Benjamin Latrobe

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Note: This article is about the elder Benjamin Latrobe. For his son, see Benjamin Henry Latrobe, II

Benjamin Henry Latrobe (May 1, 1764 - September 3, 1820) was an architect best known for his design of the United States Capitol.

He was born in England at the Moravian community at Fulneck in Yorkshire and, at the age of 7, sent away to the Moravian School at Niesky in Silesia on the borders of Saxony and Poland. After a continental Grand Tour he returned to England in 1784 and entered apprenticeship to John Smeaton the engineer (of Eddystone Lighthouse fame), and later, the eminent architect C.R. Cockerell. In the early 1790s he entered private practice and Hammerwood Park (link below) near East Grinstead in Sussex was his first independent work in 1792. In 1793 Ashdown House was built nearby. Both houses still stand. In 1795 he emigrated to America where he soon achieved eminence as the first professional architect working in the country.

As an engineer, he was responsible for the water supply to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and, with his son (Benjamin Henry Latrobe, II), New Orleans, Louisiana, where he died of yellow fever. His many architectural triumphs include:

Image:Baltimorecathedral.jpg

Principally, he was responsible for setting public architecture in the United States in the Greek Revival style. He complained in jest that after building just the Philadelphia Waterworks and the Bank of Pennsylvania, the whole town copied him, and his influence on public architecture endures.

In 1814 Latrobe partnered with Robert Fulton in a steamship venture based at Pittsburgh.

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