James Brown Lord (1858-1902)

Architect of New York City & Fellow of the National Academy of Design

American architect, working in a Beaux-Arts idiom, with a practice in New York City. His Appellate Court House was his most prominent commission, noted at the time of his premature death, at the age of forty-three. Lord was born in New York, into a distinguished family, the son of James Couper Lord and grandson of Daniel Lord, a prominent lawyer in New York. His mother was a daughter of James Brown, founder of the firm that became Brown Brothers Harriman. He graduated from Princeton University in 1879 and apprenticed in the architectural office of William A. Potter. He was a member of the Tuxedo Club and designed many of the buildings at Tuxedo Park, New York. He married Mary Townsend Nicoll, of a distinguished New York family and was a member of the Metropolitan Club, the Union League, the Players Club, the Racquet Club and professionally of the American Institute of Architects and the National Academy of Design, where he was a Fellow. He is buried in Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn.

Parents (2)

James Couper Lord

of New York City & Morristown, New Jersey

1827-1869

Margaretta (Brown) Lord

Mrs Margaretta Hunter (Brown) Lord

1829-1898

Spouse (1)

Mary Townsend (Nicoll) Ryan

Mrs Mary Townsend (Nicoll) Lord, Cuyler, Ryan

1862-1937

Children (1)

James Couper Lord

Insurance Broker & Vice-President of Freeborn & Co., New York

1881-1939