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Daniel Burnham

Daniel Hudson Burnham FAIA (September 4, 1846 – June 1, 1912) was an American architect and urban designer. A proponent of the Beaux-Arts movement, he may have been, "the most successful power broker the American architectural profession has ever produced."[1]

Daniel Burnham

Burnham in 1899
Born
Daniel Hudson Burnham

(1846-09-04)September 4, 1846
DiedJune 1, 1912(1912-06-01) (aged 65)
OccupationArchitect
PracticeBurnham and Root
D. H. Burnham & Company
BuildingsReliance Building, Flatiron Building, Union Station (Washington, D.C.), Ellicott Square Building
ProjectsPlan of Chicago
World's Columbian Exposition

A successful Chicago architect, he was selected as Director of Works for the 1892–93 World's Columbian Exposition, colloquially referred to as "The White City". He had prominent roles in the creation of master plans for the development of a number of cities, including the Plan of Chicago, and plans for Manila, Baguio and downtown Washington, D.C. He also designed several famous buildings, including a number of notable skyscrapers in Chicago, the Flatiron Building of triangular shape in New York City,[2] Union Station in Washington D.C., London's Selfridges department store, and San Francisco's Merchants Exchange.

Although best known for his skyscrapers, city planning, and for the White City, almost one third of Burnham's total output – 14.7 million square feet (1.37 million square meters) – consisted of buildings for shopping.[3]

Early life edit

 
Burnham's childhood home in Henderson, New York

Burnham was born in Henderson, New York, the son of Elizabeth Keith (Weeks) and Edwin Arnold Burnham.[4] He was raised in the teachings of the Swedenborgian, also called The New Church[5] which ingrained in him the strong belief that man should strive to be of service to others.[6] At the age of eight, Burnham moved to Chicago[4] and his father established there a wholesale drug business which became a success.[7]

Burnham was not a good student, but he was good at drawing. He moved to the eastern part of the country at the age of 18 to be taught by private tutors in order to pass the admissions examinations for Harvard and Yale, failing both apparently because of a bad case of test anxiety. In 1867, when he was 21 he returned to Chicago and took an apprenticeship as a draftsman under William LeBaron Jenney of the architectural firm Loring & Jenney. Architecture seemed to be the calling he was looking for, and he told his parents that he wanted to become "the greatest architect in the city or country".[7]

Nevertheless, the young Burnham still had a streak of wanderlust in him, and in 1869 he left his apprenticeship to go to Nevada with friends to try mining gold, at which he failed. He then ran for the Nevada state legislature and failed to be elected. Broke, he returned again to Chicago and took a position with the architect L. G. Laurean. When the Great Chicago Fire hit the city in October 1871, it seemed as if there would be endless work for architects, but Burnham chose to strike out again, becoming first a salesman of plate glass windows, then a druggist. He failed at the first and quit the second. He later remarked on "a family tendency to get tired of doing the same thing for very long".[7]

Career edit

 
The Montauk Building, c.1886

At age 26, Burnham moved on to the Chicago offices of Carter, Drake and Wight where he met future business partner John Wellborn Root, who was 21 and four years younger than Burnham. The two became friends and then opened an architectural office together in 1873. Unlike his previous ventures, Burnham stuck to this one.[7] Burnham and Root went on to become a very successful firm. Their first major commission came from John B. Sherman, the superintendent of the massive Union Stock Yards in Chicago, which provided the livelihood – directly or indirectly – for one-fifth of the city's population. Sherman hired the firm to build for him a mansion on Prairie Avenue at Twenty-first Street among the mansions of Chicago's other merchant barons. Root made the initial design. Burnham refined it and supervised the construction. It was on the construction site that he met Sherman's daughter, Margaret, whom Burnham married in 1876 after a short courtship.[8] Sherman commissioned other projects from Burnham and Root, including the Stone Gate, an entry portal to the stockyards which became a Chicago landmark.[9]

