolished), on Park Avenue between 32nd and 33rd Streets. In addition to his work on Stewart's projects, Kellum designed a number of commercial structures during the 1860s: the Ball, Black & Company building, 565-67 Broadway (1858–60, standing); the cast-iron building at 55 White Street (1861, standing); Mutual Life Insurance Building, 140-46 Broadway (1863–65; demolished); the cast-iron Fulton Ferry Terminal (1863, demolished); the former New York Stock Exchange, Broad Street (1865, demolished); the New York Herald Building, Broadway (1865–67, demolished); the James McCreery & Company Building, 801 Broadway (1868, standing) and the Tiffany & Company Building, 15 Union Square West (1870)

At the time of his death Kellum was occupied in an even grander project for Stewart, laying out Garden City, Long Island on the tract in Hempstead township that Stewart had bought. It was one of the first American "garden city" planned suburbs.

Kellum was also the primary architect of the New York County Courthouse (1861 onwards; completed with revised and elaborated interiors, 1881), on Chambers Street behind New York City Hall; it is known as the "Tweed Courthouse" after William Marcy "Boss" Tweed, who commissioned it and profited from kickbacks during its construction. Kellum's exterior is in the Italianate manner; immense cast-iron structural and decorative elements are to be seen in the public spaces of the rich interiors. Provided by Wikipedia
Showing 1 - 1 results of 1 for search 'John Kellum', query time: 0.02s Refine Results
  1. 1

