Charles E. White, Jr.

Charles E. White, Jr.

Charles E. White, Jr. (1876–1936) was a noted Chicago area architect who for a time worked in the Oak Park studio of Frank Lloyd Wright and who, both before and after that time, had a successful and influential career as an architect and a writer on architectural subjects. It is fair to say that White is an under-appreciated member of Wright’s Oak Park studio staff.

Contents

Early Years and Education

Charles Elmer White, Jr. was born May 18, 1876, in Lynn, Massachusetts, the son of Charles E. White, Sr. and his wife Agnes Elizabeth Safford. Through his father, White was a direct descendant of American Revolutionary War soldiers William Loud and Michael Porter.[1]

White enrolled in the architecture program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, studying with the renowned architecture professor Constant-Désiré Despradelle. Among his fellow classmates were Raymond Hood and Ellis F. Lawrence as well as pioneering women architects Ida Annah Ryan, Harriet F. Locke, Florence Luscomb, and Marion Mahony (class of 1894, with whom he would later work in Chicago). White graduated in the class of 1895.[2]

Architectural Practice

For the next eight years, White worked in the East, chiefly practicing architecture with Walter R. B. Wilcox in Burlington, Vermont. At the age of twenty-seven, White then moved to Chicago in 1903 to work for Frank Lloyd Wright, at the time when other employees in the studio included Walter Burley Griffin, Marion Mahony, Isabel Roberts, and artist Richard Bock. The letters which White wrote to his friend Wilcox offer valuable insights into the building methods, working relationships and responsibilities of the Oak Park studio in what has been called Wright’s "first golden age" when the Prairie Style was developed.[3] When writing about this time in his life, some architectural historians have mistakenly called White a "student” or “apprentice” of Frank Lloyd Wright; both terms are incorrect. White was an architect in his own right, having practiced architecture for nearly a decade in the East before the three years when he worked in the Oak Park studio.

By 1905 White launched his own practice in Oak Park. He designed and built his own studio and collaborated with Wright and Vernon S. Watson on the River Forest Tennis Club of 1906. His office was busy with many commissions in the years leading up to World War I.[4]

In addition to the practice of architecture, White wrote a number of influential articles about home building, ranging from matters of taste and design to construction methods. These were widely circulated in popular home magazines of the day. White was also a champion of fireproof hollow tile construction and helped to popularize it nationally. A gifted renderer, his architectural illustrations often accompanied his writings, which featured the work of many different colleagues, including, Frank Lloyd Wright, Marion Mahony Griffin, Walter Burley Griffin, and William Eugene Drummond, as well as his own designs.

During the Great War he served in the quartermaster corps.[5] In 1922 White formed a partnership with fellow MIT graduate Bertram A. Weber; Weber had worked in the office of noted Chicago architect Howard Van Doren Shaw (MIT class of 1892) prior to their partnership. The firm of White and Weber continued to practice in Chicago until White's death in 1936.[6] They designed the Art Deco United States Post Office (1933) in Oak Park, the Rectory of the Grace Episcopal Church, Oak Park, as well as the Haish Memorial Library in Dekalb, Illinois, an Art Deco Indiana limestone building on the National Register of Historic Places.

Personal life

White married the daughter of prominent Oak Park inventor Charles E. Roberts, Alice May Roberts (born December 13, 1876); they were the parents of Charles Safford White (1903–1984) and Elizabeth Whipple White (1906–2001).[7]

White died August 15, 1936 in Oak Park.[8]

