J. Carroll Johnson
J. Carroll Johnson (November 9, 1882 – May 4, 1967) was an architect in South Carolina. He was the first resident architect at University of South Carolina and supervised campus expansion.[1] He designed numerous residences in Columbia's suburbs during the roaring 1920s.[2] His work also includes the Lexington County Courthouse which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
He was born in Kristianstad, Sweden.[1] He is buried at Elmwood Cemetery.[1]
The Library of Congress has photographs of some of his buildings including from the Historic American Buildings Survey (catalogued along with musical documents from minstrel performer Carroll Johnson).[3]
Work
    
- State Industrial School for Girls (1918)
 - First Presbyterian Church of Kershaw, South Carolina (1920),
 - Three schools in Lancaster, South Carolina (1922)
 - Buildings on the University of South Carolina campus including:
- Sloan College (1927)
 - South Caroliniana Library wing additions (1927–1928)
 - Melton Observatory (1928)
 - Wardlaw College (1930–1931)
 - Sims Dormitory (1939)
 - Petigru College (1949) with Simons & Lapham of Charleston
 - LeConte College (1952)
 - Osborne Administration Building (1951 – 1952)
 - President’s House (1952), conversion and renovation[1]
 
 - Lexington County Courthouse (1939 – 1940) with Jesse W. Wessinger in Lexington, South Carolina[4]
 - First Baptist Church of West Columbia (1942)[1]
 
Residential buildings
    
Further reading
    
- “Dialogue With The Past’–J. Carroll Johnson, Architect, and the University of South Carolina, 1912–1956” Master’s thesis by Andrew Watson Chandler, University of South Carolina (1993)[2]
 - “John C. Johnson, 84, Architect, Dies” Columbia State, May 5, 1967, page A7
 - The South Carolina Architects, 1885–1935: A Biographical Directory by John E. Wells and Robert E. Dalton, New South Architectural Press, Richmond, Virginia (1992)
 
References
    
- "Johnson, John Carroll".
 - Chandler, Andrew Watson (October 16, 1993). Dialogue with the past: J. Carroll Johnson, architect, and the University of South Carolina, 1912-1956. OCLC 29925752 – via Open WorldCat.
 - "7 J carroll johnson Images: Library Of Congress Public Domain Search". Library Of Congress.
 - "Lexington County Courthouse". LandmarkHunter.com.
 - "102 Southwood Drive - Hollywood-Rose Hill | Historic Columbia". www.historiccolumbia.org.
 
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