A Guide to the Carneal and Johnston, Virginia Military Institute, Architectural Drawings and Plans, 1918-1984 Carneal and Johnston, Virginia Military Institute, Architectural Drawings and Plans, 1918-1984
40198
Carneal and Johnston, Virginia Military Institute, Architectural drawings and plans, 1918-1984. Accession 40198, Business
records collection, Library of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia.
Acquisition Information
Gift of Ballou, Justice, Upton, Architects, Glen Allen, Virginia, 7 August 2002.
William Leigh Carneal, Jr. and James Markam Ambler Johnston began their firm around 1908 after spending a year working independently
out of the same office space. The firm went on to become one of the most
prolific and long-established architectural practices in Virginia.
Carneal, born in Richmond on October 24, 1881, graduated in 1903 from the Virginia Military Institute. He began his architectural
practice around 1906 following a three year stint as a clerk in his father's
company, Sitterding-Carneal-Davis Company. Johnston, born in Rockbridge County on May 18, 1885, studied engineering at Virginia
Polytechnic Institute and Cornell University before moving to Richmond in 1906. He
worked at the Richmond Cedar Works for one year until he began his own architectural practice.
From 1908 until 1950, the firm of Carneal and Johnston (the firm was known as Carneal, Johnston, and Wright from 1928 through
1945, when Oscar Pendleton Wright was a partner) helped to mold the architectural
environment of central Virginia, especially Richmond. Responsible for over 1300 buildings, Carneal and Johnston practiced
in a wide-range of project types, from the mundane to the monumental. While they did
execute some residential buildings, the firm generated a far greater number of public, commercial, and industrial structures.
Some of their most notable structures include First Virginia Regiment Armory (1913),
the Virginia Mutual Building (1919-1921), the Virginia State Office Building (1922-1923), Saint Joseph's Villa (thirteen buildings,
1930-1931), the Virginia War Memorial (1932), and various structures on the
campuses of Richmond College (now the University of Richmond) and Virginia Military Institute.
The firm survived following the founders' retirements in the 1950s. Subsequent owners were Miles Cary Johnston, James Beck,
and Raymond Browder who sold the firm to employees Carlos H. Costas, W. Fred Hughes
III, and Kenneth E. Bunch in 1984. In 1999, the surviving firm of Carneal and Johnston merged with Ballou Justice and Upton,
Architects, and ceased to exist as an architectural firm.
The Carneal and Johnston Virginia Military Institute (VMI) architectural drawings and plans consist of 721 sheets. This represents
approximately 56 separate commissions undertaken by the firm between 1918 and
1984 at the Lexington, Virginia, military school. Alexander Jackson Davis (1803-1892), a New York-born architect, originally
planned VMI's barracks, professors' residences and other buildings during the mid-19th
century. VMI was the first American college campus to be executed wholly in the Gothic Revival style. The bulk of the Carneal
and Johnston material covers 1920 through 1976 and shows major renovations to existing
buildings or new construction on the campus. The drawings depict elevations, floor plans, details, sections, and the like
for VMI structures. Additionally, a few topographic and plat style maps are housed in the
collection. The majority, if not all, of the correspondence from the Carneal and Johnston firm is no longer extant.
The drawings are identified by their title. The date given on the container list is taken from the earliest date on the drawing
and does not represent any revisions or addenda which were added at a later time.
Many of the drawing sets are noted as "As Built" plans, meaning that they show some aspect of the built work in its final
form.
Oversized, Alterations and Fireproofing Barracks (Commission # 860) and Alterations and Additions to Central Heating Plant
(Commission # 675) placed on Roll 1 (4/J/2/7/1) Oversized, Drill Hall (Commission #
1023) and Topographic Map of Proposed Riding Hall [Drill Hall] (Commission # 1023) placed on Roll 2 (4/J/2/7/1)