In 1881, the firm was commissioned to build the Montauk Building, which was then the tallest building in Chicago at the time. To solve the problem of the city's water-saturated sandy soil and bedrock 125 feet (38 m) below the surface, Root came up with a plan to dig down to a "hardpan" layer of clay on which was laid a 2-foot (0.61 m) thick pad of concrete overlaid with steel rails placed at right-angles to form a lattice "grill", which was then filled with Portland cement. This "floating foundation" was, in effect, artificially-created bedrock on which the building could be constructed. The completed building was so tall compared to existing buildings that it defied easy description, and the name "skyscraper" was coined to describe it. Thomas Talmadge, an architect and architectural critic said of the building, "What Chartres was to the Gothic cathedral, the Montauk Block was to the high commercial building."[10]

 
Masonic Temple Building in Chicago

Burnham and Root went on to build more of the first American skyscrapers, such as the Masonic Temple Building[11] in Chicago. Measuring 21 stories and 302 feet, the temple held claims as the tallest building of its time, but was torn down in 1939.

The talents of the two partners were complementary. Both men were artists and gifted architects, but Root had a knack for conceiving elegant designs and was able to see almost at once the totality of the necessary structure. Burnham, on the other hand, excelled at bringing in clients and supervising the building of Root's designs. They each appreciated the value of the other to the firm. Burnham also took steps to ensure their employees were happy: he installed a gym in the office, gave fencing lessons and let employees play handball at lunch time. Root, a pianist and organist, gave piano recitals in the office on a rented piano. Paul Starrett, who joined the office in 1888 said "The office was full of a rush of work, but the spirit of the place was delightfully free and easy and human in comparison to other offices I had worked in."[12]

Although the firm was extremely successful, there were several notable setbacks. One of their designs, the Grannis Block in which their office was located, burned down in 1885 necessitating a move to the top floor of The Rookery, another of their designs. Then, in 1888, a Kansas City, Missouri, hotel they had designed collapsed during construction, killing one man and injuring several others. At the coroner's inquest, the building's design came in for criticism. The negative publicity shook and depressed Burnham. Then in a further setback, Burnham and Root also failed to win the commission for design of the giant Auditorium Building, which went instead to their rivals, Adler & Sullivan.[13]

On January 15, 1891, while the firm was deep in meetings for the design of the World's Columbian Exposition, Root died after a three-day course of pneumonia. As Root had been only 41 years old, his death stunned both Burnham and Chicago society.[14] After Root's death, the firm of Burnham and Root, which had had tremendous success producing modern buildings as part of the Chicago School of architecture, was renamed D.H. Burnham & Company. After that the firm continued its successes and Burnham extended his reach into city design.[15]

 
Court of Honor and Grand Basin — World's Columbian Exposition
 
The Agricultural Building at night (1893)

World's Columbian Exposition edit

Burnham and Root had accepted responsibility to oversee the design and construction of the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago's then-desolate Jackson Park on the south lakefront. The largest world's fair to that date (1893), it celebrated the 400-year anniversary of Christopher Columbus's famous voyage. After Root's sudden and unexpected death, a team of distinguished American architects and landscape architects, including Burnham, Frederick Law Olmsted, Charles McKim, Richard M. Hunt, George B. Post, and Henry Van Brunt radically changed Root's modern and colorful style to a Classical Revival style. Only the pavilion by Louis Sullivan was designed in a non-Classical style. To ensure the project's success, Burnham moved his personal residence into a wooden headquarters, called "the shanty" on the burgeoning fairgrounds to improve his ability to oversee construction.[16] The construction of the fair faced huge financial and logistical hurdles, including a worldwide financial panic and an extremely tight timeframe, to open on time.

Considered the first example of a comprehensive planning document in the nation, the fairground featured grand boulevards, classical building facades, and lush gardens. Often called the "White City," it popularized neoclassical architecture in a monumental, yet rational Beaux-Arts style. As a result of the fair's popularity, architects across the U.S. were said to be inundated with requests by clients to incorporate similar elements into their designs.

