Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Fred Wesley Wentworth

American architect (1864–1943) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

Fred Wesley Wentworth (August 3, 1864 – October 5, 1943) was an American architect known for his extensive contributions to the architectural landscape of Downtown Paterson, New Jersey, as well as various residences and theaters across northeastern New Jersey. Wentworth played a pivotal role in reshaping Paterson following a devastating wind-driven fire that destroyed much of the city's central business district in 1902. His architectural portfolio encompassed a diverse range of building types, including institutional, commercial, residential, religious, and healthcare structures, as well as some of the nation's earliest movie theaters designed exclusively for motion pictures.[1][2][3]

Quick facts Born, Died ...
Remove ads

Early life

Born on August 3, 1864, in Boxborough, Massachusetts, Wentworth was raised in Dover, New Hampshire. He graduated Dartmouth College in 1889 with a degree in architecture.[4] While at Dartmouth, he was a founding member of the senior society Casque and Gauntlet.[5]

Career

Summarize
Perspective

Wentworth's professional career in Paterson started in 1888. When he first arrived, Paterson was a modest manufacturing town, but it experienced rapid growth, nearly tripling in population during his tenure. As the city expanded, Wentworth designed a wide array of new building types, including a post office, courthouse,[6] movie theaters, parking garages, aeronautics factories, and other commercial buildings.[7] In 1902 a fire devastated most of the center of the city and Wentworth was responsible for much of the rebuilding work needed afterward.[6][4]

Throughout his career, Wentworth designed numerous notable buildings,[8][9][10] some in collaboration with his draftsman and later partner, Frederick J. Vreeland. Many of his works are located within the Downtown Commercial Historic District of Paterson.[11]

Wentworth was president of the New Jersey AIA and a member of the New Jersey State Board of Architects.[12][13] He was recognized as a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects.[13] He retired in 1933.[12]

Thumb
Paterson Post Office (1899)

Downtown Paterson

Thumb
Loomis Sanitarium Library

Other public buildings

  • Public School #10, Paterson
  • Public School #13, Paterson
  • Passaic County Tuberculosis Sanitarium (1928), aka Preakness Hospital Preakness, abandoned in 2009
  • Passaic County Welfare Home (1936), Haledon and Wayne[24]
  • Valley View Sanitarium (1927–31), known as the Preakness Building[25]
    • Nurses Residence, known as Passaic County Juvenile Detention Center
    • Storage Building
  • Loomis Sanitarium Library

Religious buildings

Movie theaters

Thumb
Stanley Theater

Wentworth was commissioned to build several movie theatres by Jacob Fabian including The Regent which was the first facility built exclusively for the exhibition of moving pictures and other movie palaces.[16][29] Fabian is recalled in the cinema at City Center Mall, the Fabian 8.[30]

Thumb
Psi Upsilon Fraternity House, Dartmouth College

Residences

Remove ads

Personal life

On May 9, 1893, Wentworth married Florence Agnes Marie Hurlburt; the couple had no children. They lived at 630 East 27th Street in Paterson.[4]

He belonged to the Hamilton Club of Paterson, the North Jersey Country Club, Scottish Rite Freemasonry, the Shriners, and the Sons of the American Revolution.[12] He was a charter member of the Rotary.[12] Wentworth was also a Republican and a Universalist.[12]

Wentworth died on October 5, 1943, in Paterson at the age of 80.[4][12] He was buried in Pine Hill Cemetery in Dover, New Hampshire.[12]

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads