- Richard Morris Hunt
Richard Morris Hunt (
October 31 1827 –July 31 ,1895 ) was a preeminent figure in the history of Americanarchitecture .Biography
Born at
Brattleboro, Vermont , Hunt was the son of Jane Maria Leavitt, born to an influential family of Suffield, Connecticut, and Hon. Jonathan Hunt, a U.S. congressman whose own father was the lieutenant governor of Vermont, and scion of a wealthy and prominent Vermont family. [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=WLfMU4yd1FYC&pg=PA421&lpg=PA421&dq=dwight+leavitt&source=web&ots=I935DS2rWX&sig=oG1VlU3201UX1CscT2TcLmpntxU&hl=en#PPA407,M1 The History of the Descendants of John Dwight, of Dedham, Mass., Benjamin Woodbridge Dwight, New York, 1874] ] Richard Morris Hunt was the brother of the Boston painterWilliam Morris Hunt , and the photographer and lawyerLeavitt Hunt . (Hunt was named forLewis Richard Morris , a family relation [Lewis Richard Morris was married to Ellen Hunt, sister of Richard Morris Hunt's father. [http://www.crjc.org/heritage/V07-14.htm General Lewis R. Morris House, Springfield, Vt., National Register, Connecticut River Joint Commissions, crjc.org] ] , who was a U.S. Congressman from Vermont and the nephew ofGouverneur Morris , an author of large parts of the U.S. Constitution.) [ [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9F01E5D91039E033A25752C0A96E9C94649ED7CF Obituary of Richard Morris Hunt, The New York Times, August 1, 1895] ]Following the early death of his father, Hunt's mother took the family to Europe, where they remained for more than a decade, first in Switzerland and later in Paris. Hunt began his education at the
Boston Latin School , but after the family's move to Europe Hunt entered the Parisatelier ofHector Lefuel in 1846. The aspiring architect Hunt became the first American to attend theÉcole des Beaux-Arts inParis . Hunt's mentor Lefuel later permitted him to supervise work on theLouvre museum, which Lefuel was renovating forNapoleon III , as well as to design the "Pavillon de la Bibliothèque" (“Library Pavilion”), prominently situated opposite thePalais-Royal . Hunt would later regale aspiring young architectLouis Sullivan with stories of his work on the New Louvre in Lefuel's "atelier libre". [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=6M9RixFpkKwC&pg=PA13&dq=%22hector+lefuel%22+%22richard+morris+hunt%22&ei=V07xSNOBCJnqtgOpj5zRAw&sig=ACfU3U37awu3xgRAweGGHdfWOWc0xAm2Ow Louis Sullivan, Prophet of Modern Architecture, Hugh Morrison, W.W. Norton & Co., New York, 1998] ]After his return in 1855, Hunt founded the first American architectural school at his
Tenth Street Studio Building (beginning with only four students), co-founded theAmerican Institute of Architects and from 1888 to 1891 served as the Institute's third president, brought the first apartment building to Manhattan in a burst of scandal, and set a new ostentatious style of grand houses for the social elite and the eccentric, competitive new millionaires of theGilded Age . Hunt's greatest influence is his insistence that architects be treated, and paid, as legitimate and respected professionals equivalent to doctors and lawyers. He sued one of his early clients for non-payment of his five percent fee, which established an important legal precedent. One of his 1859 students at the Tenth Street Studio,William Robert Ware , was deeply influenced by Hunt and went on to found the first two university programs in architecture:MIT in 1866, and Columbia in 1881.His extensive social connections in Newport [Hunt himself lived during the season in Newport, where his wife, the New York City heiress Catherine Clinton Howland, had extensive family connections.] among the richest Americans of his generation, were informed by his energy and good humor. Legend has it that while on a final walk-through of one of his Vanderbilt mansions, Hunt discovered a mysterious tent-like object in one of the ballrooms. Investigating, he found it was canvas covering a life-sized statue of himself, dressed in stonecutters' clothes, all carved in secret as a tribute by the gang of stonecutters working on the house. Vanderbilt permitted the statue to be placed on the roof of the mansion.
Most who came into contact with Hunt came away struck by the man. On their first meeting in 1869
Ralph Waldo Emerson spoke of "one remarkable person new to me, Richard Hunt the architect. HIs conversation was spirited beyond any I remember, loaded with matter, and expressed with the vigour and fury of a member of the Harvard boat or ball club relating to the adventures of one of their matches; inspired, meantime, throughout, with fine theories of the possibilities of art." [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=qa9aAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA280&lpg=PA280&dq=%22william+morris+hunt%22+%22ralph+waldo+emerson%22&source=web&ots=klZ4EwdIbd&sig=GqlXoo7zXfXwc-HG-V9r5xdUplM&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=8&ct=result Journals of Ralph Waldo Emerson, 1864-1876, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Edward Waldo Emerson, Waldo Emerson Forbes, Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston, 1914] ]Hunt's folksy manner, lack of pretense and unbridled enthusiasm led Emerson to gush, "I could only think of the immense advantage which a thinking soul possesses when horsed on a robust and vivacious temperament. The combination is so rare of an Irish labourer's nerve and elasticity with Winckelmann's experience and cultivation as to fill one with immense hope of great results when he meets it in the New York of to-day."
