Neander Montgomery Woods

Neander Montgomery Woods Jr. (1876 - 1956) was an architect in Memphis, Tennessee and in the northeastern United States including New York City, New Jersey, and Connecticut.[1] His most well known building is the Exchange Building in Memphis. His work is noted along with a few other architects on a historical marker in the Central Gardens Historic District.[2] George Mahan Jr. apprenticed with him as did Everett Woods, his younger brother who also became an architect.

Postcard of the Exchange Building in 1911. The decorative top of the building was actually red brick rather than white.

Woods father was Rev. Neander M. Woods Sr. who was born in Kentucky September 1842. Woods Sr wrote a book about the family's Scottish ancestry, The Woods-Mcafee Memorial. Woods Sr. died April 15 1910 in Louisville, Kentucky and is buried at Cave Hill Cemetery in the city.

Woods Jr. authored the 80 page Art house printing co. publication The most house for the least money (1921).[3]

Work

  • Neander Woods home (1909) at 1521 Peabody Avenue in the Central Gardens area of Memphis. The third home he designed for himself.[1]
  • 665 North Trezevant Street in Central Gardens, Memphis[4]
  • Exchange Building (1910) 9 North 2nd Street. The tallest building in Memphis for 20 years after its completion.[5]
  • N. Montgomery Woods House 1400 South Wanamassa Dr. in Wanamassa, New Jersey. Also known as the Mushroom House. A "symphony in brown" according to Woods.
gollark: The internet connection here is *apiohazardously* bad and I'm forced to `pacman`-update over it.
gollark: I mean, JSON has problems, but it is at least simple and coherent.
gollark: Maybe? Less so for some.
gollark: I was looking at the WHATWG's documentation on application/x-www-form-urlencoded and it says this:> The application/x-www-form-urlencoded format is in many ways an aberrant monstrosity, the result of many years of implementation accidents and compromises leading to a set of requirements necessary for interoperability, but in no way representing good design practices.
gollark: I feel like they could probably just, if it's for array literals, get away with limiting it to 16 or so with no major issues.

References

  1. "This place in history: The top ten most unique houses in Memphis".
  2. "Central Gardens Historic District Historical Marker".
  3. Woods, Neander Montgomery (30 October 2018). "The most hourse for the least money". Art color printing co.
  4. Griffin, John (October 11, 2002). "Sexy Beast". Memphis Flyer. Retrieved November 8, 2018.
  5. "Historic Memphis Buildings ...and notable Businesses". historic-memphis.com.

Further reading

  • Memphis, and Architectural Guide by Eugene J. Johnson
  • Obituary, New York Times (link needed)
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