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McKim, Mead & White

American architectural firm From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

McKim, Mead & White
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McKim, Mead & White was an American architectural firm based in New York City. The firm came to define architectural practice, urbanism, and the ideals of the American Renaissance in fin de siècle New York.

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The principals of McKim, Mead & White (left to right): William Rutherford Mead, Charles Follen McKim, and Stanford White

The firm's founding partners, Charles Follen McKim (1847–1909), William Rutherford Mead (1846–1928), and Stanford White (1853–1906), were giants in the architecture of their time, and remain important as innovators and leaders in the development of modern architecture worldwide. They formed a school of classically trained, technologically skilled designers who practiced well into the mid-20th century.[1] According to Robert A. M. Stern, only Frank Lloyd Wright was more important to the identity and character of modern American architecture.[2]

The firm's New York City buildings include Manhattan's former Pennsylvania Station, the Brooklyn Museum, and the main campus of Columbia University.

Elsewhere in New York state and New England, the firm designed college, library, school and other buildings such as the Boston Public Library, Walker Art Building at Bowdoin College, the Garden City campus of Adelphi University, and the Rhode Island State House. In Washington, D.C., the firm renovated the West and East Wings of the White House, and designed Roosevelt Hall on Fort Lesley J. McNair and the National Museum of American History.

Across the United States, the firm designed buildings in Illinois, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Washington and Wisconsin. Outside of the United States, the firm developed buildings in Canada, Cuba, and Italy. The scope and breadth of their achievement is notable, considering that many of the technologies and strategies they employed were nascent or non-existent when they began working in the 1880s.[3]

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History

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Background

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The Isaac Bell House, in Newport, Rhode Island

Charles McKim, who grew up in West Orange, New Jersey, was the son of a prominent Quaker abolitionist. He attended Harvard College and the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, a leading training ground for American artists.

William Rutherford Mead, a cousin of president Rutherford B. Hayes, went to Amherst College and trained with Russell Sturgis in Boston. McKim and Mead formed a partnership with William Bigelow in New York City in 1877.

White was born in New York City, the son of Shakespearean scholar Richard Grant White and Alexina Black Mease (1830–1921). His father was a dandy and Anglophile with no money, but a great many connections in New York's art world, including painter John LaFarge, jeweler Louis Comfort Tiffany and landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted.

White had no formal architectural training; he began his career at the age of 18 as the principal assistant to Henry Hobson Richardson, the most important American architect of the day and creator of a style recognized today as "Richardsonian Romanesque". He remained with Richardson for six years, playing a major role in the design of the William Watts Sherman House in Newport, Rhode Island, an important Shingle Style work.

White joined the partnership in 1879, and quickly became known as the artistic leader of the firm. McKim's connections helped secure early commissions, while Mead served as the managing partner. Their work applied the principles of Beaux-Arts architecture, with its classical design traditions and training in drawing and proportion, and the related City Beautiful movement after 1893. The designers quickly found wealthy and influential clients amidst the bustle and economic vigor of metropolitan New York.[4]

Early developments

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The William G. Low House, epitome of the Shingle Style

The firm initially distinguished itself with the innovative Shingle Style Newport Casino (1879-1880) and summer houses, including Victor Newcomb's house in Elberon, New Jersey (1880–1881), the Isaac Bell House in Newport, Rhode Island (1883), and Joseph Choate's house "Naumkeag" in Lenox, Massachusetts (1885–88).[5] Their status rose when McKim was asked to design the Boston Public Library in 1887, ensuring a new group of institutional clients following its successful completion in 1895. The firm had begun to use classical sources from Modern French, Renaissance and even Roman buildings as sources of inspiration for daring new work.

In 1877, White and McKim led their partners on a "sketching tour" of New England, visiting many of the key houses of Puritan leaders and early masterpieces of the colonial period. Their work began to incorporate influences from these buildings, contributing to the Colonial Revival.[6]

The H.A.C. Taylor house in Newport, Rhode Island (1882–1886) was the first of their designs to use overt quotations from colonial buildings. A less successful but daring variation of a formal Georgian plan was White's house for Commodore William Edgar, also in Newport (1884–86). Rather than traditional red brick or the pink pressed masonry of the Bell house, White tried a tawny, almost brown color, leaving the building neither fish nor fowl.

The William G. Low House in Bristol, Rhode Island (1886–1887), demolished in 1962, is today seen as a quintessential expression of the Shingle Style. The architectural historian Vincent Scully saw it as "at once a climax and a kind of conclusion" for McKim, since its "prototypal form ... was almost immediately to be abandoned for the more conventionally conceived columns and pediments of McKim, Mead, and White's later buildings."[7]

The partners added talented designers and associates as the 1890s loomed, with Thomas Hastings, John Carrère, Henry Bacon and Joseph M. Wells on the payroll in their expanding office. With a larger staff, each partner had a studio of designers at his disposal, similar to the organization of a modern design firm, and this increased their capacity for doing even larger projects, including the design of entire entire college campuses for Columbia University and New York University, and a massive entertainment complex at Madison Square Garden, all located in New York City.

