James W. McLaughlin | |
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Born | November 1, 1834 Sewickley, Pennsylvania |
Died | 1923 (aged 88–89) |
Nationality | United States |
Occupation | Architect |
Buildings |
John Uri Lloyd House Sir Alfred T. Goshorn House Cincinnati Zoological Gardens Cincinnati Public Library Mabley & Carew |
James W. McLaughlin (1834–1923) was a Cincinnati, Ohio architect. He studied to be an architect working under famed James Keys Wilson. He fought in the American Civil War serving in the Union Army. During the late 19th century, he became a popular builder in Cincinnati. In 1870 he helped organize the Cincinnati chapter of the American Institute of Architects; that year, he was selected as a Fellow of the AIA, serving on its board.
James W. McLaughlin was born on November 1, 1834, the second son of William and Mary McLaughlin. His family wsas "largely" Scots-Irish and his father William was an early Cincinnati merchant who had moved in 1818 to the developing city from Sewickley, Pennsylvania outside Pittsburgh. His younger sister Mary Louise McLaughlin became a ceramic artist.
When the American Civil War broke out, McLaughlin left his architectural practice to serve in the Union Army. During the war he became a lieutenant in the infantry body guard of General John C Fremont. After the war he published "a book illustrated with his vivid vignettes of army life based on his experiences with General Fremont in California."
At the age of fifteen McLaughlin entered the tutelage of James Keys Wilson. In 1855, the first year of his independent practice, he built the dry goods store on West Fourth Street. Architect Samuel Hannaford was his rival in the city. McLaughlin's design for the Cincinnati Zoological Gardens (1874–1875) "produced the earliest completed structures specifically for that purpose in the United States, and displayed his sense of humor and flexibility in housing specimens in buildings inspired by their geographical and ethnically associated origins."