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The
following article by S. Allen Chambers, AArchitects
and Architecture@ is excerpted
from the upcoming West Virginia Encyclopedia. Chambers, an
architectural historian, was associated with the Historic American
Buildings Survey for many years. He is co-author of What Style Is It?,
the National Trust for Historic Preservation's manual of American
architecture, and author of National Landmarks, America's Treasures,
the definitive guide to over 2,000 National Historic Landmarks. He has
also written Buildings of West Virginia, part of the multi-volume
Buildings of the United States series sponsored by the Society of
Architectural Historians.
When West Virginia=s
legislators first met in 1863, they appointed a committee to oversee the
design of a state seal. According to the written description, one side
depicts AA
cultivated slope with the log farmhouse peculiar to this region.@
Peculiar to this region or not, log houses were certainly the prevalent
building type from the earliest days of settlement until long
afterwards.
Logs weren=t
used only for houses. In July 1788 Francis Asbury wrote in his diary
that he Ahad
large congregations at Rehoboth.@
Now a lovingly-preserved Methodist shrine, this small log church still
stands, covered with a protective canopy, in Monroe County.
Log buildings ranged from the simple to the elaborate. Some were
constructed from written specifications that might even include
directions regarding the type of notching. Log construction persisted
for many years in isolated parts of the state, as evidenced in 1872 in
McDowell County, when commissioners ordered that a new courthouse, the
county=s
second, be of log construction. Throughout the state, log buildings
remain in excellent condition today, many covered from the beginning
with clapboards.
Sawmills, brickyards, and quarries provided other building materials.
In 1798, a visitor to Wheeling described Moses Shepherd=s
new dwelling as Aone
of the best built and handsomest stone houses . . . on this side of the
mountains.@
With its graceful Georgian proportions and finely crafted details,
Monument Place, as it came to be called, would have been at home on either
side of the mountains. It stood on the same site where Moses=s
father had built a log stockade, Fort Shepherd, a few decades before.
Old Stone Church in Lewisburg, another late 18th-century building, tells
eloquently of its significance by its very name.
By this time Samuel Washington had already built his own stone
mansion, Harewood, in the Eastern Panhandle. In 1794 its beautifully
paneled walls witnessed the wedding of Dolly Payne Todd and James
Madison. Early in the 19th century, other Washington family members
built even larger houses, of brick, near Harewood on tracts that a
teen-aged George Washington had originally surveyed for Lord Fairfax.
Blakeley and Claymont Court still stand across from each other on the
meandering Bullskin Run.
Far to the south, mineral springs in Greenbrier and Monroe counties
were already attracting visitors in the early 1800s. As at Berkeley
Springs, health and pleasure seekers were first housed in log
structures. By 1840 the management at Sweet Springs opened a new
hostelry so attractive that its design has often been attributed to
Thomas Jefferson, even though built after his death. As it turns out,
William B. Philips, one of the talented builders at Jefferson=s
University of Virginia, designed and built the hotel which still stands.
Sweet Springs was soon eclipsed by the phenomenal Grand Central Hotel at
nearby White Sulphur.
Just before the Civil War, the State of Virginia began construction
of the Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum at Weston. When the hospital's
main building was finally completed in 1880, its proponents bragged that
it was the largest cut-stone building in the United States. No longer
used as a hospital, the sprawling building still dominates its environs.
The Weston hospital was designed by R. Snowden Andrews, a Baltimore
architect, but other antebellum institutions looked westward for their
architects. Cincinnati=s
James Keys Wilson provided Alexander Campbell with a Gothic Revival
design for Bethany College in Brooke County. Begun in 1858 and completed
in 1871, Old Main was a remarkable achievement for its time and place.
It remains the centerpiece of one of America=s
most idyllic campuses.
Far to the east, the United States Armory at Harpers Ferry was not so
idyllic, certainly not in October 1859 when John Brown attempted to
seize it. The fire-engine house where he was captured has been moved and
rebuilt no fewer than four times, testament to its status as a shrine.
