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David Hyer : ウィキペディア英語版
David Hyer
David Burns Hyer was an American architect who practiced in Charleston, South Carolina and Orlando, Florida during the first half of the twentieth century, designing civic buildings in the Neoclassical Revival and Mediterranean Revival styles.〔''Hiers Family Genealogy'', by Hiers Research Committee, 1974, p. 522〕
==Biography==
David Burns Hyer was born on May 21, 1875, in Charleston, South Carolina, the youngest son of John Henry Hyer, Jr. and Elizabeth "Ella" Saphronia Zachary. Hyer served as a civil engineer at the Charleston Navy Yard and for many Southern railways, before opening his own private architectural practice in Charleston.〔"Engineering News Record", Volume 129, 1949.〕 Hyer’s Charleston office was located in the People's Building.
David Hyer married Sally Yeadon Mazyck, daughter of James Mazyck, in June 1904; they had four children: David B Hyer Jr., Yeadon Mazyek Hyer, Robert Payne Hyer and Helen Hyer〔.〕

Active in Charleston (see partial list of works below) Hyer was a member of the South Carolina Chapter of the American Institute of Architects (AIA).〔Journal of the AIA, 1913, page 400.〕 By the early 1920s the Hyers established a home in Orlando. Hyer worked in association with Daytona and Winter Park architect John Arthur Rogers (father of architect James Gamble Rogers II);〔The Architectue of James Gamble Rogers II, by Patrick W McGlane and Debra A. McGlane, pp. 15 & 16.〕 he also listed his architectural business in the Orlando city directories. As such, it was one of only 10 architectural firms listed in 1926, the others including: Frank L. Bodine, Fred E. Field, Murry S. King, Maurice E. Kressly, George E. Krug, Howard M. Reynolds, Frederick H. Trimble. Ryan and Roberts (Ida Annah Ryan and Isabel Roberts) and Percy P. Turner. It was one of 12 firms so listed in Orlando in 1927. During the 1920s Hyer maintained Orlando offices first in the Rose Building and later in the Phillips Block on South Orange Avenue.〔Orlando Telephone Directories, 1925-1929〕
Hyer's best and most visible Orlando work is the Grace Phillips Johnson Estate on Edgewater Drive. The grand Mediterranean Revival home is on a narrow isthmus between Lake Adair and Lake Concord, with sweeping views across Lake Concord to downtown Orlando. The house once had three murals by Florida artist Sam Stoltz, only one remains, a peacock.
James Gamble Rogers II managed David B. Hyer's Orlando office in 1934; by 1935 Hyer had moved back to Charleston permanently. Hyer continued to practice architecture in South Carolina as late as 1941. Hyer died on December 11, 1942, in Charleston, South Carolina.〔rsmeader on ancestry.com, posted March 7, 2009〕〔Engineering News Record, 1942, page 13〕〔See a photo of David Hyer's grave at this link: http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=hyer&GSfn=david&GSbyrel=all&GSdy=1942&GSdyrel=in&GSob=n&GRid=36050508&df=all&〕

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