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Ellis F Lawrence

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Nationality
  
American

Occupation
  
Architect


Name
  
Ellis Lawrence

Role
  
Architect

Ellis F. Lawrence wwworegonencyclopediaorgmediauploadsLawrence

Born
  
November 13, 1879 (
1879-11-13
)
Malden, Massachusetts, U.S.

Died
  
February 27, 1946, Portland, Oregon, United States

Education
  
Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Buildings
  
Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art, Elsinore Theatre

Structures
  
University of Oregon Library a, Jordan Schnitzer Museum, Elsinore Theatre, Mahonia Hall, McArthur Court

Similar People
  
William Holford - Baron Ho, Pietro Belluschi, Phil Knight

Uo presentation of the ellis f lawrence award


Ellis Fuller Lawrence (November 13, 1879 – February 27, 1946) was an American architect who worked primarily in the U.S. state of Oregon. In 1914, he became the co-founder and first dean of the University of Oregon's School of Architecture and Allied Arts, a position he held until his death.

Contents

Ellis F. Lawrence The Life and Work of Architect Ellis F Lawrence Restore Oregon

Lawrence concurrently served as campus architect for the University of Oregon and designed many campus buildings, including Knight Library and the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art. Lawrence Hall on the university campus (which replaced his Architecture and Art Building of 1923) was named in his honor in 1956. His body of over 500 projects includes churches, residences, commercial and industrial buildings, funerary buildings, multi-family residences, and public buildings.

In 1988, the private residence he designed for Thomas A. Livesley, a prominent Salem, Oregon businessman and civic leader, was purchased through private donations and donated to the state and now serves as the Governor's official residence (Mahonia Hall).

Biography

Ellis F. Lawrence was born in Malden, Massachusetts and received his secondary education at Phillips Academy, Andover, graduating in 1897. He received both his bachelor's and master's degrees at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), the first school of architecture in the United States. After graduation in 1902, Lawrence worked for several architectural firms then traveled in Europe. He was employed by the Boston architectural firm Codman & Despradelle in 1905.

In 1906, Codman & Despradelle (Boston), sent Lawrence to San Francisco to commence work there, but the 1906 San Francisco earthquake convinced him to stay in Portland, Oregon where he had stopped on the way. He lived in Portland the rest of his life and commuted to his work as dean and campus architect in Eugene.

He was associated with several Oregon-based architecture firms: MacNaughton, Raymond & Lawrence (1906–1910); Lawrence & Holford (1913–1928); Lawrence, Holford, Allyn & Bean (1928–1933); and Lawrence, Holford, & Allyn (1933–1941). Lawrence's final partnership, Lawrence & Lawrence (1944–1946), was with his son, Henry Abbott Lawrence.

Eugene, Oregon

  • Alpha Phi Sorority House, University of Oregon
  • Chambers House
  • Knight Library, University of Oregon
  • Hope Abbey Mausoleum
  • Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art, University of Oregon
  • Women's Memorial Quadrangle (includes Gerlinger Hall, Susan Campbell Hall, and Hendricks Hall), University of Oregon
  • Portland, Oregon

  • Belle Court Apartments
  • Cumberland Apartments
  • Henry B. Dickson House
  • Lewis T. Gilliland House
  • Albert, Oscar, and Linda Heintz House
  • Dr. Harry M. Hendershott House
  • James Hickey House
  • Irvington Tennis Club
  • William H. Lewis Model House
  • Alexander D. McDougall House
  • Natt and Christena McDougall House
  • Henry B. Miller House
  • Paul C. Murphy House
  • Isaac Neuberger House
  • Harry T. Nicolai House
  • John V. G. Posey House
  • O. L. Price House
  • Samuel G. Reed House
  • Maurice Seitz House
  • Blaine Smith House
  • Stanley C. E. Smith House
  • Arthur Champlin Spencer and Margaret Fenton Spencer House
  • John A. Sprouse Jr. House
  • Alice Henderson Strong House
  • Fred E. Taylor House
  • Troy Laundry Building
  • Wells-Guthrie House
  • James E. Wheeler House
  • Other Oregon NRHP structures

  • Old Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority House, Corvallis
  • James M. and Paul R. Kelty House, Lafayette
  • Leaburg Powerhouse, part of the Leaburg Hydroelectric Project Historic District, Leaburg
  • Hall–Chaney House, Milwaukie
  • Elsinore Theater, Salem
  • Mahonia Hall, (Oregon Governor's mansion), Salem
  • Other buildings

  • Baker Middle School, Baker City
  • Cooley House, Lewis and Clark College, Portland
  • Franklin Building, Salem, contributing structure to the Salem Downtown Historic District
  • Martin House, Eugene
  • McArthur Court, University of Oregon, Eugene
  • Mount Crest Abbey Mausoleum, Salem
  • Ocean View Abbey Mausoleum, Astoria
  • Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity house, Eugene
  • References

    Ellis F. Lawrence Wikipedia