- Joseph Lyman Silsbee
Joseph Lyman Silsbee (1848–1913) was a significant American
architect during the 19th and 20th centuries. He was well known for his facility of drawing and gift for designing buildings in a variety of styles. He was influential as mentor to a generation of architects, most notably architects of thePrairie School including the famous architectFrank Lloyd Wright .Biography
Born in 1848 at Salem,
Massachusetts , Joseph Lyman Silsbee graduated from Exeter andHarvard . He then became an early student of the first school of architecture in the United States, theMassachusetts Institute of Technology . Thereafter he served an apprenticeship withBoston architects Ware & Van Brundt andWilliam Ralph Emerson , respectively. Silsbee traveled inEurope before moving to Syracuse,New York in 1874. In 1875 he married Anna Baldwin Sedgwick, daughter of influential lawyer and politician, Charles Baldwin Sedgwick.Silsbee practiced architecture from 1875 until his death in 1913. He had a prolific practice and at one point had three simultaneously operating offices. He had offices in Syracuse (1875–1885), Buffalo (Silsbee & Marling, 1882–1887), and
Chicago (Silsbee and Kent, 1883–1884). From 1883–1885 his Syracuse office was a partnership with architect Ellis G. Hall. Silsbee's Chicago office had a number of architects who were later to become known in their own right, including: Frank Lloyd Wright,George Grant Elmslie ,George W. Maher , andIrving Gill .Silsbee was one of the first professors of architecture at
Syracuse University , one of the earliest schools of architecture in the nation. He was a founding member of the Chicago and Illinois Chapters of theAmerican Institute of Architects . In 1894 Silsbee was awarded the Peabody Medal by theFranklin Institute for his design for a Moving Sidewalk. This invention had its debut at theWorlds Columbian Exposition and saw usage in subsequent Worlds Fairs.Architecture
Among his most prominent architectural works is the landmark
Syracuse Savings Bank Building (1876). Built next to theErie Canal on Clinton Square in Syracuse, it is often referred to as a textbook example of the High Victorian Gothic style. Silsbee also designed the White Memorial Building (1876), the Amos Block (1878), and the Oakwood Cemetery Chapel (1879–80), all extant in Syracuse. Upland Farm (1892), the lost mansion designed for Frederick R. and Dora Sedgwick Hazard in nearby Solvay, New York is an example of the fashionable residential work that Silsbee was best known for. Photographs of these works are linked below. Silsbee designed the lavish interiors ofPotter Palmer 's "castle" in Chicago. Several of his residential designs survive in Riverside,Illinois . His most prominent surviving work in Chicago is theLincoln Park Conservatory .References
* [http://freenet.buffalo.edu/bah/a/archs/silsb/silsbiog/index.html Joseph Lyman Silsbee] at buffalo.edu
* [http://syracusethenandnow.org/Architects/Silsbee/Joseph_Lyman_Silsbee.htm Joseph Lyman Silsbee] , Syracuse
* Syracuse-Onondaga County Planning Agency (1975). "Onondaga Landmarks".
* Harley McKee, Patricia Earle, Paul Malo (1964). "Architecture Worth Saving in Onondaga County". Syracuse: Syracuse University Press.
* Angela Hess. [http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:OxpNJon510QJ:www.state.il.us/hpa/IH204.pdf+Joseph+lyman+silsbee&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=3 "Joseph Lyman Silsbee"]External links
* [http://www.cnyhistory.org/Upload_Project/image_calc_results.php Syracuse Savings Bank photographs]
* [http://syracusethenandnow.org/Dwntwn/S_Salina/WhiteMemorialBuilding/White_Memorial_%20Building.htm White Memorial Building photographs]
* [http://syracusethenandnow.org/Dwntwn/ClintonSq/AmosBlock.htm Amos Block photographs]
* [http://syracusethenandnow.org/Architects/Silsbee/OakwoodMortuaryChapel.htm Oakwood Memorial Chapel photographs]
* [http://www.cnyhistory.org/Upload_Project/image_calc_results.php Hazard Mansion photographs]
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