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William (Will) Gabriel Tachau

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Louisville, Jefferson, KY, United States
Death: January 1969 (93)
Manhattan, New York City, New York County, New York, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Charles Gabriel Tachau and Franziska (Fannie) Tachau
Brother of Nora Naumburg; Emil Samuel Tachau; Lotta Naumburg; Olga Hirsch; Flora Tachau and 3 others

Occupation: Architect
Managed by: Randy Schoenberg
Last Updated:

About Will Tachau

Immigration USA https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YBC-GS1?i=3&cc=14...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_G._Tachau

William G. Tachau, AIA, (born April 1875) was an American architect active in early- to mid-twentieth-century New York City. With Lewis Pitcher, he was a partner in the architectural firm of Pitcher & Tachau from 1904 to 1919 when he established the firm of Tachau & Vought.[1] Both firms from 1918 onward specialized in mental hygiene hospitals.[2] The firm moved from 109 Lexington Avenue to 102 East 30th Street around 1923 and remained at that address and that name even after Vought left.[3]

Early life and education

Tachau was born in April 1875 in Louisville, Kentucky where he attended high school and later designed the Louisville Library. He earned a Ph.B. from Columbia University in 1896, and a Diplome Ecoles des Beaux Arts in 1903.[2] [edit]Practice

He worked as a draftsman from 1896 to 1897 in the architectural firm of Lamb and Rich, as a designer for the architectural firm of Herts & Tallant in 1898, 1903 and 1904, and was briefly chief of design for Albert Kelsey in 1903. He joined Lewis Pitcher around 1904 forming Pitcher and Tachau. Like many New York architectural firms active during the Great Depression, Tachau and Vought worked in “almost continuous employment on Federal, State or City work,” including on Mayor Fiorello H. La Gaurdia’s list of architects since its inception. He practiced under the license No. 3556 in New York and No. C-250 in New Jersey, and was a member of the Society Deplome par le Government Francais and the Beaux Arts Society. Upon's Vought's departure from the firm, Eliot Butler Willauer (1912–1972) became a principal in Tachau & Vought[2] [edit]Works as Picher & Tachau

Jewett House (1907, formerly North Residence from 1915, designed as the firm Pitcher and Tachau) of Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York built for $280,000.[2][4] Troop C Armory in Brooklyn, New York[1] The Kingsbridge Armory in the Bronx, New York[1] [edit]Works as Tachau & Vought

Louisville Library, Louisville, Kentucky for $300,000[2] Temple Israel, New York City for $287,700[2][4][5] Squadron C Armory (or Company C Armory), Brooklyn, New York built for $500,000[2] Central Islip Hospital in Central Islip, New York built for $900,000[2] 8th Regiment Armory, New York City, built for $1,500,000[2] Utica State Hospital in Utica, New York built for $600,000[2] Psychiatric Pavilion, Brooklyn, New York, built for $1,650,000[2] The “medieval-inspired drill shed” of the 369th Regiment Armory, 2360 Fifth Avenue (18-42 West 143rd Street and 17-44 West 142nd Street), New York City, a two-story fireproof drill shed for troops (1920–1924)[6] for $300,000.00 (filed in 1921)[1][3][7] Central Park brick band stand (1923) for $100,000.00[3] The U.S. Marine Hospital (Stapleton, Staten Island) (1933–36, with Kenneth Murchison and William H. Gompert),[8] built for $2,266,000[2] Freeport Post Office (designed with William Gropper in the Colonial Revival style), 132 Merrick Road, Freeport, New York (added 1989 to the National Register of Historic Places)[9] 4781-4789 Broadway (1948), a two-story brick library, built for $285,000.00[3] [edit]

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Will Tachau's Timeline

1875
April 1875
Louisville, Jefferson, KY, United States
1969
January 1969
Age 93
Manhattan, New York City, New York County, New York, United States