James Leal Greenleaf (July 30, 1857 – April 15, 1933) was an American landscape architect and civil engineer. Early in his career, he was a well-known landscape architect who designed the gardens and grounds of many large estates in Connecticut, New Jersey, and New York. He was appointed to the United States Commission of Fine Arts in 1918, and served until 1927. He was the landscape architect for the Lincoln Memorial (finished in 1922), and a consulting landscape architect for the Arlington Memorial Bridge (designed in 1925 and finished in 1932).
Early life
Greenleaf was born in 1857 in Kortright, New York. His father, Thomas Greenleaf, was a member of the prominent Greenleaf merchant family, but had retired to Kortright due to failing health.[1] His mother, Eleanor Leal, was of Dutch and Scottish descent.[2] He was the fourth of five children, and the only son, born to Thomas and Eleanor.[2] The Greenleafs were Huguenots who fled France, anglicizing their family name (Feuillevert) to Greenleaf. Greenleaf's great-great-great-great-grandfather, Edmund, was born in 1574 in Ipswich, Suffolk, England. His great-great-grandfather, Enoch, was born there in 1647, and the entire family emigrated to Salisbury, Connecticut, in 1650.[3] His great-grandfather, Thomas, was the founder and editor of Greenleaf's New Daily Advertiser.[4] He was a distant relative of James Greenleaf, the infamous Washington, D.C., land speculator and whose sister married Noah Webster (whose newspaper later merged with the New Daily Advertiser).[5] Greenleaf later credited his childhood in the Catskill Mountains for giving him a love of landscape architecture.[1]
Greenleaf took a teaching position as an Assistant at the Columbia School of Mines in 1882. He was promoted to tutor, instructor, and assistant professor. Increasingly engaged in the practice of civil engineering, he became an adjunct professor, and then left the school entirely in 1894 to become a full-time civil engineer.[2]
After his retirement from public service in 1927, Greenleaf rarely worked. However, he did consult with the firm of McKim, Mead and White on the landscape design around Arlington Memorial Bridge in 1931 and 1932.[4] In retirement, Greenleaf devoted himself to landscape painting, working primarily in Italy and on the Isle of Skye.[4] His work was exhibited at the National Academy of Design in New York City.[6]
Personal life
Greenleaf married Bertha Potts of New York City on June 14, 1899.[2] She was the daughter of George A.H. and Helen (Hard) Potts, whose wealthy mining family founded Pottsville, Pennsylvania.[16] They had a son, Donald Leal Greenleaf, born June 5, 1890.[2] Bertha Potts Greenleaf died in 1911.[4]
Greenleaf moved to New Canaan, Connecticut, around 1918. He contracted pneumonia in 1932, and although he recovered he remained in poor health. A few months before his death, he moved in with his son (also a resident of New Canaan). Greenleaf suffered from appendicitis, and had his appendix removed on April 3, 1933. He never recovered from the shock of the surgery, and died in Stamford Hospital in Stamford, Connecticut, on April 15.[4]
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