The control of the fair's design and construction was a matter of dispute between various entities, particularly the National Commission which was headed by George R. Davis, who served as Director-General of the fair. It was also headed by the Exposition Company which consisted of the city's leading merchants, led by Lyman Gage which had raised the money needed to build the fair, and Burnham as Director of Works. In addition the large number of committees made it difficult for construction to move forward at the pace needed to meet the opening day deadline.[17] After a major accident which destroyed one of the fair's premiere buildings, Burnham moved to take tighter control of construction, distributing a memo to all the fair's department heads which read "I have assumed personal control of the active work within the grounds of the World's Columbian Exposition ... Henceforward, and until further notice, you will report to and receive orders from me exclusively."[18]

After the fair opened, Olmsted, who designed the fairgrounds, said of Burnham that "too high an estimate cannot be placed on the industry, skill and tact with which this result was secured by the master of us all."[19] Burnham himself rejected the suggestion that Root had been largely responsible for the fair's design, writing afterwards:

What was done up to the time of his death was the faintest suggestion of a plan ... The impression concerning his part has been gradually built up by a few people, close friends of his and mostly women, who naturally after the Fair proved beautiful desired to more broadly identify his memory with it.[20]

Post-fair architecture edit

Nevertheless, Burnham's reputation was considerably enhanced by the success and beauty of the fair. Harvard and Yale both presented him honorary master's degrees ameliorating his having failed their entrance exams in his youth. The common perception while Root was alive was that he was the architectural artist and Burnham had run the business side of the firm; Root's death, while devastating to Burnham personally, allowed him to develop as an architect in a way it might not have, had Root lived on.[21]

In 1901, Burnham designed the Flatiron Building in New York City, a trailblazing structure that utilized an internal steel skeleton to provide structural integrity; the exterior masonry walls were not load-bearing. This allowed the building to rise to 22 stories.[22] The design was that of a vertical Renaissance palazzo with Beaux-Arts styling, divided like a classical column, into base, shaft and capital.[23][24]

Other Burnham post-fair designs included the Land Title Building (1897) in Philadelphia, the first major building in that city not designed by local architects, and known as "the finest example of early skyscraper design" there,[25] John Wanamaker's Department Store (1902–1911) in Philadelphia, now Macy's, which is built around a central court,[26] Wanamaker's Annex (1904, addition: 1907–1910), in New York City, a 19-story full-block building which contains as much floorspace as the Empire State Building,[27] the neo-classical Gimbels Department Store (1908–1912) also in New York, now the Manhattan Mall, with a completely new facade,[28] the stunningly Art Deco Mount Wilson Observatory in the hills above Pasadena, California,[20] and Filene's Department Store (1912) in Boston, the last major building designed by Burnham.[29]

The Philippines edit

In 1904, Burnham accepted a commission from Philippines Governor-General William Howard Taft. He had the opportunity to redesign Manila and plan a summer capital to be constructed in Baguio. Due to the Philippines status as a territory, Burnham was able to pursue his vision without having to win local approval. Altogether the project took six months to design, with only six weeks spent in the Philippines. During his time there, Burnham did not interact with Filipino locals concerning the project. After his plans were approved by William Cameron Forbes, Commissioner of Commerce and Police in the Philippines, Burnham was allowed to choose the principal architect, William E. Parsons. Burnham then departed to keep tabs on the project from the mainland. Burnham's plans emphasized improved sanitation, a cohesive aesthetic (Mission Revival), and visual reminders of government authority. In Manila, wide boulevards radiated out from the capital building, while in Baguio government structures loomed from the cliffs above the town. The land for the Baguio project, 14,000 acres (5,700 ha) in total, was seized from local Igorots with approval of the Philippine Supreme Court. In Manila, neighborhoods ravaged by the war for independence were left untouched while a luxury hotel, casino, and boat clubs were designed for visiting mainland dignitaries.[30]

 
Title page of first edition

City planning and the Plan of Chicago edit

Initiated in 1906 and published in 1909, Burnham and his co-author Edward H. Bennett prepared a Plan of Chicago which laid out plans for the future of the city. It was the first comprehensive plan for the controlled growth of an American city and an outgrowth of the City Beautiful movement. The plan included ambitious proposals for the lakefront and river. It also asserted that every citizen should be within walking distance of a park. Sponsored by the Commercial Club of Chicago,[31] Burnham donated his services in hopes of furthering his own cause.

Building off plans and conceptual designs from the World's Fair for the south lakefront,[32] Burnham envisioned Chicago as a "Paris on the Prairie". French-inspired public works constructions, fountains and boulevards radiating from a central, domed municipal palace became Chicago's new backdrop. Though only parts of the plan were actually implemented, it set the standard for urban design, anticipating the future need to control urban growth and continuing to influence the development of Chicago long after Burnham's death.