Major works

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The original Madison Square Garden, built in 1890
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The original Penn Station in New York City, built between 1906 and 1910

McKim, Mead and White gained prominence as a cultural and artistic force through their construction of Madison Square Garden. White secured the job from the Vanderbilt family, and the other partners brought former clients into the project as investors. The extraordinary building opened its doors in 1890. What had once been a dilapidated arena for horse shows was now a multi-purpose entertainment palace, with a larger arena, a theater, apartments in a Spanish style tower, restaurants, and a roof garden with views both uptown and downtown from 34th Street. White's masterpiece was a testament to his creative imagination, and his taste for the pleasures of city life.[8]

The architects paved the way for many subsequent colleagues by fraternizing with the rich in a number of other settings similar to The Garden, enhancing their social status during the Progressive Era. McKim, Mead and White designed not only the Century Association building (1891), but also many other clubs around Manhattan: the Colony Club, the Metropolitan Club, the Harmonie Club, and the University Club of New York.

Though White's subsequent life was plagued by scandals, and McKim's by depression and the loss of his second wife, the firm continued to produce magnificent and varied work in New York and abroad.[9] They worked for the titans of industry, transportation and banking, designing not only classical buildings (the New York Herald Building, Morgan Library, Villard Houses, and Rhode Island State Capitol), but also planning factory towns (Echota, near Niagara Falls, New York; Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina; and Naugatuck, Connecticut),[10] and working on university campuses (the University of Virginia, Harvard, Adelphi University and Columbia). The magnificent Low Library (1897) at Columbia was similar to Thomas Jefferson's at the University of Virginia, where White added an academic building on the other side of the Lawn.

Some of their later, classical country houses also enhanced their reputation with wealthy oligarchs and critics alike. The Frederick Vanderbilt Mansion (1895–1898) at Hyde Park, New York and White's "Rosecliff" for Tessie Oelrichs (1898–1902) in Newport were elegant venues for the society chronicled by Edith Wharton and Henry James. Newly-wealthy Americans were seeking the right spouses for their sons and daughters, among them idle aristocrats from European families with dwindling financial resources. When called for, the firm could also deliver a house-full of continental antiques and works of art, many acquired by Stanford White from dealers abroad. Clarence Mackay'sHarbor Hill (1899–1902), demolished in 1949, was probably the most opulent of these flights of fancy. Though many are gone, some now serve new uses, such as "Florham", in Madison, New Jersey (1897–1900), now the home of Fairleigh Dickinson University.[11]

New York's City's enormous Penn Station (1906–1910) was the firm's crowning achievement, reflecting not only its commitment to new technological advances, but also to architectural history stretching back to Greek and Roman times.[12] McKim, Mead & White also designed the General Post Office Building across from Penn Station at the same time, part of which became an above-ground expansion of Penn Station in 2021.[13] The original Penn Station was demolished in 1963–1964 and replaced with a newer Madison Square Garden, in spite of large opposition to the move.[14]

Later years

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The Manhattan Municipal Building, designed principally by William M. Kendall and completed in 1915.
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The Racquet and Tennis Club, designed principally by W. Symmes Richardson and completed in 1918.
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Liggett Hall on Governors Island, designed principally by Lawrence G. White and completed in 1929.
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The National Museum of American History, initiated by Lawrence G. White, but designed principally by James K. Smith and Walker O. Cain, and completed in 1964.

In January 1906 the founders were joined by three additional partners: William Mitchell Kendall (1856 – 1941), Burt Leslie Fenner (1869 – 1926) and William Symmes Richardson (1873 – 1931). Each had worked as assistants to McKim, Mead and White, respectively, though they had been delegated executive responsibility for individual projects since 1904.[15] After a 1907 invitation to participate in the competition to design the Manhattan Municipal Building (1915), the new partners reversed the firm's long standing policy against participation in such competitions. Their entry, designed by Kendall, was successful, and the completed building was the firm's first serious entry into skyscraper design.[16][17]

