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| Architect George Pool Chappell with his first wife, Hester Louisa Candee Chappell | 
George Pool Chappell was born in 1857 in the then Bedford section of 
Brooklyn NY.  When I first moved to Bedford Stuyvesant it was George 
Chappell's 1888 First AMEZ Church ( Tompkins Avenue Congregational 
Church) on MacDonough Street and Tompkins Avenue  that caught my 
attention.  The campanile was Bedford Stuyvesant's own venetian tower I 
thought to myself. Tompkins Avenue Congregational Church AKA Dr. 
Meredith House was one of the largest protestant sanctuaries in the 
country.  I often wonder how such a young architect at the time got such
 a large commission. I think it has a bit has to do with Chappell living
 across the street from the church site at the time.  
About two years ago I got my own commission to do renovation work on a 
beautiful landmarked George P. Chappell house on Dean Street.  While surveying that
 house I began to respect this very smart Victorian architect.  I 
wanted to know more about him his works, what kind of man was he... The good news is that we know
 much of his Brooklyn works 
(look here) the bad news is we know nothing about this mystery man except he was very respected and a stand-up citizen of Brooklyn . 
According to Suzanne Spellen (aka Montrose Morris on brownstoner.com) 
Chappell appears in Brooklyn directories in 1878. We know nothing about 
his education or possible 
apprenticeships  or training. We do know that he was extremely talented,
 and prolific. Most of his work was done in what is now Crown Heights 
North, Bedford Stuyvesant,  and  Park Slope, along with a lesser amount 
of work in Clinton Hill and other neighborhoods. He is listed in the 
census as living in Bedford Stuyvesant, on Monroe Street, when he was 
23, with his mother and grandmother, and he is listed as a builder. 
Later in life, he moved to Crown Heights North, and lived on St. Marks 
Avenue, at least in the beginning of the 20th century. As more and more 
areas become landmarked, or at least researched, more Chappell buildings
 are being re-discovered and credited to him. Chappell should be name Mr
 Dean Street of Mr. Crown Heights.  Most of the ohh ahhh buildings in 
that neighborhood are done by Chappell.
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| Tompkins Avenue Congregational 
Church b.1888 G.P. Chappell Architect 
 | 
 I want to focus on the George P. Chappell buildings in the Proposed but
 not landmarked Bedford Historic District.  According to a tour I 
attended with Guru Andrew Dolkart, architect  George Chappell earliest buildings in 
this Bedford area are 76 and 78 Halsey built sometime before 1885. 
Chappell was one of the first architects to not use the typical Neo-Grec
 house designs in Bedford.  Chappell's 76 and 78 Halsey Street is done 
in the simple Romanesque Revival Style which added some spice to this 
area. 
|  | 
| 78 and 76 Halsey Street George Chappell Architect built around 1883 | 
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| Front elevation of 76 Halsey Street George Chappell Architect | 
|  | 
| 78 and 76 Halsey Street George Chappell Architect built around 1883 | 
In 1886 Chappell out did himself in Bedford with the house he designed 
at 194 Hancock Street for Louis Gibbins.  194 Hancock Street uses 
Renaissance-inspired forms and details, which tend to exhibit a more 
elegant handling of materials and ornament.   The current owners have 
done a great deal of work restore this house back to its original glory.
 
|  | 
| 194 Hancock Street b.1887 G.P. Chappell architect/ original owner Louis Gibbins | 
|  | 
| 194 Hancock Street b.1887 G.P. Chappell architect/ original owner Louis Gibbins | 
1887 was a busy year for Chappell in Bedford District with the building 
of nine house being designed and built. 60 Macon Street Done in a 
classic Chappell style using a large bay front done in brick with a boat
 cut brownstone base. Oriels on the side to give this place great light 
and garden views. 
|  | 
| 60 Macon Street b.1887 G.P. Chappell architect/ Built by Arnold Wagner | 
Chappell will be very surprise today to learn that many of 
his houses are now on the market for a million dollars here in Bedford, Crown Heights North and Park Slope.  This group at 271 - 279 Jefferson was built
 for developer Susanna and Walter Russell who built much of the 
Proposed Bedford District. We see from 
Prudential Douglas Elliman
 photos that Chappell's signature fret, woodwork and stain glass are 
still intact in 271 Jefferson.
|  | 
| 271 -279 B. 1887 G.P. Chappell Architect; S.E.C. Russell Builder/Developer | 
 | 
 | 
 | 
 The last group of Chappell 1887 homes in
 Bedford are probably his most famous but not because of the 
architecture but due to Spike Lee movie Crooklyn filmed at 7 Arlington 
Place.  1 - 7 Arlington Place are some of my favorite but somewhat 
simple homes done by Chappell.  The end  two houses, which are united by
 continuous sills and moldings, also share rusticated stone first floors
 and denticulated moldings. The two middle houses share similar 
brownstone facades with stone trim, identical cornices, and continuous 
moldings, all four houses remain well preserved.
|  | 
| 1 - 7 Arlington Pl /B. 1887 G.P. Chappell Architect; Horace Russell Builder/Developer | 
  
|  | 
| 1 - 7 Arlington Pl from Halsey Street G.P. Chappell Architect 1887 | 
|  | 
| George Pool Chappell with his second wife, Clare Chase Chappell, his 
daughter, Marjorie Halstead, and his 2 grandchildren, Hester and Berrian
 Halstead. | 
 Finally the Macon.  This is Chappell's largest residential building in 
the Bedford District. Chappell really took advantage of the curved 
intersection of Macon and Arlington Place.  This grand apartment was 
built sometime in the 1890s most likely after the World Columbian 
Exposition in Chicago in the classical style of the White City.  This 
building was built to compete with other high end flats such as the 
Alhambra and the Renaissance all within the same area.  George P. 
Chappell has many other buildings in Bedford Stuyvesant but I wanted to 
focus on the proposed landmarked buildings.  
|  | 
| 1890s The Macon George P. Chappell Architect | 
|  | 
| George Pool Chappell at work… | 
Chappell worked over fifty years building much of Bedford, Stuyvesant 
Heights, Crown Heights North, Clinton Hill and Park Slope. George Pool 
Chappell died in June 1933.
To learn more about George Pool Chappell please join us tomorrow for a 
MAS Crown Heights North Walking tour: http://mas.org/tours/
 
the house of looking beautiful specially i like the different color for painting...Bedford Vans
ReplyDeleteGeorge Pool Chappell was my great grandfather ... my father's maternal grandfather. My father's name was George Chappell Halstead, younger brother of Hester and Berrien shown in your picture.
ReplyDeleteMy understanding growing up was that `Grandaddy Chappell' was not educated as an architect. In those days, one could become an architect by apprenticing for a period of time, I believe.
However, I have a copy of what I think is a diploma from The University of the State of New York Education Department indicating that he ` has given satisfactory evidence that he has the qualifications required by law ... and is authorized to employ the title of Architect'. Oddly, it is dated Dec 13 1929! ... four years before his death and long after he had designed many buildings.
He did work in the Westampton, NY area as well, including an eighteenth century farmhouse for his daughter, my grandmother, Marjorie and he husband Kenneth Burt Halstead.
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