Plans in additional cities edit

 
Burnham and Bennett's plan for San Francisco

Burnham's city planning projects did not stop at Chicago. Burnham had previously contributed to plans for cities such as Cleveland (the 1903 Group Plan),[33] San Francisco (1905),[34] Manila (1905),[35] and Baguio in the Philippines, details of which appear in the 1909 Plan of Chicago publication. His plans for the redesign of San Francisco were delivered to the Board of Supervisors in September 1905,[36] but in the haste to rebuild the city after the 1906 earthquake and fires Burnham's plans were ultimately ignored. In the Philippines, Burnham's Plan for Manila never materialized due to the outbreak of World War II and the relocation of the capital to another city after the war. Some components of the plan, however, did come into fruition including the shore road which became Dewey Boulevard (now known as Roxas Boulevard) and the various neoclassical government buildings around Luneta Park, which very much resemble a miniature version of Washington, D.C., in their arrangement.

In Washington, D.C., Burnham did much to shape the 1901 McMillan Plan which led to the completion of the overall design of the National Mall. The Senate Park Commission, or McMillan Commission established by Michigan Senator James McMillan, brought together Burnham and three of his colleagues from the World's Columbian Exposition: architect Charles Follen McKim, landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted Jr., and sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens. Going well beyond Pierre L'Enfant's original vision for the city, the plan provided for the extension of the Mall beyond the Washington Monument to a new Lincoln Memorial and a "pantheon" that eventually materialized as the Jefferson Memorial. This plan involved significant reclamation of land from swamp and the Potomac River and the relocation of an existing railroad station, which was replaced by Burnham's design for Union Station.[37] As a result of his service on the McMillan Commission, in 1910 Burnham was appointed a member and first chairman of the United States Commission of Fine Arts helping to ensure implementation of the McMillan Plan's vision. Burnham served on the commission until his death in 1912.[38]

Influence edit

In his career after the fair, Burnham became one of the country's most prominent advocates for the Beaux-Arts movement as well as the revival of Neo-classical architecture which began with the fair.[25] Much of Burnham's work was based on the classical style of Greece and Rome. In his 1924 autobiography, Louis Sullivan, one of the leading architects of the Chicago School, but one who had a difficult relationship with Burnham over an extended period of time, criticized Burnham for what Sullivan viewed as his lack of original expression and dependence on classicism.[39] Sullivan went on to claim that "the damage wrought by the World's Fair will last for half a century from its date, if not longer"[40] – a sentiment edged with bitterness, as corporate America of the early 20th century had demonstrated a strong preference for Burnham's architectural style over Sullivan's.

 
Burnham c.early 1900s

Burnham is famously quoted as saying, "Make no little plans. They have no magic to stir men's blood and probably will not themselves be realized." This slogan has been taken to capture the essence of Burnham's spirit.[41][42]

A man of influence, Burnham was considered the pre-eminent architect in America at the start of the 20th century. He held many positions during his lifetime, including the presidency of the American Institute of Architects.[43] Other notable architects began their careers under his aegis, such as Joseph W. McCarthy. Several of his descendants have worked as influential architects and planners in the United States, including his son, Daniel Burnham Jr., and grandchildren Burnham Kelly and Margaret Burnham Geddes.

Personal life edit

Burnham married Margaret Sherman, the daughter of his first major client, John B. Sherman, on January 20, 1876. They first met on the construction site of her father's house. Her father had a house built for the couple to live in. During their courtship, there was a scandal in which Burnham's older brother was accused of having forged checks. Burnham immediately went to John Sherman and offered to break the engagement as a matter of honor but Sherman rejected the offer, saying "There is a black sheep in every family." However, Sherman remained wary of his son-in-law, who he thought drank too much.[44]

Burnham and Margaret remained married for the rest of his life. They had five children, two daughters and three sons, including Daniel Burnham Jr. born in February 1886,[45] who became an architect and urban planner like his father. He worked in his father's firm until 1917, and served as the Director of Public Works for the 1933-34 Chicago World's Fair, known as the "Century of Progress".

