Edward W. Donn Jr.
Edward Wilton Donn Jr. (1868–1953) was a Washington, D.C.-based American architect of the early 20th century.
Donn was most famous for his association with Waddy Wood as part of the architectural firm of Wood, Donn & Deming (see
Career
Edward W. Donn Jr.'s father and namesake was an architect and Donn Jr. followed his career. As a young architect he worked with Theodore Fredrich Laist and Waddy Butler Wood, eventually forming a firm with Wood and William I. Deming.
After Wood, Donn & Deming dissolved, Donn went on his own. In the late 1920s, over the objections of Frederick Law Olmsted, a decision was made to build a replica of the house in which George Washington was born on the excavated foundation of the destroyed home. Donn worked on a design based on the rectangular foundation discovered by George Washington Parke Custis in June 1815, and on descriptions of the house as a "house of ten or twelve rooms, of two stories in height, with an ell, and probably, not much dissimilar or smaller than Gunston Hall....."
In 1927 the U.S. Fine Arts Commission and the Secretary of War approved a design based on Donn's interpretation and the Memorial House was finished in time for George Washington's 200th birthday in 1932.
The Memorial House foundation was later revealed to be the foundation of a large rectangular out building - perhaps a barn. By 1934 the
As part of the memorial tributes on the occasion of the 200th anniversary of Washington's birth, Donn oversaw the stonework on the columns in Westmoreland Circle, working with stonecutter Walter Phelps.[3]
Works
- George Washington Memorial House, George Washington Birthplace National Monument, VA; 1927
- "Kenmore" House, George Washington's sister,Betty Washington Lewis, Fredericksburg, VA
- Falmouth log cabin restoration, the corner of Butler Road and Carter Street, Stafford County, VA; 1930, known locally as Hobby School, built on another location in 1880s
- Garden Club of America Entrance Markers, Washington, D.C.; 1932
- Senator Francis NewlandsStatue, Chevy Chase Circle, Washington, D.C.; 1933
- U.S. Powder Factory and Naval Proving Grounds, Indian Head, Maryland
References
- Fauquier Times. Retrieved December 4, 2019.
- ISBN 978-0-8203-4272-6.
- ^ Kelly, John (May 5, 2018). "In 1932, the Garden Club of America thought D.C. needed fancier entryways". The Washington Post. Retrieved December 4, 2019.