Frederick Dinkelberg
Daniel Burnham hired New York architect Frederick Dinkelberg in 1892 to assist his new design partner Charles Atwood with the World's Columbian Exposition. In addition to the Fair, Dinkelberg assisted Atwood with the Marshall Field & Company and the Ellicott Square commissions. Dinkelberg went on to become Burnham's "facade designer" -- and is credited with design for the Heyworth Building, the Railway Exchange, the Conway Building and the Flatiron Building in New York. Dinkelberg left D.H. Burnham and Company in 1908 when an internal reorganization named Peirce Anderson its lead designer. Dinkelberg's "last hurrah" was the Jewelers' Building at 35 East Wacker. (And it was quite a hurrah...) But of all Frederick Dinkelberg's commissions this little house designed in 1891 may have been among his best memories.
The Villa Margherite. 4 South Battery Street. Charleston, South Carolina
The opportunities that employment at D.H. Burnham & Company brought to Dinkelberg could not have been gained elsewhere. But at a price. DHB was a corporate machine, taking individual contributions and crediting them as its own. For the commission on Battery Street, Dinkelberg was given full credit. For his assistance to the opium addicted Atwood.... not so much.
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