Brown's action helped precipitate events that led to the formation of
West Virginia, and some of these took place in another structure that
the federal government had recently built. Wheeling's post office and
custom house, a stone Renaissance Revival building, soon came to play a
far more important role than architect Ammi B. Young could have
anticipated, when it housed delegates who met in 1861 to create the new
state. Now handsomely restored, it is known as West Virginia
Independence Hall.
Another architectural testament to the separation of one state from
the other lies close by. Cast-iron fronts of the List Building were
fabricated in Wheeling, but at different times, since the building was
erected in several stages. The base of one pilaster is labeled ASweeneys
& Co. Wheeling. Va.,@
the base of the adjoining pilaster bears the label ASweeney
& Son. Wheeling W.Va.@
Wheeling could build almost anything, thanks in great measure to its
talented cadre of German craftsmen and builders. Known as the Nail City,
it also became famous for its pressed, stamped metal AWheeling
Ceilings.@
Rows and rows of townhouses still exist in Wheeling, the only city of
any real urban character when West Virginia was created.
Three of the new state=s
first priorities were to provide for a state university, a state
penitentiary, and to decide where to locate the capital. After
alternating between Wheeling and Charleston, the latter city was finally
selected as the permanent seat of government, and it soon began to grown
accordingly. Charleston=s
1870s Kanawha Presbyterian Church was designed by another Cincinnati
architect, M.E. Anderson, and its interior is lit by richly colored
stained-glass windows by Tiffany.
West Virginia University, located in Morgantown, has grown over the
years to become a fascinating architectural amalgam. One of the earliest
architects associated with the university was Elmer Forrest Jacobs, who
also embellished Morgantown with some of its finest Victorian-era
mansions and commercial structures. Jacobs was the first, and for many
years the only, West Virginia member of the American Institute of
Architects.
The original architect for the State Penitentiary, a grim foreboding
Gothic pile at Moundsville is believed to be Joseph Sinclair Fairfax. At
the turn of the 20th century, Wheeling architects Franzheim and Giesey
designed a huge addition. Ironically, West Virginia=s
Latinate state motto, which translates as AMountaineers
[are] always free,@
appears high above the prison=s
battlemented entrance.
Edward Bates Franzheim, Millard F. Giesey, and their sometime partner
Frederic F. Faris, were the state=s
leading architectural triumvirate for many years. Though their work
centered in the Wheeling area, they designed a courthouse for Mineral
County, and did several buildings at the turn of the century in Marion
County=s
overnight oil boomtown, Mannington.
Parkersburg, a city that had already grown rich on oil, was large
enough to have its own architects. Parkersburg=s
Juliana and Ann streets contain the state=s
most concentrated grouping of Italianate, Second Empire, and Queen Anne
mansions, all typical of upscale Victorian-era design. Many were
designed by Richard H. Adair and William Howe Patton. H. Rus Warne, a
Parkersburg native, practiced in his home town only briefly before
moving to Charleston. He became one of the state=s
most important early 20th-century architects, and founded a firm that
still exists. Two of his most interesting and unusual commissions were
for the 1907 Jamestown Exposition, held in Norfolk, Virginia. His
colonial-revival West Virginia Building remains standing in Virginia,
but his ACoal
Column,@
an obelisk constructed of coal from 19 different West Virginia seams, is
gone.
Huntington, Collis P. Huntington=s
planned town on the Ohio at the western terminus of his Chesapeake &
Ohio Railroad, became headquarters for many coal companies with the
development of the southern coalfields. Its downtown skyline grew tall,
and Fifth Avenue became a street of churches, where Gothic towers share
architectural honors with Romanesque arches and Ionic porticos.
With coal came the company town, the most maligned and most
misunderstood category of West Virginia architecture. Castigated as
monotonous, poorly constructed and horribly located, some company towns
were all of the above. Others were model communities. At Gary, in
McDowell County, the U.S. Coal and Coke Company maintained an in-house
staff of architects and engineers who, among other duties, designed
houses, churches, stores, and even baseball diamonds. No matter that the
drawing of an onion dome for a proposed eastern Orthodox Church appears
more like something from Vidalia than from Muscovy, the company tried
earnestly to provide its workforce with amenities far beyond basic
requirements.
