George Washington Foster Jr. (December 18, 1866 – December 20, 1923), was an American architect.[1] He was among the first African-American architects licensed by the State of New Jersey in 1908, and later New York (1916). Foster partnered with Vertner Woodson Tandy (1885–1949), the first African-American architect licensed by the State of New York, in the firm of Tandy and Foster, which was active from 1908 to 1914.[2][3]
He relocated with his wife, Carrie, to Park Ridge, New Jersey in a house he designed and built.[4] He and his wife had six children, including Henry Hardenburg Foster, who was named after his employer.[4]
He died on December 20, 1923, in a house he designed on Colony Avenue, in Bergen County, Park Ridge, New Jersey.[2][4] He is buried at the Westwood Cemetery in Westwood, New Jersey.[4]