- John H. Edelmann
John H. Edelmann (died 1900) was a
socialist -anarchist who worked as anarchitect in the office of Alfred Zucker, a successful commercial architect of the 1880s and 1890s inNew York City . [The identification of Edelmann as designer was made by Paul Sprague, through drawings preserved by Edelmann's family. Where not otherwise indicated, the information in this article is gleaned from [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9406E4D71738F93BA25751C1A962958260 Christopher Gray, "Streetscapes/33 Union Square West; Islamic/Venetian Sliver, With Minaret' "The New York Times" December 18, 1994] ] As an architect, Edelmann's sole surviving monument is the former headquarters of theDecker Brothers Piano Company, theDecker Building (1893), at 33 Union Square West, New York. [ [http://www.nyc-architecture.com/GRP/GRP040.htm New York architectural
] .] Paul Sprague, a professor of architectural history at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee, reports thatLouis Sullivan credited Edelmann with the idea for his maxim, "Form follows function ," a watchword of Modernism.Before coming to New York, Edelmann had worked as a draughtsman for the Chicago architects
William LeBaron Jenney andDankmar Adler . It was Edelmann who introduced the young Louis Sullivan to Adler, with whom he formed a partnership. The late Prof. Donald Egbert of Princeton indicates that Edelmann came to New York in 1886 to work in the mayoral campaign ofHenry George , the most influential proponent of the "Single Tax " on land, also known as theland value tax . Edelmann worked in the offices of Alfred Zucker from 1891 to 1893. TheSocialist Labor Party expelled him for his outspokenanarchist ideas, and so he and a group of anarchists founded aSocialist League in 1892. [Candace Falk, Barry Pateman, "Emma Goldman: A Documentary History of the American Years" (University of California Press) 2003:99.] He was on hand to welcome the Russian anarchistPeter Kropotkin on his first lecture tour in America; Kropotkin stayed in the Edelmann apartment on East 96th Street during his stay. Edelmann had married Rachelle Krimont, an Eastern European immigrant whose family were radicals. [Paul Avrich , "The Modern School Movement: Anarchism and Education in the United States", (2005:193).] In 1893 he and other radicals published an anarchist journal "Solidarity", and after it folded his contributed articles to "The Rebel", published in Boston. ["The Rebel: an Anarchist-Communist Journal Devoted to the Solution of the Labor question" [http://libertarian-labyrinth.org/wiki/index.php?title=The_Rebel_(1895-1896)/01/06 "The Rebel", 1895-96] ] These activities brought him into the circle of the eminent American anarchist and writerEmma Goldman .Edelmann died during the deadly heat wave of July 1900. After his death his widow took their children to England, and brought them up at
Whiteway Colony . [Paul Avrich, "Anarchist Voices: An Oral History of Anarchism in America" (Princeton University Press), 1996:155.]Notes
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