James M. McMichael


James Mackson McMichael, known as James M. McMichael, was an American architect. Several buildings he designed are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
McMichael worked out of Charlotte and was known for his church domed, classically detailed, church designs for Baptist and Protestant congregations. He also designed theaters, lodges, courthouses, stores, hotels, and residences.
Early in his career, he worked at Wheeler, McMichael, and Company and McMichael and Hunter. During most of his career, he ran his own firm.
McMicahel was born in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania to James and Lavinia McMichael and had at least four siblings. He married Sarah Florence Williamson on October 23, 1896 in Chester, Pennsylvania, where they lived in 1900. He moved to Charlotte in 1901 and was associated with architect Oliver Duke Wheeler. He may have replaced Louis E. Schwend who died in 1900. In 1903, McMichael and architect Leonard L. Hunter formed the firm of McMichael and Hunter which lasted through 1904. They designed two schools, two houses, a courthouse, a lodge, an office building, and seven churches. McMichael established his own firm in 1904. By 1915 or 1916, the busy practice hired Marion R. Marsh. Like architect C. C. Hook of Charlotte, he favored Colonial architecture designs. He also designed Gothic Revival architecture churches, including First Baptist Church in Concord, Myers Park Presbyterian Church He designed the First Baptist Church in Charlotte in a Byzantine architecture style. Many of his church designs are domed. Other churches he designed include the Page Memorial Methodist Church in Aberdeen, East Avenue Tabernacle Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church in Charlotte, Edenton Baptist Church in Edenton, First Baptist Church in Lincolnton, Edenton Baptist Church, and Charlotte's Little Rock A. M. E. Zion Church.
McMichael and his wife had three sons and five daughters. According to his obituary, he designed more than 900 churches in his 50-year career.

Work