Jacques Benedict

{{Short description|American architect}}

{{Infobox architect

|name=Jacques Benedict

|image= LittletonTH.jpg

|caption= Littleton Town Hall, built 1920

|mother=

|father=

|nationality= American

|birth_name=Jules Jacques Benois Benedict

|birth_date={{birth date|mf=yes|1879|4|22}}

|birth_place= Chicago, Illinois

|death_date=January 16, 1948 (aged 68)

|death_place= Denver, Colorado

|significant_buildings=

|significant_projects=

|awards=

|signature=

|}}

Jules Jacques Benois Benedict (April 22, 1879 – January 16, 1948) was one of the most prominent architects in Colorado history, whose works include a number of well-known landmarks and buildings listed on the National Register of Historic Places.{{cite web|title=The Architecture of Jules Jacques Benedict in Colorado|url=https://npgallery.nps.gov/pdfhost/docs/NRHP/Text/64500922.pdf|website=NRHP|access-date=29 March 2018}}{{PD-notice}}

Biography

Commonly known as Jacques Benedict, he was born in Chicago in 1879, and he studied architecture at the École des Beaux-Arts. He came to Denver in 1909, and became renowned for his many prominent works including homes, churches, academic and public buildings, spanning a range of architectural styles and with a particular gift for melding with natural landscapes. Benedict married June Louise Brown in Denver on February 20, 1912, and was hired to be the architect of the Catholic Archdiocese of Denver, becoming a respected authority on sacred architecture. The architect has been described by his biographer Doris Hulse, as "talented, cultured, eccentric, flamboyant, practical, difficult, opinionated, generous, temperamental, considerate, gentleman farmer, man-about-town", and a number of his works are widely known today.{{citation needed|date=March 2018}}

Benedict died in January 1948 in a Denver hospital.{{cite news|title=Church Architect Dies In Hospital at Denver|newspaper=The Caspar Tribune-Herald|agency=Associated Press|location=Casper, Wyoming|date=January 18, 1948|page=13}}

Works

=Denver=

=Elsewhere=

Gallery

File:Large, brick residence at 4050 Mt. View Blvd., Denver, Colorado, designed by architect Jacques Benois Benedict.jpg|4050 Mt. View Blvd., Denver, Colorado

File:City and County of Denver Wayside House, Rocky Mts. - Langer-Cooper.jpg|City and County of Denver Wayside House, Rocky Mts. / Langer-Cooper

File:SunkenGardens.jpg|Sunken Gardens Pavilion, built c.1910, Denver, demolished

File:ChiefHosa.jpg|Chief Hosa Lodge, built 1918

File:Residence at 1700 East 7th Avenue, Denver, Colorado, J. B. Benedict, architect - Hyskell, Denver, 23.jpg|Kerr House, 1900 East 7th Avenue Parkway, NRHP-listed

File:Large L-shaped residence, Colorado, designed by architect Jacques Benois Benedict - De Lux, Denver.jpg|Large L-shaped residence, Colorado

File:Stone mountain lodge of Paul T. Mayo, Bear Creek Cañon, Rocky Mountains, Colorado, with boy seated on step, designed by architect Jacques Benois Benedict.jpg|Stone mountain lodge of Paul T. Mayo, Bear Creek Cañon, Rocky Mountains, Colorado

File:Summer residence for the president of the United States, Mt. Falcon, Colorado. View looking southwest showing house, descending terrace, and natural gardens) - J. B. Benedict, architect, LCCN2002708920.jpg|Summer residence for the president of the United States, Mt. Falcon, Colorado. View looking southwest showing house, descending terrace, and natural gardens

File:Cranmer House.JPG|George Cranmer House, 200 Cherry Street, 1917, National Register of Historic Places

File:First Church of Divine Science, 1400 Williams St., 1922.jpg|First Church of Divine Science, 1400 Williams St., 1922

File:Kistler Rodriguez House.JPG|Kistler-Rodriguez House, 700 E. 9th Ave., 1920, National Register of Historic Places

File:StElizabethsDenver.JPG|St. Elizabeth's Catholic Church Cloisters Prayer Garden & Monastery, 1062 11th St., 1936

File:Washington Park Denver.JPG|Washington Park Boating Pavilion, 1913, National Register of Historic Places

File:Weckbaugh House.JPG|Weckbaugh House, 1701 Cedar Ave., 1930–33, National Register of Historic Places

File:Carnegie Library, Littleton, NH.jpg|Littleton Carnegie Library, 2707 W. Main St., Littleton, 1917

File:THAC Front.JPG|Littleton Town Hall, 2450 W. Main St., Littleton, 1920, National Register of Historic Places

File:Herman Coors House Golden CO.jpg|Herman Coors House, 1817 Arapahoe St., Golden, 1912, National Register of Historic Places

File:Ponderosa Lodge.JPG|Ponderosa Lodge, 6145 Shoup Road, Colorado Springs, Colorado, National Register of Historic Places

File:Colorado Rocky Mtn Church.jpg|St. Catherine's Chapel at St. Malo

File:Kohn House.JPG|Kohn House, 770 High St., 1926

File:Kerr House.JPG|John G. and Helen Kerr House, 1900 E. 7th Ave., 1925, National Register of Historic Places

File:HungarianFreedomPark.JPG|Hungarian Freedom Park Fountain (Children's Fountain), Speer Blvd., 1st. Ave., & Clarkson St., 1932, National Register of Historic Places

File:Malo Mansion, 500 E. 8th Ave., 1921, Denver Local Landmark.jpg|Malo Mansion, 500 E. 8th Ave., 1921, Denver Local Landmark

File:Steinhauer Field House.JPG|Steinhauer Field House (1937) at the Colorado School of Mines, Golden, Colorado

References

{{reflist}}

Further reading

[https://web.archive.org/web/20070625170824/http://www.littletongov.org/history/biographies/benedict.asp Littleton Biography of Jacques Benedict]

[https://web.archive.org/web/20070927051108/http://www.archden.org/dcr//news.php?e=40&s=4&a=949 Denver Catholic Archdiocese Article]

Buildings of Colorado by Thomas J. Noel