Early projects
Between 1895 and 1905, Moses McKissack built houses in Decatur, Alabama, and Mount Pleasant and Columbia, Tennessee.[12] In 1905, Moses officially launched McKissack & McKissack as a construction firm.[13] Also in 1905, Moses received a commission to build a new house for the dean of architecture and engineering at Vanderbilt University in Nashville.[12] He opened his first architectural office in Nashville in 1907.[16] The firm's first major project was to design the Carnegie Library on the Fisk University campus, a two-story Classic Revival building constructed from brick with a stone columned porch, featuring an interior light well. Its cornerstone was laid in 1908 by William Howard Taft, then the U.S. Secretary of War.[17][18]
Significant projects designed by Moses McKissack during the 1910s include the dormitories for Roger Williams University in Nashville and Lane College in Jackson, Tennessee.[13] From 1918 and 1922, Moses designed more than one dozen residences in Nashville and Belle Meade, largely in the Colonial Revival style.[16]
Calvin McKissack started an independent practice in Dallas, Texas, in 1912, specializing in the design and construction of dormitories and black schools.[16] In 1915, he returned to Tennessee, becoming superintendent of industries and a teacher of architectural drawing at the Tennessee Agricultural and Industrial State Normal School.[13] In 1918, Calvin joined the faculty of Pearl High School as director of the industrial arts department and later became the first executive secretary of the Tennessee State Association of Teachers in Colored Schools.[17][13] In 1921, McKissack & McKissack built the historic Hubbard House in Nashville.[13] When Tennessee instituted a registration law for architects in 1922, the McKissack brothers were initially denied their licenses.[16] However, after petitioning the state and obtaining architectural degrees, the brothers got their licenses and became the first licensed black architects in the United States
Moses McKissack III died on December 12, 1952. Calvin McKissack remained with the firm until he died in 1968.[17] William DeBerry McKissack, the youngest son of Moses III, then succeeded his uncle as president of the firm.[17][8] After suffering a stroke, he retired due to illness,[17] and his wife, Leatrice Buchanan McKissack, became chief executive officer.[19]
Leatrice's daughter Cheryl McKissack Daniel opened a McKissack & McKissack office in New York City in 1990.[15] In 2000, Cheryl McKissack Daniel bought the company from her mother and dissolved the original business, paying out shareholders and closing their offices in the south.[15][20] She then re-established McKissack & McKissack as sole owner of the company.[15] The company closed its Nashville office in May 2002, making its New York City offices its corporate headquarters.[18]