Haralson Bleckley - Place of Birth, Date of Birth, Age, Wiki, Facts, Net Worth, Birthday, Biography and Family

Haralson Bleckley, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Family, Facts, Age, Net Worth, Biography and More in FamedBorn.com


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Jan 31, 1870 Died on 05 Dec 1933 (aged 63)

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About Haralson Bleckley

  • Haralson Bleckley (January 31, 1870 - December 5, 1933) was an American architect who designed many buildings in his hometown of Atlanta, Georgia.
  • Several of his works are listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP).He designed the Bona Allen Mansion, built in 1911-12 in Buford, Georgia: The Bona Alien House is significant in architecture and commercial history.
  • Architecturally, the house is significant as an outstanding example of an Italian Villa Style home in Georgia and as a work of the renowned Atlanta architect Haralson Bleckley.
  • Important stylistic elements of the house include the use of cream or tan colored brick (also characteristic of many of Bleckley's other works), red tile for the roof that is reminiscent of Italian villas, the entrance foyer and open balcony that create a great hall with large fireplace, and classical details.
  • It is also significant for the large number of surviving outbuildings that were built with the house.
  • Very few homes of this era have surviving outbuildings and very few as intact as these.
  • As a work of Haralson Bleckley (1870-1933), the house is an even rarer commodity as few of his works have survived.
  • He is best known for his Bleckley Plaza Plan for downtown Atlanta, a cause he pursued from 1909 until his death.
  • He received some major public commissions, including that for the State Agricultural and Mechanical School System in 1904-5.
  • His best known house to date is "The Crescent" in Valdosta, which he designed in 1899 with Harry Nelson Tyler.
  • Thus the Bona Alien House stands as a major monument to the individual skills of Bleckley, who trained in Europe and was a major proponent of art and architecture in Atlanta during the period this house was built.
  • He was serving as president of Georgia's only chapter of the American Institute of Architects at the time this house was completed. Also:Haralson Bleckley, son of Logan Edwin Bleckley, the well-known Chief Justice of the Georgia Supreme Court, originated and sponsored the "Bleckley Plaza" plan, a grand concept in the City Beautiful tradition which proposed a series of public parks covering the railroad tracks in downtown Atlanta.
  • He also prepared a plan for his proposed Civic Center for Atlanta, whereby state, county, and municipal buildings would form a great civic center.
  • However, only the placement of City Hall followed his plan.
  • Bleckley designed many of Atlanta's public schools, hotels, churches, and the original Brookhaven Country Club.
  • The Tyree in Midtown is one of the few surviving apartment buildings he designed in Atlanta (photo 30).
  • The Tyree is individually listed in the National Register. And:Haralson Bleckley (1870-1933) is best known for his Utopian scheme known as the Bleckley Plan for redeveloping Atlanta's railroad gulch.
  • It was first presented in 1910.
  • He was a skilled craftsman, trained in the Beaux Arts tradition in Paris, whose surviving works are few but of high quality.
  • The Crescent, in Valdosta, Georgia, perhaps Georgia's finest Neo-Classical house, was one of his designs in conjunction with his then-partner, Harry N.
  • Tyler.
  • He designed many of Atlanta's public schools, theaters, hotels, churches (including Atlanta's first domed church), and the original Brookhaven Country Club.
  • He also had major commissions in Athens, Georgia with both the University of Georgia and the State Normal School as well as with downtown businesses.
  • The Tyree is one of the few surviving apartment buildings he is known to have designed in Atlanta.
  • Just before he designed this building he had been president of the local chapter of the American Institute of Architects in 1912.
  • During the same year he planned the Tyree, he designed a proposed art gallery for the city on behalf of the Atlanta Art Association that was never built. His office was in the Flatiron Building.He designed the University of Georgia Library Building built in 1904.Works include: Several works in Eleventh District A & M School-South Georgia College Historic District, Douglas, Georgia, NRHP-listed.
  • Including: Peterson Hall (1907, originally the Academic Building) Davis Hall (1907, a dormitory), and Powell Hall (1907, a dormitory) Baptist Church (1909), Ponce de Leon Avenue, Atlanta Fourth Ward School (1910) in Atlanta. Griffin Hotel (1910), included in Griffin Commercial Historic District, Griffin, GA (Bleckley,Haralson), NRHP-listed Haistens Hospital (c.1910), Griffin, Georgia Griffin City Hall One or more works in Third District A & M School-Georgia Southwestern College Historic District, 800 Wheatley St., Americus, GA (Bleckley, Haralson), NRHP-listed Tyree Building (1915-16), 679 Durant Pl., NE, Atlanta, GA (Bleckley,Haralson), NRHP-listed also included in the Midtown Historic District

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