Potter & Robertson (1875-1881) During his New York partnership with
William Appleton Potter the firm designed many summer vacation cottages in
Newport, Rhode Island, and the
Jersey Shore, beginning with the
Bryce Gray residence in
Long Branch, New Jersey (completed c. 1877; since demolished). •
Stuart Hall (1875–77)
Princeton Theological Seminary. •
Witherspoon Hall (1875–77)
Princeton University. •
Brown University Library (1875)
Providence, Rhode Island. •
University Hotel (1875–77; demolished)
Princeton, New Jersey. •
Grace Church Chapel (completed 1876; demolished)East 14th Street; the third chapel for Grace Church, and the second on this site, replacing one that burned down in 1872. •
Alpha Kappa Lodge (1876)
Williams College,
Williamstown, Massachusetts. • '''St. Augustine's Episcopal Church and Mission House''' (1876–77)107 East Houston Street. •
Commodore Charles H. Baldwin House (1877–78)
Newport, Rhode Island; a multi-gabled essay in the
Queen Anne style showing the influence of
Norman Shaw, and
H. H. Richardson's Newport residence for William Watts Sherman (1874–76). •
Christ Episcopal Church (1878)Oyster Bay, Long Island; altered by
Delano & Aldrich in 1925, who encased the domestic-looking church in stone. •
St. James Protestant Episcopal Chapel, known as the
Church of the Presidents (1879)
Long Branch, New Jersey.
Solo career (1881-1902) Robertson's
Park Row Building (completed 1899) at 15 Park Row, built for
August Belmont, was, for a brief period, the world's tallest office building. Among his many other commissions in New York City and elsewhere: •
St. James Episcopal Church (completed 1881)East 71st Street & Madison Avenue. Altered by
Ralph Adams Cram and others. The tower collapsed and was replaced by a spire in 1950. •
Church of the Holy Spirit (1881–83; demolished 1905)775 Madison Avenue. •
Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church (1881–84; demolished)East 60th Street & Madison Avenue. •
23 East 67th Street (1882–83)Redesigned in the neo-Federal style and an additional storey added by Sterner and Wolfe in 1919. •
Mott Haven (138th Street) Railroad Station (1885–86; demolished). •
YWCA Building (1885–87)7-11 East 15th Street. Now used by the
Soka Gakkai International-USA Cultural Center, the Buddhist Association for Peace, Culture and Education. •
Drew Theological Seminary Library (completed 1886)
Madison, New Jersey. Published in
The American Architect and Building News 20 March 1886. •
"Sunnymede", Dr. Francis H. Markoe house (1886–87)
Southampton, Long Island. Dr Markoe was Robertson's brother-in-law. •
Knox Presbyterian Church (completed 1887)252
East 72nd Street, now known as
St. John the Martyr Roman Catholic Church (Manhattan). •
Bushnell House (1887–88)838 East High Street,
Springfield, Ohio. Built for
Asa Bushnell and his wife Ellen, and now a funeral home, the Bushnell House exemplifies Robertson's
Richardsonian Romanesque style. It is part of Springfield's
East High Street Historic District, which is listed on the
National Register of Historic Places. •
"Wyndcote", Robertson's residence (1887–88)Southampton, Long Island. •
Christ Church (1887–89)
Poughkeepsie, New York. •
"Hammersmith Farm" (1887–89)
Newport, Rhode Island, for John W. Auchincloss. •
Jan Hus Bohemian Brethren Church (1888)347
East 74th Street. •
Rutgers Presbyterian Church Chapel (1888)West 73rd Street; named after the same man, Col. Henry Rutgers, as
Rutgers University. •
Margaret Louisa Home (1889–91)14-16 East 16th Street. • '''St. Luke's Episcopal Church''' (1889–90)73 South Fullerton Avenue,
Montclair, New Jersey. •
13 East 71st Street (1891–92)town house. • '''St Luke's Church''' (completed 1892)Convent Avenue,
Hamilton Heights (Manhattan). Within the Hamilton Heights Historic District. •
Pequot Library (1893)
Southport, Connecticut. Meticulously restored in 2008. •
American Tract Society Building (1894–95)150 Nassau Street. Combining elements of
Renaissance Revival and
Romanesque Revival styles, this is one of the earliest steel-framed structures. It is clad in gray
Westerly granite, gray
Roman brick and tan
architectural terracotta. A
New York City landmark. •
Engine Company 55 Firehouse,
Fire Department of New York (completed 1895)363 Broome Street, Manhattan. The building is a
New York City landmark. •
New York Savings Bank (1896–97)Eighth Avenue at West 14th Street (northwest corner). The grand Roman banking hall was occupied for several years by a carpet merchant, and then by the upscale grocer, Balducci's (2005-2009). It and its sibling across 14th Street serve as New York's
gemelli churches. A
New York City landmark. •
Academy of Medicine (completed 1889; demolished)17 West 43rd Street. •
Rutgers Riverside Presbyterian Church (1889–90; demolished)Broadway and West 73rd Street. The church was replaced by the current structure. •
Lincoln Building (1889–90)1-3
Union Square West. A
New York City landmark. •
MacIntyre Building (1890–92)874 Broadway, lofts, the
AIA Guide to New York City (4th ed.) calls refers to the building's style as "unspeakable eclectic" •
United Charities Building (1891–1892)East 22nd Street and Park Avenue South, designed with Rowe & Baker. •
Mohawk Building (1891–92)160 Fifth Avenue. •
Mendelssohn Hall (1891–92)West 40th Street. The hall was designed for the
Mendelssohn Glee Club.*...First Congregational Church of St. Albans, 27 Church St., St. Albans, Vermont 1892-1894 completed 1894. •
Church of St Paul and Parish House (1895–97)540 West End Avenue at West 86th Street. Tuscan Renaissance in tan brick and limestone, with an octagonal campanile at the corner. The
AIA Guide to New York City (4th ed.) calls this church, with its octagonal corner tower, "a startling work." It's now the Church of St. Paul and St. Andrew and is shared with Congregation B'nai Jeshurun. A
New York City landmark. •
First Reformed Dutch Church (1896–1897)
Somerville, New Jersey. •
Fourth Universalist Society in the City of New York (1898)Central Park West and 76th Street. Mosaic in interior. •
Moses Allen and Alice Dunning Starr House (1897–99)5 West 54th Street; a
New York City landmark. •
Bedford Park Presbyterian Church (1900)Bedford Park Boulevard, the Bronx. •
Lying-in Hospital (1902)305 Second Avenue between East 17th and 18th Streets, now "Rutherford Place", apartments and offices. •
Corn Exchange Bank Building •
Shelburne FarmsShelburne, Vermont. Shelburne House, the Breeding Barn, the Farm Barn and the Coach Barn make up Robertson's most ambitious farm complex. Robertson designed the adjacent
Shelburne Railroad Station (1890). •
Camp Santanoni Main Camp ComplexNewcomb, New York; for Robert C. Pruyn of Albany, a Yale classmate of Robertson's. The first
Adirondack camp to be comprehensively designed as a unit by a professional architect.
Robertson & Potter (1902-1919) In 1902, Robertson took on as partner Robert Burnside Potter (1869-1934), nephew of William Potter. They designed a cottage, perhaps several, for Regis H. Post in
Bayside, Long Island. •
House of Relief Ambulance Annex (1907–08)9 Jay Street, was attached by an enclosed overhead bridge to the House of Relief, New York Hospital across Staple Street; within the Tribeca Historic District. ==References==