The Burnham family lived in Chicago until 1886, when he purchased a 16-room farmhouse and estate on Lake Michigan in the suburb of Evanston, Illinois.[46][47][48][49] Burnham had become wary of Chicago which he felt was becoming dirtier and more dangerous as its population increased. Burnham explained to his mother, whom he did not tell of the move in advance, "I did it, because I can no longer bear to have my children on the streets of Chicago..."[45] When Burnham moved into "the shanty" in Jackson Park to better supervise construction of the fair, his wife, Margaret and their children remained in Evanston.[46]

Beliefs edit

Burnham was an early environmentalist, writing: "Up to our time, strict economy in the use of natural resources has not been practiced, but it must be henceforth unless we are immoral enough to impair conditions in which our children are to live," although he also believed the automobile would be a positive environmental factor, with the end of horse-based transportation bringing "a real step in civilization ... With no smoke, no gases, no litter of horses, your air and streets will be clean and pure. This means, does it not, that the health and spirits of men will be better?" Like many men of his time, he also showed an interest in the supernatural, saying "If I were able to take the time, I believe that I could prove the continuation of life beyond the grave, reasoning from the necessity, philosophically speaking, of a belief in an absolute and universal power."[50]

Death edit

 
Daniel Burnham's headstone in Graceland Cemetery, Chicago, Illinois

When Burnham was in his fifties, his health began to decline. He developed colitis and in 1909 was diagnosed with diabetes, which affected his circulatory system and led to an infection in his foot which was to continue for the remainder of his life.[51]

On April 14, 1912, Burnham and his wife were aboard the RMS Olympic of the White Star Line, traveling to Europe to tour Heidelberg, Germany. When he attempted to send a telegram to his friend Frank Millet who was traveling the opposite direction, from Europe to the United States, on the RMS Titanic, he learned that the ship had sunk in an accident and Millet did not survive. Burnham died only 47 days later[52] from colitis complicated by his diabetes and food poisoning from a meal eaten in Heidelberg.[53][54]

At the time of his death, D.H. Burnham and Co. was the world's largest architectural firm. Even legendary architect Frank Lloyd Wright, although strongly critical of Burnham's Beaux Arts European influences, still admired him as a man and eulogized him, saying: "[Burnham] made masterful use of the methods and men of his time ...[As] an enthusiastic promoter of great construction enterprises ...his powerful personality was supreme." The successor firm to Burnham's practice was Graham, Anderson, Probst & White, which continued in some form until 2006.[55] Burnham was interred at Graceland Cemetery in Chicago.[56]

Memorials edit

Tributes to Burnham include Burnham Park and Daniel Burnham Court in Chicago, Burnham Park in Baguio in the Philippines, Daniel Burnham Court in San Francisco (formerly Hemlock Street between Van Ness Avenue and Franklin Street), the annual Daniel Burnham Award for a Comprehensive Plan (run by the American Planning Association),[57] and the Burnham Memorial Competition which was held in 2009 to create a memorial to Burnham and his Plan of Chicago.[58] Collections of Burnham's personal and professional papers, photographs, and other archival materials are held by the Ryerson & Burnham Libraries at the Art Institute of Chicago.

In addition, the Reliance Building in Chicago which was designed by Burnham and Root, is now the Hotel Burnham, although Root was the primary architect before his death in 1891.

Notable commissions edit

Chicago edit

Cincinnati edit

  • Union Savings Bank and Trust Building (later the Fifth Third Union Trust Building, the Bartlett Building and now the Renaissance Hotel, 1901)[61]
  • Tri-State Building (1902)[61]
  • First National Bank Building (later the Clopay Building and now the Fourth & Walnut Center, 1904)
  • Fourth National Bank Building (1904)[61]

