American master blacksmith and metal designer
A Samuel Yellin lamp at the Cathedral of Learning in Pittsburgh , Pennsylvania Samuel Yellin (1884–1940), was an American master blacksmith , and metal designer.
Early life and education
Yellin Studio in 1915 Samuel Yellin was born to a Jewish family in Mohyliv-Podilskyi , Ukraine in the Russian Empire in 1884. At the age of eleven, he was apprenticed to a master ironsmith. In 1900, at the age of sixteen, he completed his apprenticeship. Shortly afterwards he left the Ukraine and traveled through Europe. In about 1905, he arrived in Philadelphia , in the United States, where his mother and two sisters were already living. His brother arrived in Philadelphia at about the same time. In early 1906, Yellin took classes at the Pennsylvania Museum School of Industrial Art and within several months was teaching classes there, a position he maintained until 1919.[1]
Career
In 1909, Yellin opened his own metalsmith shop.[2] In 1915, the firm of Mellor, Meigs & Howe , for whom he designed and created many commissions, designed a new studio for Samuel Yellin Metalworkers at 5520 Arch Street in Philadelphia. Yellin died in 1940, but the firm remained there for decades under the direction of Yellin's son, Harvey. Following Harvey's death, the business moved forward under the ownership and guidance of Samuel Yellin's granddaughter, Clare Yellin. The firm has now been in operation for over 110 years as of this writing (2022).
During the building boom of the 1920s, Samuel Yellin Metalworkers employed as many as 250 workers, many of them European artisans. Although Yellin was highly knowledgeable about traditional craftsmanship and design, he also championed creativity and the development of new designs. Samuel Yellin's works can be found in some of the finest buildings in America.
Honors
Yellin received awards from the Art Institute of Chicago (1919), the American Institute of Architects (1920), the Architectural League of New York (1922), and the Bok Civic Award from the City of Philadelphia (1925).[3] He was a member of the Philadelphia Chapter of the American Institute of Architects and the T Square Club, the Philadelphia Sketch Club , and the Architectural League of New York.[4]
Selected works
Universities, colleges and schools
1922 advertisement.
Annapolis Colored High School , Annapolis , Maryland
Bowdoin College
Bryn Mawr College
California Institute of Technology , Pasadena, California
Dominican Academy , New York, New York
Drexel Institute , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania
Eastman School of Music , Rochester, New York
Harvard University , Cambridge, Massachusetts
Haverford College
Jewish Theological Seminary , New York, New York
Oberlin College , Oberlin, Ohio
Princeton University , Princeton, New Jersey
Swarthmore College
University of Chicago , Chicago , Illinois
University of Michigan , Ann Arbor, Michigan
University of Pennsylvania , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania
University of Pittsburgh , Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
University of Texas at Austin , Austin, Texas
University of Tulsa , Tulsa , Oklahoma
University of Virginia , Charlottesville , Virginia
Vanderbilt University , Nashville, Tennessee
Yale University , New Haven, Connecticut
Institutional and commercial
(Alphabetical by state)
San Diego Air Station, San Diego , California
Aetna Life Insurance Co, Hartford, Connecticut
Peabody Museum, New Haven, Connecticut
Bok Singing Tower , Lake Wales, Florida
Sarasota Court House, Sarasota, Florida
Union Pacific RR Station, Boise, Idaho
Art Institute of Chicago , Chicago , Illinois
Union Station, Indianapolis , Indiana
Baltimore Trust Company, Baltimore , Maryland
Detroit Institute of Art , Detroit , Michigan
Detroit Public Library , Detroit, Michigan
Detroit Society of Arts and Crafts, Detroit, Michigan
Grand Rapids Art Gallery , Grand Rapids, Michigan
University of Michigan Law Library , Ann Arbor, Michigan
Lauren Rogers Museum of Art , Laurel, Mississippi
Morristown Memorial, Morristown, New Jersey
Ritz-Carlton Hotel, Atlantic City, New Jersey
Victor Talking Machine Co, Camden, New Jersey