Selected Work

  • Curtis B. Camp Residence, Oak Park, IL[9]
  • "An Easy Housekeeping Cottage" Chicago, IL, no date given[10]
  • Walter Gerts House, River Forest, IL, 1905[11]
  • Mrs. C. E. Simmons House, Oak Park, IL, 1905[12]
  • Robert Kermen House, Oak Park, IL, 1907[13]
  • J. Fletcher Skinner Residence, 608 Linden Avenue, Oak Park IL, 1908[14]
  • Elizabeth F. Cheney Mansion, 220 North Euclid, Oak Park, IL, 1913[15]
  • Charles E. White, Jr. Residence, Oak Park, IL, 1916
  • Nathan G. Moore House, 333 Forest Ave, Oak Park, IL, remodeling (after the 1922 fire), with Frank Lloyd Wright
  • Haish Memorial Library, DeKalb, IL, White & Weber, architects, 1931[16]
  • United States Post Office, Oak Park, IL, White & Weber, architects, 1933 (adjacent to Unity Temple)
  • Rudolph Pabst House, Winnetka, IL. White & Weber, architects, 1936
  • G.F.Kelly Home, 729 North Kenilworth, Oak Park, IL 1912[17]

Selected publications

Books:

  • Successful Houses and How to Build Them; Charles E. White, Jr. 1912 – Important images of Frank Lloyd Wright’s homes include: Moore Residence (First) p 8 (1895 s.034); Dana-Thomas pp 41, 51 (Interior), 216 (1902 S.072), Hill p 66 (2), 425 (1900 S.051); Heurtley, p 217 (1902 S.074); Beachy p 220 (1906 S.117); Winslow p 225 (1894 S.024); Coonley p 284 (1907 S.135); Roberts interior p350 (1908 S.150); Martin interior p 397 (1904 S.100); Winslow Stable p 498 (1894 S.025). These images document the homes prior to 1912.
  • The Bungalow Book, Charles E. White, Jr. (1923)

Important articles:

  • An Easy Housekeeping Cottage for $1800, by Charles E. White, Jr.; ‘’Ladies Home Journal’’, 1911
  • What You Should Know When Building A Little House, by Charles E. White, Jr.; ‘’Ladies Home Journal’’
  • A Fireproof House for Less Than $4000, Designed By Charles E. White, Jr., with Illustrations; by George A. Newman; ‘’Ladies Home Journal’’, February 15, 1911
  • When Houses are in Good Taste, by Charles E. White, Jr., in ‘’Keith's Magazine’’, 1913
  • Many Ways To Build A Fireproof House, by Charles E. White, Jr.; ‘’House Beautiful’’, 1914

References

  1. ^ The Sons of the American Revolution Magazine, Volumes 1-4 By Sons of the American Revolution, p 35
  2. ^ Guide to Frank Lloyd Wright and Prairie School Architecture in Oak Park, by Paul E. Sprague, p. 94
  3. ^ Letters, 1903-1906, by Charles E. White, Jr. from the Studio of Frank Lloyd Wright, by Nancy K. Morris Smith and Charles E. White, Jr.
  4. ^ Charles E. White, Jr., from The Historical Society of Oak Park and River Forest, by Marty Hackl
  5. ^ U. S. Army register, Volumes 1-10, p. 253
  6. ^ Journal of Architectural Education, Volumes 25-26‎, p. 112; Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture
  7. ^ History of Royalton Vermont, by Mary Evelyn Wood Lovejoy, p. 946
  8. ^ archInform website
  9. ^ Architectural Record, Volume 40, by American Institute of Architects, p 303
  10. ^ Country and Suburban Homes of the Prairie School Period, by Hermann V. von Holst, plate 63
  11. ^ Country and Suburban Homes of the Prairie School Period, by Hermann V. von Holst, plate 26
  12. ^ Country and Suburban Homes of the Prairie School Period, by Hermann V. von Holst, plate 32
  13. ^ Country and Suburban Homes of the Prairie School Period, by Hermann V. von Holst, plate 19
  14. ^ Country and Suburban Homes of the Prairie School Period, by Hermann V. von Holst, plate 93
  15. ^ http://www.cheneymansion.com/cheney_history.htm
  16. ^ ‘’Illinois Off the Beaten Path’’, by Lyndee Jobe Henderson, Bill Franz, Bob Puhala, in ‘’Travel’’, 2007
  17. ^ http://www.prairieschooltraveler.com/html/il/oakpark/oakpark.html

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