Jeremiah O'Rourke
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Jeremiah O'Rourke | |
|---|---|
| Born | February 6, 1833 |
| Died | April 22, 1915 (aged 82) |
| Alma mater | Queen's College, Cork |
| Occupation | Architect |
| Spouse |
Elizabeth Dunn (m. 1860) |
| Buildings | |
Jeremiah O'Rourke, FAIA, (February 6, 1833 – April 22, 1915), was an Irish-American architect known primarily for his designs of Roman Catholic churches and institutions and Federal post offices. He was a founder of the Newark-based architectural firms of Jeremiah O'Rourke (active from the 1850s to the 1880s) and Jeremiah O'Rourke & Sons (active from the 1880s until his death).
O'Rourke was born in Dublin, Ireland in 1833 as one of eight children and graduated in 1850 from the Government School of Design, Queens College, Cork. He thereafter emigrated to the United States where he found work drafting plans for a Newark carpenter-builder, Jonathan Nichols. He married Elizabeth Cecilia Dunn in 1860. He lived in a home he designed and built at 45 Burnet Street in what is now the James Street Commons Historic District.
In 1870, in anticipation of erecting a cathedral, James Roosevelt Bayley, Bishop of Newark, sent O'Rourke and Monsignor George Hobart Doane on a tour of England and France to study European churches.[1]

Architecture
He set up his architectural firm in Newark, New Jersey, where he was Patrick Keely's chief "competitor for Roman Catholic church and institutional commissions in metropolitan New York and northern New Jersey."[2]
He became a member and Fellow of the American Institute of Architects in 1886.[3]
O'Rourke was appointed from April 1893 to September 1894 to the office of the United States Supervising Architect[4] in Washington, D.C., during the presidency of Grover Cleveland on the recommendation of both New Jersey senators. Succeeding W. J. Edbrooke of Chicago in this job, O'Rourke's designed several federal post offices with his annual salary of $4,500 (about $130,000 in 2020 adjusted for inflation).[5]
He returned in 1894 to private practice, founding Jeremiah O'Rourke & Sons in Newark and New York City with sons William P. O'Rourke, Joseph B. O'Rourke, and Louis J. O'Rourke. O'Rourke and his sons specialized in ecclesiastical designs.[2]
O'Rourke died April 22, 1915, in Newark.[6]
