Leopold Eidlitz

Leopold Eidlitz
Portrait in Architectural Record (1908)
Born(1823-03-10)March 10, 1823
Prague, Bohemia
DiedMarch 22, 1908(1908-03-22) (aged 85)
New York City
OccupationArchitect
Spouse
Harriet Amanda Lazelle Warner
(m. 1845)
ChildrenCyrus L. W. Eidlitz
Buildings
Relatives

Leopold Eidlitz (March 10, 1823,[1] in Prague, Bohemia – March 22, 1908, in New York City) was an American architect best known for his work on the New York State Capitol (Albany, New York, 1876–1881), as well as "Iranistan" (1848), P. T. Barnum's house in Bridgeport, Connecticut; St. Peter's Church, on Westchester Avenue at St. Peter's Avenue in the Bronx (1853); the Brooklyn Academy of Music on Montague Street in Brooklyn (1861, destroyed by fire 1903); the former Temple Emanu-El (New York, 1866–68, destroyed 1927); the Broadway Tabernacle (1859, demolished about 1907); the completion of the Tweed Courthouse (1876–81); and the Park Presbyterian Chapel on West 86th Street and Amsterdam Avenue.[2]

  1. ^ Landmarks Preservation Commission: Tweed Copurthouse, 16 October 1984
  2. ^ Park Presbyterian Chapel and Church have been the subject of a heated preservation battle in New York's Upper West Side. The main sanctuary, which occupies the corner lot, was added in a sympathetic style by Henry F. Kilburn (1889); Eidlitz had designed the first Park Presbyterian Church (West-Park Presbyterian Church (New York City)) at 84th Street and 11th (now West End) Avenue in 1854, when the Upper West Side was still suburban. (Christopher Gray, "Streetscapes: West-Park Presbyterian; An 1890 West Side Church Fighting Landmark Status", New York Times, January 10, 1988: accessed August 16, 2008).