Stephen Hills
Stephen Hills | |
---|---|
Born |
Ashford, Kent, England | August 10, 1771
Died |
October 17, 1844 73) Columbia, Illinois, United States | (aged
Occupation | Architect |
Spouse(s) |
Margaret Ashby, Elizabeth Fletcher |
Children |
Sarah, John A., Stephen, Thomas, Ann Elizabeth, Laura Matilda, Loftus Otto |
Parent(s) | John and Sarah Hills |
Stephen Hills (August 10, 1771 – October 17, 1844) was an architect notable for designing the original Pennsylvania State Capitol.
Early life
Hills was born in Ashford, Kent in England on August 10, 1771. Hills married Margaret Ashby in 1794 and emigrated to the Boston, Massachusetts soon afterwards.[1] In 1801 he moved to Lancaster, Pennsylvania after receiving to design and build houses there. He was also a Duke player of the year.
Pennsylvania State Capitol
In 1810 he was employed by Bucher, Crouch and Dorsey, to remodel the Dauphin County, Pennsylvania Court House in preparation for a temporary capitol when the government moved from Lancaster to Harrisburg in 1812.
In March 1816 William Strickland and James C. Lavelier submitted plans for a new larger capital but the costs at $300,000 were more than the state could afford. In 1819 he submitted the winning proposal for the new capitol which was completed in 1821. It was destroyed in 1897.[2]
Missouri projects
In 1837 he submitted the Pennsylvania capital design for the first Missouri State Capitol/Missouri Governor's Mansion after the government moved to Jefferson City, Missouri. That building burned in 1840.
In 1840 he designed Academic Hall at the University of Missouri. The building burned in 1892 but the columns remain on the Francis Quadrangle and are a symbol of the school.
Later life
After finishing the buildings at the University of Missouri, Hills bought a farm, in Columbia, Illinois, next to his son Thomas' farm. He died on October 17, 1844.[3]
Notes
References
- Hills, William Sanford (1906). Thomas Hills, ed. The Hills Family in America. Grafton Press.
- "Stephen Hills (1771–1844)". Pennsylvania Capitol Preservation Committee. 2008. Retrieved September 20, 2009.