.
In New York City, Hunt's handiwork can be seen on the austere pedestal of the
Statue of Liberty and on the elegant 5th Avenue facade of theMetropolitan Museum of Art . The only one of Hunt's New York City buildings that has not been destroyed now houses Hostelling International - New York (formerlyAmerican Youth Hostels ) on the east blockfront of Amsterdam Avenue between 103d and 104th Streets in Manhattan. Erected in 1883 and entered into the National Register of Historic Places in 1975, [http://www.nyc-architecture.com/UWS/UWS042.htm this red-brick building] features dormer windows and a mansard roof similar to those Hunt used on hisBiltmore Estate in Asheville, North Carolina, pictured below on this page. This popular youth hostel was originally built for the Association for the Relief of Respectable Aged Indigent Females, a charity created in 1813 with the help of financier Peter G. Stuyvesant (a descendant of the Dutch colonial governorPeter Stuyvesant ) andJohn J. Astor . In later years it was used as a nursing home, but by the 1970s was abandoned and became a burned-out "shooting gallery" used by drug dealers and derelicts. Its current use as a flagship youth hostel came into being in 1988. According to an article in [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE1D8103AF934A15750C0A96E948260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=print "The New York Times"] :The project is a rare collaborative effort involving a West Side community group, a midtown developer, an international foundation, two Wall Street securities firms, seven government agencies and 300 profit-seeking investors in 30 states.....In 1980, the city's Office of Economic Development awarded a grant to Valley Restoration, which in turn hired the consulting firm of Buckhurst, Fish, Hutton & Katz to study the feasibility of converting the building into a hostel. The consultants concluded that a youth hostel containing 477 beds was feasible, along with a restaurant of 126 seats and a small theater. Efforts were then made to bring together community leaders, a youth hostel organization and a developer to put forward a plan.
The financing of this successful preservation and re-use project was unusual. According to the "Times" article:
The developer was Bertram Lewis, chairman of Sybedon, a group of Manhattan investment bankers specializing in high-stakes real estate deals....The terms of a 1984 agreement between the three groups had Valley Restoration buying the property from the city, which had acquired it in a 1978 tax foreclosure action. The $687,500 price was a payment to Valley from a limited partnership consisting of Sybedon and a group of investors. Last December a public offering of shares through Thomson McKinnon Securities raised $5.2 million from 300 investors in 30 states. The Metropolitan New York Council of American Youth Hostels agreed to manage the building and channel profits from the fees for the rooms back to the limited partnership to repay the investors.
Among the employees who worked in Hunt's firm was Franco-American architect and fellow Ecole des Beaux Arts graduate
Emmanuel Louis Masqueray when went on to be Chief of Design at theLouisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis. Hunt often employed sculptorKarl Bitter to enrich his designs. Both Hunt and his frequent collaborator, landscape architectFrederick Law Olmsted , were associated with theCity Beautiful Movement , and Hunt was the first president of theMunicipal Art Society that grew out of the movement. Nevertheless, Olmstead, an advocate of "naturalistic" architecture and landscape design famously clashed with Hunt in 1863 over Hunt's proposal for "Scholar's Gate," a formal entrance toCentral Park at 60th Street and Fifth Avenue. According to Central Park historian Sarah Cedar Miller, Central Park Commissioner and influential New YorkerAndrew Haswell Green , was a major supporter of Hunt. When the park commissioners adopted Hunt's design, Olmstead and his partnerCalvert Vaux protested and resigned their positions with the Central Park project. Hunt's plan for Scholar's Gate was never built and Olmstead and Vaux subsequently rejoined the project.Miller, Sara Cedar: "Central Park, An American Masterpiece" p. 57. Harry N. Abrams, Inc, 2003 ISBN 0-8109-3946-0.] Nevertheless, there were to be other reminders of Hunt in Central Park.Hunt died in 1895 and was buried at the
Common Burying Ground and Island Cemetery inNewport, Rhode Island . In 1898, 3 years after Hunt's death in Newport, the Municipal Art Society commissioned the Richard Morris Hunt Memorial, designed by sculptorDaniel Chester French and architectBruce Price . [http://www.mas.org/viewarticle.php?id=1352&category=29] History of the Municipal Art Society (official site)] The memorial is installed in the wall of Central Park acrossFifth Avenue from today’sFrick Museum at 70th Street. Following Hunt's death, his son Richard Howland Hunt took over the practice his father had established.Among the many projects Richard Howland Hunt finished was the great entrance hall of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, for which his father, a Metropolitan trustee, had made the initial sketches in 1894, having earlier designed the Museum's Fifth Avenue facade. [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=jIXc9ES8qcAC&pg=PT229&lpg=PT229&dq=%22catherine+howland+hunt%22&source=web&ots=p7FF0pLLhg&sig=FrzxQ4gje6sUyfSIe2pWZULg1WQ&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=2&ct=result Long Island Country Houses and Their Architects, 1860-1940, Robert B. MacKay, Anthony K. Baker, Carol A. Traynor, W.W. Norton & Co., New York, 1997] ]
Residential Works
*H. B. Hollins' Country Estate, "Meadow Farm," East Islip, NY
*J.N.A. Griswold House, Newport, RI 1863-1864
*Marshall Field House, Prairie Avenue, Chicago, 1873
*Henry Marquand House, NYC, 1881-84 [Henry Gurdon Marquand joinedCharles McKim as a pallbearer at Hunt's funeral.]
