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George Feick Papers

 Collection
Identifier: RG 30-303

Scope and Contents

The George Feick Papers consist of contracts, architectural plans and specifications for Oberlin College buildings as well as specifications for the Ohio State University Athletic Field. Also included are copies of biographical information about George Feick and Feick family members assembled by Archives staff.

Architectural records by George Feick himself include details for parts of the interior of the Cox Administration Building, the Athletic Field Grandstand, and the Ohio State University Athletic Field. The other plans and specifications in the papers are by supervising architects for certain Oberlin College buildings: Cass Gilbert (Finney Chapel, Cox Administration Building); Patton and Miller, Architects (Carnegie Library, Keep Cottage, Warner Gymnasium); J. L. Silsbee (Men’s Building, dormitories); and R.S. Silsbee (a garage).

Dates

  • Creation: 1889-1996, undated
  • Creation: Majority of material found in 1906-1914
  • Other: Date acquired: 1998 April 21

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Unrestricted.

Biographical Sketch

George Feick was a builder and contractor in Sandusky, Ohio, in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. George was born in Steinau near Darmstadt, Germany, in 1849 and migrated to America in 1866, following his brothers Johann Philip (1847) and Adam (1849). From a family of German carpenters, all of the Feick brothers worked for Adam Bauer until Adam Feick formed his own company with George in 1872, Adam Feick and Brother. During this partnership, which lasted until Adam’s death in 1893, the brothers constructed substantial buildings in Ohio and Wyoming, including the Erie County Jail, the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railroad stations in Sandusky and Painesville, Ohio, the Cheyenne, Wyoming State Capitol Building, and at Oberlin College, Talcott Hall and Lord Cottage. In that period, builders had to be skilled at design work as well as masonry, stone cutting and timber sawing, and many of them were considered on a par with architects, although they were not classically trained. Lord Cottage is an example of a building in Oberlin entirely designed and built by Adam Feick and Brother, in 1892.

On Adam’s death the company became George Feick and Company Builders. Later the name changed to George J. and John A. Feick, Builders, consisting of George and his nephew John. This company lasted several years until the uncle and nephew separated and formed separate companies: The George Feick and Sons Company in 1916, and John A. Feick, Builder. The contracting firm of The George Feick and Sons Company was incorporated with George Feick Sr., President, Emil A. Fieck ,Vice President and George Feick Jr., Secretary-Treasurer. They built the Savings Bank and Mohican buildings at Mansfield, Ohio; the Hotel and Administration Building for the Lakeside Association at Lakeside, Ohio; the St. Josephs Church at Marblehead, Ohio; and various buildings in Sandusky, Ohio, including the Feick Building, an eight-story building.

During this period of shifting corporate names, George Feick erected a number of buildings at Oberlin College (designed by differeing architects), including the Severance Chemical Laboratory (Howard Van Doren Shaw, 1901), Warner Gymnasium (Patton, Fisher & Miller, 1901), the Carnegie Library (Patton & Miller, 1908), Finney Memorial Chapel (Cass Gilbert, 1908), Rice Memorial Hall (Arthur Bates Jennings, 1910), Keep Cottage (Patton & Miller, 1913), and Wilder Hall (Joseph Lyman Silsbee, 1911). George's firm also handled building contracts at Lake Erie College, Ohio State University, Ohio Wesleyan University, and Capital University.

George Feick’s first wife was Augusta Ernestine Klotz, born in Dresden in 1852. Together they had five children: Emil Augustus, Clara Sofia, George Jr., Ernestine, and Olga Charlotte. Mrs. Augusta Feick died in 1888. In 1892 George Feick married Minnie A. Klotz; the only child of this union was Augustus H. Feick, born in 1893. George Feick died in November 1932. The Feick family is still in business in Sandusky as Feick Contractors, with John A. Feick as architect for the Feick Design Group. In 1945 Edward L. Feick, an architectural engineer, established the current emphasis on designing and building for clients. John A. Feick III joined his father in 1973 as the fifth generation Feick builder.

Sources Consulted

George Feick Papers, RG 30/303, Oberlin College Archives.

Feick Design Group website, http://www.feickdesigns.com/feick-builders-history.html, accessed July 21, 2015. [Defunct as of 2025.]

Feick Contractors website, https://feickcontractors.com/, accessed February 13, 2025.

Note written by Anne Cuyler Salsich; updated by Emily Rebmann.

Extent

11.44 Linear Feet

Language of Materials

English

Arrangement

The papers have been organized into three series:  Biographical, Contracts, and Drawings and Specifications.

Method of Acquisition

The architectural records by George Feick and the architects under whom he worked were donated to the Oberlin College Archives by John Adam Feick (son of Adam Feick and nephew to George Feick) in three lots in 1998-99. The contracts in Series II were given to the Office of the College Secretary by David Seitz, Manager of the Feick Office Building, in 2000. These were then transferred to the Archives. In 2009 the Sandusky Public Library provided many of the materials in Biographical series in response to an inquiry from Archives staff. Other secondary sources in Series I were compiled by Archives staff.

Accruals and Additions

Accession Nos: 1998/052, 1998/090, 1999/003.

Related Materials

Additional materials relating to George Feick can be found in several other collections held by the Oberlin College Archives. Correspondence regarding buildings on campus to and from Feick can be found in Records of Oberlin College Presidents, the Henry Churchill King Papers (RG 2/6), and Records of the Office of the Treasurer (RG 7).

The Feick Family Papers, 1810-1982 (MS 0681) reside at the Center for Archival Collections, Bowling Green State University.

Title
George Feick Papers Finding Guide
Author
Anne Cuyler Salsich
Date
2015 July 21
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Revision Statements

  • July: Processed by Anne Cuyler Salsich.
  • 2015 July: Revised by Archives staff.
  • 2018 March: Revised by Archives staff.
  • 2024-2025: Prepared for migration by Emily Rebmann and Lee Must.

Repository Details

Part of the Oberlin College Archives Repository

Contact:
420 Mudd Center
148 West College Street
Oberlin OH 44074-1532 US
440-775-8014
440-775-8016 (Fax)