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  1. In 1851, Davis completed Winyah Park, one of approximately eighteen or more Italianate houses he designed in the 1850s. Winyah was built for Richard Lathers, who had studied architecture with Davis in New York in the 1830s. It was situated on Lathers's estate in the town of New Rochelle in Westchester County, New York.

  2. America’s greatest architect of the mid-nineteenth century, a designer of picturesque buildings in myriad styles, Alexander J. Davis was born in New York City on July 24, 1803.

  3. Alexander Jackson Davis was an American architect, designer, draftsman, and illustrator who was best known for his innovative, picturesque country houses. He helped establish the familiar type of American rural house in the “carpenter Gothic” style of the mid-19th century.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. May 23, 2018 · After Downing's death Davis designed and supervised all buildings in Llewellyn Park in West Orange, N.J., conceived by Downing and financed by Llewellyn P. Haskell as America's first "garden suburb" (1852-1869). Picturesqueness was predominant in all Davis's works.

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    Alexander Jackson Davis (1803–1892) was one of the most influential American residential architects of the nineteenth century. His designs for country houses illustrated publications on landscape gardening and rural life that established an architectural vocabulary for American picturesquelandscape design between 1835 and 1850. Davis’s copious draw...

    Born on July 24, 1803, in New York City, Alexander Jackson Davis [Figs. 1 & 2] was raised and educated in Utica and Auburn, New York. After apprenticing with a publisher in Alexandria, Virginia, between 1818 and 1823 (at the time still within the District of Columbia), Davis moved to New York City to study design at the American Academy of the Fine...

    Mary Freeman Goldbeck, Portrait of Alexander Jackson Davis, ca. 1845.
    Sketch by Mary Freeman Goldbeck about 1858.
    Alexander Jackson Davis, Castle Garden, N. York, c. 1825–1828.
    Alexander Jackson Davis, “Viewof the Battery and Castle Garden,” 1826–28.
  5. The other architect was Alexander Jackson Davis. Born in 1803 in New York City, Davis grew up in Newark, New Jersey, and upstate New York, where his father made his living as a bookseller and small-time publisher. Davis left school at 14 to become a printer’s apprentice.

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  7. He died in 1892 at the age of 88 and was buried in Bloomfield Cemetery in Bloomfield, New Jersey. Media Gallery. Born in New York City, Davis studied at the American Academy of Fine Arts, the New York Drawing Association, and the Antique School of the National Academy of Design.