    Biomarker-guided intervention to prevent acute kidney injury after major surgery (BigpAK-2 trial): study protocol for an international, prospective, randomised controlled multicent... by Joachim Gerss, Javier Ripollés-Melchor, Emmanuel Futier, Melanie Meersch, Carola Wempe, Detlef Kindgen-Milles, Alexander Zarbock, Markus W Hollmann, Sigismond Lasocki, Thomas Rimmele, Tim Rahmel, Michael Adamzik, Hartmuth Nowak, Ingeborg Welters, Brian Johnston, Ane Abad-motos, Alfredo Abad-gurumeta, Marc Moritz Berger, Davide Ricci, Maurizio Cecconi, Gudrun Kunst, Christian Stoppe, Christian Putensen, Marlies Ostermann, Sascha Ott, Brijesh Patel, Gabriele Baldini, Antoine Lamblin, Karen Williams, Elena Mancini, Christian Arndt, Hinnerk Wulf, Marc Irqsusi, Wim Vandenberghe, John Kellum, Raphael Weiss, Jackie Donovan, Lui G Forni, Giacomo Monti, Céline Monard, Markus A Weigand, Thorsten Brenner, Ulrich Jaschinski, Carlos Lopez, Maxime Leger, Emmanuel Rineau, Philipp Simon, María Gómez-Rojo, Lars Bergmann, Alicia Waite, Savino Spadaro, Alexander Wolf, Andrew Spence, Simon Dubler, Alexander PJ Vlaar, Patrick Schober, Ben C Creagh-Brown, Nandor Marczin, Emilio Maseda, Christian Strauss, Stefano Romagnoli, Christian Nusshag, Ulrich Gobel, Ángel Candela-Toha, Jon Silversides, Nuttha Lumlertgul, Khaschayar Saadat-Gilani, Vincent Legros, Timo Brandenburger, Thomas Dimski, Laura Huthmann, Claude Pelletier, Manon Schleß, Peter Rosenberger, Helene Häberle, Jan Gerrit Haaker, Matthias Gründel, Lucia Cattin, Laura Villarino Villa, Juan Victor Lorente, Christine Martin, Jan Larmann, Wolfgang Bauer, Giovanni Borghi, Benjamin O’Brien, Thilo von Groote, Antoine Guillaume Schneider, Silvia De Rosa, Diego Parise, Alice Bernard, Paula Fernández-Valdes-Bango, Irene Romero Bhathal, A Suarez-de-la-Rica, Gianluca Villa, Raquel García-Álvarez, Antonio Siniscalchi, Richard Ellerkmann, Florian Espeter, Christian Porschen, Mahan Sadjadi, Michael Storck, Tobias Brix, Dana Meschede, Wida Amini, Carina Stenger, Julius Freytag, Jens Brands, Matthias Unterberg, Britta Marko, Fabian Dusse, Wolfgang A Wetsch, Sandra E Stoll, Hendrik Drinhaus, Bernd W Böttiger, Onnen Mörer, Lars-Olav Harnisch, Roswitha Lubjuhn, Daniel Heise, Christian Bode, Andrea Sauer, Konrad Peukert, Lennart Wild, Philippe Kruse, Jan Menzenbach, Valbona Mirakaj, Sabine Hermann, Stefanie Decker, Mona Jung-König, Tobias Hölle, Sarah Dehne, Jörg Reutershan, Thomas Prüfer, Stefan Pielmeier, Indra Wimmelmeier, Michaela Scholz, Andrea Paris, Isabel Christina Gallego Zapata, Holger Pohl, Nirmeen Fayed, Kai Dielmann, Evelyn Martin, Tilo Koch, Alexander Mück, Philipp Deetjen, Ngoc Bich Mehlmann, Peter M Spieth, Andreas Güldner, Axel Rand, Maximillian Ragaller, Martin Mirus, Rebecca Bockholt, Marc Herzog, Maren Kleine-Brüggeney, Ant Isabelle Cristiani, Marion Ohl, Monica Vieira Da Silva, Gilda Filipe de Castro Reblo, Matthias Hilty, Katharina Spanaus, Benedetta Mura, Eleonora Terreni, Francesco Magiotti, Lorenzo Turi, Cristiana Laici, Chiara Capozzi, Andrea Castelli, Massimiliano Greco, Antonio Messina, Gianluca Castellani, Romina Aceto, Vinicio Danzi, Alessandro Rigobello, Massimo De Cal, Monica Zanella, Gaetano Scaramuzzo, Riccardo La Rosa, Paolo Priani, Alberto Volta Carlo, Stefano Turi, Martina Baiardo Redaelli, Marilena Marmiere, Kittisak Weerapolchai, Shelley Lorah, Fabiola D’Amato, Aneta Bociek, Rosario Lim, Benjie Cendreda, Reynaldo Dela Cuesta, Eirini Kosifidou, Zoka Milan, Juliana Fernanda, Emma Clarey, Daveena Meeks, Nicholas J Lees, Marco Scaramuzzi, Orinta Kviatkovske, Adam Glass, Christine Turley, Charlotte Quinn, Syeda Haider, Adam Rossiter, Syed Nasser, Ned Gilbert-Kawai, Tatjana Besse-Hammer, Eric Hoste, Hannah Schaubroeck, Jan De Waele, Jenni Breel, Eline de Klerk, Harm-Jan de Grooth, Lothar Schwarte, Alexander Loer, Alicia Ruiz-Escobar, Diana Fernández-García, Nerea Gómez-Pérez, Pascual Crespo-Aliseda, Cristina Cerro-Zaballos, Cristina Fernández-Martín, Eduardo Martín-Montero, Alejandro Suarez de la Rica, Héctor Berges Gutiérrez, Maria del Pino Heredia Pérez, Maria de los Reyes Bellido Fernández, Liena Izquierdo López, Javier Valiente Lourtau, Ma Angeles Ferre Colomer, Ma Azucena Pajares Moncho, Maria Jesús Montero Hernández, Esther Pérez Sancho, Silvia Polo Matínez, Pedro Rivera Soria, Maider Puyada Jáuregui, Hugo Rivera Ramos, Marta Antelo Adrán, Ramón Adalia Bartolomé, Patricia Galán Menéndez, Laura Llinares Espin, Yuri Santiago Loaiza Aldean, Víctor MoralesAriza, Rosalía Navarro-Perez, Luis Santé-Serna, Pedro de la Calle-Elguezabal, Rubén Sánchez-Martín, Inés De Soto, Pau Vallhonrat Alcántara, Laura Perelló Cerdà, Gal·la Rouras Hurtado, Paula Rodriguez Nieto, John Narros Sicluna, Angel Molero Molinero, Juan Pablo Nocete, Elena Murcia Sánchez, Stanislas Abrard, Marie-Luce Parrouffe, Frank Bidar, Lucie Aupetitgendre, Ugo Schiff, Bertille Paquette, Gaëlle Sellier, Nathalie Borgnetta, Benjamin Brochet, Thierry Floch, Julien Coffinet, Marion Leclercq-Rouget

    Published 2023-03-01
    Get full text
    Article