*James Pinchot House, "Grey Towers," Milford, Pennsylvania 1884-86
*William Borden House, Chicago, Illinois, 1884-89
*Ogden Mills House, Fifth Avenue, NYC, 1885-87
*Archibald Rogers House, Hyde Park New York, 1886-89
*William Kissam Vanderbilt House, "Marble House ,"Newport, Rhode Island , 1888-92
*William Kissam Vanderbilt , [http://photocollection.alonsorobisco.es/architecture_images.htm Residence] ,New York , 1879-82.
*J.R. Busk House, "Indian Springs," Presently Known as: "Wrentham House,"Newport, Rhode Island , 1889-92
*Ogden Goelet House, "Ochre Court", Newport, Rhode Island, 1888-93
*Oliver Belmont House, "Belcourt Castle ",Newport, Rhode Island , 1891
*Elbridge Gerry House, NYC, 1891-94 Newport, Rhode Island,
*John Jacob Astor IV House, Fifth Avenue, NYC, 1891-95
*Dorsheimer-Busk House,Newport, Rhode Island , 1890-93
*George Washington Vanderbilt House, "Biltmore Estate ", the largest private mansion in America (pictured below)Asheville, North Carolina , 1890-
*Cornelius Vanderbilt II house, "The Breakers ",Newport, Rhode Island , 1892-95Churches
*St. Mark's Episcopal Church, Islip, Long Island, New York [http://www.StMarksOnline.us]
Commercial
*New York Tribune Building, Park Place, New York, 1873.
Public Buildings
*
Howland Cultural Center (Howland Library), Beacon, NY, designed for Hunt's brother-in-lawJoseph Howland , [http://www.howlandculturalcenter.org Howland Cultural Center]
*Fogg Art Museum , Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1892-95 (demolished and replaced).
*Administration Building,World's Columbian Exposition , Chicago, 1893 [Gold medal from theRoyal Institute of British Architects .]Honors
*
Honorary Doctorate ,Harvard University , Cambridge, Massachusetts (first architect to receive the honor)
* Gold Medal,Royal Institute of British Architects (first American architect to be so honored)
* Honorary member,Académie française
*Chevalier of the Legion of Honor , France [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=l71xDwYtEJIC&pg=PA110&lpg=PA110&dq=%22richard+morris+hunt%22+%22honorary+doctorate%22&source=web&ots=9We8VRhTLj&sig=kKYAQvdVXEzBUboldJXyx2f0QMc&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=3&ct=result The Look of Architecture, Witold Rybczynski, Oxford University Press, 2003] ]ources
* [http://www.greatbuildings.com/architects/Richard_Morris_Hunt.html Great Buildings Online]
* Durante, Dianne, "Outdoor Monuments of Manhattan: A Historical Guide" (New York University Press, 2007): brief summary of Hunt's career and description of Daniel Chester French's Hunt memorial in Central Park, New York.References:
*Baker, Paul, "Richard Morris Hunt", MIT Press, 1980
*Stein, Susan Editor, "The Architecture of Richard Morris Hunt ", University of Chicago Press, 1986
*Kvaran. Einar Einarsson, "Architectural Sculpture of America"External links
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=6608217 Richard Morris Hunt grave, Island Cemetery, Newport, Rhode Island]
* [http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9504E5D91039E033A25752C0A96E9C94649ED7CF Obituary, Richard Morris Hunt, The New York Times, August 1, 1889]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.