George Perkins Bissell Alderman was born September 20, 1862, to Eugene Clydon and Ellen Eliza (née Holmes) Alderman. His full name, including the two middle initials he displayed throughout his life, derived from his father's
Civil War service. Wounded in the
Battle of Chancellorsville, Eugene Alderman was given up for dead until Captain
George Perkins Bissell of the
25th Connecticut Infantry noticed his movement. Picking up the soldier and strapping him to his horse, he rode him to the nearest hospital, and in a feeling of indebtedness, the elder Alderman chose to name his first-born son after the man who saved him. As a young child he worked on the family farm and as a carpenter, and also attended school in East Granby, CT. The family moved to
Plainville, Connecticut, where he attended school for a year, then worked at country store. In 1879 his family moved to
Holyoke, Massachusetts, where he worked with his father as a carpenter. Eventually Alderman realized that he really desired to be an architect and to that end he entered the office of
James A. Clough, architect, of Holyoke, where he worked for 5 years. He then moved to
Chicago where he found work in the offices of
Cass Chapman, a prominent architect. ==Architectural practice==