Many coal-company owners lived outside the state, and built palatial
houses elsewhere with their West Virginia profits. One who stayed home
was James E. Watson, who built High Gate in Fairmont. The state=s
most remarkable Tudor Revival mansion, it was designed by Philadelphia
architect Horace Trumbauer. Bluefield architect Alex B. Mahood, trained
at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris, designed mansions for magnates of
the southern coalfields, and embellished Bluefield=s
residential districts with some of the grandest Georgian Revival houses
in the state. Bluefield is also home to a small building that is among
West Virginia=s
architectural jewels. Sacred Heart Church is one of several projects
during the 1920s that resulted from the inspired partnership of John J.
Swint, Roman Catholic Bishop of West Virginia, and Edward J. Weber,
architect of Pittsburgh. Wheeling=s
St. Joseph Cathedral, a magnificent stone edifice that takes its
architectural cues from Lombard Romanesque churches of medieval Italy,
is the capstone of their remarkable collaboration.
The Depression of the 1930s hit West Virginia hard. Yet, some of our
most significant and important buildings were products of this pivotal
decade. Cass Gilbert=s
magnificent State Capitol in Charleston had been started in 1924, but
was not completed until 1932. Its main wing follows the architectural
pattern established by the U.S. Capitol, though its gilded dome rises
five feet higher. Next door is the Executive Mansion, designed by
Charleston architect Walter F. Martens.
At the encouragement of Eleanor Roosevelt the nation's first
subsistence homestead project was created in West Virginia. The federal
government purchased the Arthur family farm in Preston County. A number
of houses, all with enough land for a vegetable garden, are still lived
in by the families for whom they were built. Two other West Virginia
communities were created under the same auspices, Eleanor in Putnam
County and Tygart Valley Homestead at Daly in Randolph County.
Also during the Depression, a number of state parks were developed,
with design assistance from the National Park Service and building
assistance from the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC). Log cabins,
concession stands, picnic pavilions, stables, and other structures
reflected the intentionally rustic flavor then deemed appropriate for
park design. Pioneers of the olden days would have deplored the round
logs, heavy chinking, and chopped-off ends of CCC work. After more than
a half century, these ALincoln
Log@
buildings in parks such as Babcock in Fayette County, Watoga in
Pocahontas, and Lost River in Hardy, seem just right for their woodsy
settings. Hawks Nest, in Fayette County, has several Depression-era
buildings along with a 1960s lodge designed by the well-known Cambridge,
Massachusetts, firm TAC: The Architects Collaborative. The lodge, an
angular composition of poured-in-place concrete and brick, has yet to
appear as comfortable in its spectacular natural setting as its 1930s
companions.
Modern architecture in West Virginia has kept up the pace of
excellence that earlier generations established. Walter Martens and his
son Robert, with help from Eliel Saarinen, gave Charleston=s
riverfront a superb International Style skyscraper just before World War
II when the United Carbon Building was completed. A wing of the
Huntington Museum of Art, built in 1968-70, is the last work of the
internationally-famous architect Walter Gropius. In 1975, Clarksburg
opened a new public library designed by Marcel Breuer, adding another
distinctive element to its architecturally rich downtown. In the 1980s
Michael Graves designed one of his signature buildings for the Erickson
Alumni Center at West Virginia University. Perhaps the most unusual of
the state=s
religious structures is in Marshall County, near Moundsville. At the end
of one of West Virginia=s
most tortuous country roads stands a splendid vision of Indian Hindu
architecture: the Hare Krishna=s
Palace of Gold. Tenderly crafted in the 1970s by disciples of the faith
using Ahow
to@
books, it incorporates marble, semi-precious stones, gold leaf, and
stained-glass. Charleston=s
brand new U.S. Courthouse by architects Skidmore, Owings & Merrill
combines state-of-the-art functionality with a design based on one of
the world=s
oldest architectural styles. Its huge lotus columns harken back directly
to the times of the Pharaohs.
Architecture is alive and well in West Virginia. The framers of the
State Seal would be happy to know that many of the old log cabins
peculiar to the region still stand, now alongside a myriad of buildings
representing every conceivable type and style, and built of materials
they could not have imagined.
S. Allen Chambers
Washington D.C.
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