The firm retained its name long after the deaths of the founders. White was murdered in 1906, McKim died in 1909 and Mead retired in 1919. Kendall and Richardson divided most design responsibilities while Fenner took on the role of chief executive.[18] Architectural historian Mosette Broderick described the design partners thusly: Kendall as "hardworking, dull and mean," Richardson as "the best designer of the three."[19] This summation of Kendall's design skills is contradicted by his buildings, such as the Butler Institute of American Art (1919); his contemporaries considered him scholarly in the way that McKim had been.[20] The recollections of employees such as Royal Cortissoz, however, confirm that his behavior towards his colleagues and subordinates could be actively malicious.[21] Leland M. Roth identified the Racquet and Tennis Club (1918), designed by Richardson, as "the last and best work" of the decade following McKim and White's deaths. Richardson here combined Italian Renaissance precedents, such as the Florentine Palazzo Antinori, with modern functionalism.[22] The final two partners, Lawrence Grant White (1887 – 1956)–Stanford White's son–and James Kellum Smith (1893 – 1961), were admitted to the partnership in 1920 and 1929, respectively.[23] In its later years the firm maintained its commitment to quality materials and workmanship, but without its earlier creative abilities. In prior years the firm had been unfairly accused of being a "plan factory," a firm which executed generic, repetitive work as quickly as possible, but after about 1920 the comparison came to be seen as apt.[24][25]

In 1914 the firm was approached by the Architectural Book Publishing Company with a proposal to publish a monograph of the firm's work. New drawings and photographs were prepared for the work, which was published in unbound, large folio installments from 1915 to 1920 as A Monograph of the Work of McKim, Mead & White, 1879–1915. With the exception of some important early works, this publication was focused on neoclassical works from the World's Columbian Exposition forward and served as a means for the later partners to curate their legacy. The Monograph also had a large influence on architects in the United States, England and elsewhere, for whom it served as a reference work. An abridged Student's Edition was published in 1925 and in 1952 they privately printed a more limited follow-up, Recent Work by the Present Partners of McKim, Mead & White, Architects. Both the Student's Edition and the unabridged Monograph have been reissued, the former by Classical America in 1981 and the latter by Dover Publications in 1990.[26]

Richardson retired in 1921 after a disabling accident and Fenner died in 1926. Teunis Jacob van der Bent (1862 – 1936), a partner since 1909, took over Fenner's management role and died a decade later. Kendall gradually withdrew from the firm during the 1930s and died in 1941, leaving control of the firm with White and Smith.[27] The firm's design efforts after World War II may be summed up by the Mead Art Building (1949) of Amherst College, a memorial to Mead. Mead and his wife had left a large sum of money to Amherst, his alma mater, for the construction of an art gallery.[28][29] The new building was assigned to Smith, who was college architect and another alumnus. According to Blair Kamin, at this point Smith and his firm "were struggling with the challenge[s] posed by...modernism," resulting in a building which attempts gamely to meld Beaux-Arts and modernist principles but fails at both.[30] Shortly before White's death in 1956, he won for the firm the National Museum of American History (1964) in Washington, DC. His grandson, architect Samuel White, described the commission as "[h]is personal Mount Everest."[31] The museum, among the final works initiated under the name McKim, Mead & White, was designed principally by Smith and Walker O. Cain. Here as at Amherst they attempted to meld traditionalism and modernism with little success. Martin Moeller, then curator of the National Building Museum, described it as "neither convincingly modern nor credibly neoclassical."[32]

Successors

Smith, the last surviving partner, died in February 1961. The surviving associates, Milton Bode Steinmann (1899 – 1987), Alexander Stevenson Corrigill (1891 – 1961), Walker Oscar Cain (1915 – 1993) and Cornelius John White (1894 – 1962)–no relation to Stanford White–formed a new partnership under the name Steinmann, Corrigill, Cain & White.[33] After the deaths of Corrigill and White shortly thereafter, the firm was reduced first to Steinmann, Cain & White and second to Steinmann & Cain. Steinmann retired in 1967 and the firm continued under the leadership of Cain as Walker O. Cain & Associates.[34] In 1978 the firm was reorganized as Cain, Farrell & Bell to include two new partners, including Byron Bell. In the 1990s Bell changed the name of the firm first to Bell Larson and second to Bell Larson Raucher, acknowledging the contributions of partners Douglas Larson and Alice Raucher. At the turn of the millennium Bell downplayed his firm's relation to its now-distant origins, observing that "[i]t's a different time. That was a giant firm, a major force in the world. Our firm has 10 people."[31] A late work of the firm is Peterson Hall (1999) of the Council on Foreign Relations, a New Classical townhouse on East 68th Street in Manhattan.[35] The firm was later renamed Bell Donnelly and lastly to Byron Bell Architects and Planners in 2012.[36]

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Selected works

New York City

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New England, Upstate New York, and Long Island

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New Jersey

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Washington, D.C.

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Other U.S. locations

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Other countries

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Notable architects who worked for McKim, Mead & White

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References

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