Alfred Henry Jacobs
Alfred Henry Jacobs was an American architect. He designed theaters, hotels, and religious buildings. Three of the buildings he designed are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The University of California, Berkeley has a collection of his papers, drawings, and photographs.
His father Julius Jacobs was born in Prussia in 1840 and immigrated to California in 1853. In 1898 he was appointed Assistant U.S. Treasurer, in charge of the Sub-Treasury in San Francisco.
Alfred Henry Jacobs was born in San Francisco in 1882 to Julius and Sarah Adler Jacobs. He graduated from the California School of Mechanical Arts. He studied at University of California at Berkeley and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology where he received a B.S. degree in architecture in 1904 and an M.S. degree in architecture in 1905. He did further studies at the École des Beaux Arts in Paris.
Back in San Francisco by 1907, he partnered with Walter Ratcliff and helped design the Berkeley Tennis Club. In 1909, he joined San Francisco's Fidelity Lodge, Number 120, Free and Accepted Masons of California and established his own firm.
He married Lillian Wollenberg in 1908.
Jacobs gained emeritus membership status with the American Institute of Architects. He was Jewish. He died on December 14, 1954.Work
building
roofline and signage
- Jacobs family's residence at 80 21st Avenue in San Francisco
- California Theater, renamed the State Theatre, at 787-799 Market Street in San Francisco, torn down in 1954
- Winema Theater on Main Street in Scotia, California. Made with redwood.
- Curran Theater at 445 Geary Street in San Francisco
- Granada Theater renamed the Paramount Theatre. Dismantled in 1965
- Homewood Terrace for the Pacific Hebrew Orphan Asylum and Home Society, San Francisco
- House for Ansel Adams at 129 24th Avenue in San Francisco
- Butterfield and Butterfield Auctioneer building
- Jewish orphanage