A Collection in
Virginia Military Institute Archives
Collection Number mss 00276
Virginia Military Institute Archives
Virginia Military Institute Archives Preston Library Virginia Military Institute Lexington, Virginia 24450-0304 USA Phone: (540) 464-7566 Fax: (540) 464-7279 Email: archives@vmi.edu URL: http://www.vmi.edu/archives
Alexander Jackson Davis (1803-1892), a
notable 19th century American architect, designed the Virginia
Military Institute Barracks, professors' residences and other
Institute buildings during the 1850's-1860's. Born in New
York, Davis studied at the American Academy of Fine Arts and
the National Academy of Design. He helped to popularize the
Greek Revival, Gothic Revival, and Italianate styles, and his
many important projects included private residences as well as
public buildings. Davis has long been recognized by historians
as the most significant American practitioner of the "secular
gothic," and VMI was the first American college planned
entirely in the Gothic Revival style. This style incorporates
towers, turrets, and other design elements first used in
medieval castles and cathedrals. The VMI Barracks was
designated a National Historic Landmark in 1966, and the VMI
Post was named a National Historic District in 1974.
Davis's association with VMI came about as a result of his
design work for Philip St. George Cocke, a wealthy Virginia
planter and member of the VMI Board of Visitors. Cocke, an
impassioned advocate of the Gothic style, employed Davis to
design "Belmead" the Cocke residence in Powhatan County,
Virginia. Cocke became Davis's patron in the state, and when
VMI began its building program in the late 1840's, it turned
to Davis to create a comprehensive plan for the Institute.
During the period 1850-1861, a significant portion of the
Barracks, a Porter's Lodge, Mess Hall, the Superintendent's
residence, and several faculty residences were constructed
using Davis's designs. Davis's dream of completing the
Barracks quadrangle was interrupted by the Civil War and VMI's
post-war financial problems, and his work for the Institute
ended in the 1870's. It was not until the early 20th century
that his vision for the Parade Ground facade of Barracks was
realized, based on a Davis-inspired design by another noted
architect, Bertram Goodhue.
The Alexander Jackson Davis collection consists of 27
architectural drawings executed for the Virginia Military
Institute (Lexington, Virginia) between 1859 and 1870.
Included are designs for the VMI Barracks, the
Superintendent's residence, and faculty residences. The bulk
of the drawings are ink and wash plans.
These post-Civil War designs for "Claytor Hall" --
intended to complete the Barracks project begun in the
1850s -- were never executed. VMI was struggling to
recover from the destruction of Institute buildings by
Union General David Hunter, and would not be able to
continue with Davis's ambitious design. The parade
ground facade of Barracks, as originally envisioned by
Davis, was completed in the early 20th century.
"Claytor Hall - Va. Milit. Inst. Gen. Fr.
H. Smith Supn'dt - Lexington, Virginia. - A. J.
Davis, Arc't."