American Radiator Building , New York City
Barclay-Vesey Building , New York City
Central Savings Bank , New York City
The Cloisters (Metropolitan Museum of Art), New York City
Dime Savings Bank , Brooklyn , New York City
Federal Reserve Bank of New York , New York City
Ford Motor Company, New York City
General Motors Co., New York City
International Business Machine (IBM) New York City
Salvation Arm Headquarters, New York, New York City
Allegheny County Courthouse , Pittsburgh , Pennsylvania
Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Company Building , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania
Candoro Marble Works (showroom door), Knoxville, Tennessee
Fidelity Bankers Trust, Knoxville, Tennessee
Seattle Art Museum, Seattle , Washington
Citizens Bank, Weston, West Virginia
Ecclesiastical
Baltimore Pro-Cathedral, Baltimore , Maryland
Blessed Sacrament Cathedral, Detroit , Michigan
Church of the Good Shepherd (Rosemont, Pennsylvania)
Congregation Emanu-El of the City of New York , NY
Grace Cathedral , San Francisco , California
Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, Akron, Ohio
Park Avenue Christian Church , New York City
Philadelphia Divinity School, closed 1974
Salt Lake City Cathedral, Salt Lake City, Utah
St. Bartholomew's Church, New York City
Saint Clement's Church (Philadelphia) , Lady Chapel gates
Cathedral of St. John in the Wilderness , Denver , Colorado
Cathedral of St. John the Divine , New York City
St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church, Canaan, Connecticut
Episcopal Church of the Evangelists, Philadelphia , Pennsylvania. Now Fleisher Art Memorial .
St. Mark's Episcopal Church (Philadelphia) , Pennsylvania
St. Patrick's Cathedral, New York City
St. Patrick's Church, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Kansas City, Missouri
St. Thomas Church , New York City
St. Vincent Ferrer, New York City
Washington National Cathedral , Washington D.C.
Washington Memorial Chapel , Valley Forge, Pennsylvania
Harrison Memorial Gates (1918), Washington Memorial Chapel,
Valley Forge, Pennsylvania
Cross & candlesticks (1925), Resurrection Chapel,
Washington National Cathedral ,
Washington, D.C.
Entrance grille (1934), Fleisher Art Memorial, Philadelphia
Screen (1938), St. Joseph of Arimathea Chapel, Washington National Cathedral
Chancel iron gates (ca. 1912) at Episcopal Church of the Good Shepherd in
Rosemont, Pennsylvania
Residential
Detail of stair railing (1924), Dumbarton Oaks in Washington, D.C. , including Yellin's name and year Spider screen from the Country Estate of Mrs. Arthur Meigs[5] (Alphabetical by state)
Winterthur , Henry DuPont residence, Wilmington, Delaware
Dumbarton Oaks , Robert Woods Bliss residence, Washington, D.C.
Cyrus McCormick residence, Chicago , Illinois
Cranbrook , George Gough Booth residence, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan
George Eastman residence, Rochester, New York
Fred Fisher residence, Detroit , Michigan
William E. Scripps Estate, Lake Orion, Michigan[6]
George H. Christian Mansion, Minneapolis , Minnesota (current home of Hennepin History Museum )
Frick Residence , New York City
Dominican Academy High School , formerly the Michael Friedsam Residence, New York City
Isaac Guggenheim residence, Port Washington, New York
Matinecock, Estate of J.P. Morgan. Jr., Long Island , New York
Eagle's Nest , Estate of William K. Vanderbilt II , Long Island, New York
Planting Fields , Estate of William Robertson Coe , Long Island, New York
Elie Nadelman residence, New York City
Mrs. P.A. Rockefeller residence, Fayetteville, New York
Walter Rosen, Caramoor , Katonah, New York
Reynolda House , Winston-Salem, North Carolina
Stan Hywet Hall , Frank A. Seiberling residence, Akron, Ohio
E.W. Marland Estate, Ponca City, Oklahoma
Edward Bok residence, Philadelphia , Pennsylvania
Henry F. Miller residence, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
High Hollow , George Howe residence, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Richard B. Mellon residence, Pittsburgh , Pennsylvania
Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney residence, Deer Run, Pennsylvania