Bill Kirby blogs Augusta history

Preacher led downtown revival

G. Lloyd Preacher, Augusta's very busy architect after the 1916 fire  File/ 1926
File/ 1926
G. Lloyd Preacher, Augusta's very busy architect after the 1916 fire

When Lloyd Preacher died in June 1972, it appears this newspaper took little note of his passing. That's a shame.

I say that because Geoffrey Lloyd Preacher did more than anyone since James Oglethorpe to define the look of downtown Augusta.

You see, Preacher was one of those talented men given one of history's rare opportunities - he happened to be the best architect in Augusta, Ga., when the 1916 fire burned many of its dominant downtown structures. For the years following that conflagration, Preacher and his firm were very, very busy rebuilding much of the downtown we see today.

They had a hand in almost everything: The Imperial Theater; the Richmond Hotel (now Richmond Summit); renovation work on the Lamar Building and the Marion Building, which had both seen extensive fire damage; Tubman and Houghton schools, the Rialto, Modjeska and Lenox theaters.

Even the News Building was said to have had some Preacher work.

For a man who got so much business from a fire, it's appropriate he also designed the downtown Broad Street Fire station, what we today call the Marbury Center.

Preacher even spruced up the Partridge Inn, although others before and after had much to do with that success.

If you look at all of them, you'll get a sense of the Preacher style - lighter colored brick or tiles with elaborate facades. They also have distinctive ornamentations used to soften the sharper boxiness of the buildings.

In architecture school they call it Sullivanesqe, after Chicago's Louis Sullivan in the late 1800s.

This is all pretty good for a young man from Fairfax, S.C., who came to Augusta after graduating from Clemson, and saw his career skyrocket. By the early 1920s, Preacher had moved on to bigger and better things. The South was becoming a resort region and Preacher's firm designed new hotels around the Southeast.

He even moved to a bigger city --Atlanta.

That's where he designed the work for which he is best known - the elaborate art deco, neo-Gothic Atlanta City Hall. It's the one they still use today.

While we might have forgotten him when he died, it appears Preacher remembered the town that gave him his career start.

Speaking here in later years, The Chronicle reported he said: "Augusta's future, from both business and a resort standpoint, appears to me as brighter than probably any city in the South if the citizens will awake to their opportunities."

Lloyd Preacher certainly awoke to his.

Whether we remembered him or not. 

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Dan White
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Dan White 03/12/10 - 11:49 am
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Thanks, Bill. Another gem of

Thanks, Bill. Another gem of history.

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