Detroit edit

Indianapolis edit

New York edit

Philadelphia edit

Pittsburgh edit

San Francisco edit

Washington, D.C. edit

Others edit

 
Burnham's Plan for Manila

Philippines edit

In popular culture edit

  • Make No Little Plans - Daniel Burnham and the American City[65] is the first feature-length documentary film about noted architect and urban planner Daniel Hudson Burnham, produced by the Archimedia Workshop. National distribution in 2009 coincided with the centennial celebration of Daniel Burnham and Edward Bennett's 1909 Plan of Chicago.
  • The Devil in the White City, a non-fiction book by Erik Larson, intertwines the true tales of two men: H.H. Holmes, a serial killer famed for his 'murderous hotel' in Chicago, and Daniel Burnham.
  • In the role-playing game Unknown Armies, James K. McGowan, the True King of Chicago, quotes Daniel Burnham and regards him as a paragon of the Windy City's mysterious and magical past.
  • In the episode "Legendaddy" of TV sitcom How I Met Your Mother, the character Ted, who is professor of architecture, describes Burnham as an "architectural chameleon".
  • In the episode "Household" of Hulu original The Handmaid's Tale, Daniel Burnham is indirectly mentioned and only named as a Heretic for the reason the Gilead government demolished and replaced Washington, D.C.'s Union Station.
  • In Joffrey Ballet's version of The Nutcracker, choreographed by Christopher Wheeldon, Daniel Burnham, is the Drosselmeyer character of the ballet.[66]

References edit

Informational notes

  1. ^ "By 1903, Chicago's Daniel H. Burnham had completed the twenty-one-story Fuller Building in New York City, which the public quickly redubbed the Flatiron Building because of its iconic triangular plan."[63]

Citations

  1. ^ Goldberger, Paul (March 2, 2009). "Toddlin' Town". The New Yorker (published March 9, 2009). Retrieved May 2, 2020.
  2. ^ Laurin, Dale (2008). "Grace and Seriousness in the Flatiron Building and Ourselves" (PDF). Aesthetic Realism Looks at NYC. Aesthetic Realism Foundation. pp. 1–4. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022.
  3. ^ Graham, Wade (2016) Dream Cities: Seven Urban Ideas That Shape the World New York: Harper Perennial. p.207 ISBN 978-0-06-219632-3
  4. ^ a b Norton-Burhnam House, National Register of Historic Places Registration, National Park Service, January 8, 2016
  5. ^ "Website". New Church. June 20, 2014. Retrieved June 24, 2016.
  6. ^ Carl Smith, The Plan of Chicago: Daniel Burnham and the Remaking of the American City, p. 56
  7. ^ a b c d Larson (2003), p.19
  8. ^ Larson (2003), pp.20-21
  9. ^ Larson (2003), p.22
  10. ^ Larson (2003) pp.24-25
  11. ^ . Old Chicago in Vintage Postcards. Archived from the original on May 18, 2008. Retrieved June 4, 2008.
  12. ^ Larson (2003) pp.26-27
  13. ^ Larson (2003) pp.29-30
  14. ^ Larson (2003), pp.104-108
  15. ^ Caves, R. W. (2004). Encyclopedia of the City. Routledge. p. 58.
  16. ^ Larson (2003), pp.76-77
  17. ^ Larson (2003), pp.119-120
  18. ^ Larson (2003), p.178
  19. ^ Larson (2003), p.283
  20. ^ a b Larson (2003), p.377
  21. ^ Larson (2003), pp.376–377
  22. ^ Terranova, Antonino (2003) Skyscrapers White Star Publishers. ISBN 88-8095-230-7
  23. ^ "Flatiron Building" on Destination 360
  24. ^ Gillon, Edmund Vincent (photographs) and Reed, Henry Hope (text). Beaux-Arts Architecture in New York: A Photographic Guide New York: Dover, 1988. p. 26
  25. ^ a b Gallery, John Andrew, ed. (2004), Philadelphia Architecture: A Guide to the City (2nd ed.), Philadelphia: Foundation for Architecture, p. 83, ISBN 0962290815
  26. ^ Gallery, John Andrew, ed. (2004), Philadelphia Architecture: A Guide to the City (2nd ed.), Philadelphia: Foundation for Architecture, p. 85, ISBN 0962290815
  27. ^ White, Norval; Willensky, Elliot; Leadon, Fran (2010). AIA Guide to New York City (5th ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. p. 159. ISBN 978-0-19538-386-7.
  28. ^ White, Norval; Willensky, Elliot; Leadon, Fran (2010). AIA Guide to New York City (5th ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. p. 265. ISBN 978-0-19538-386-7.
  29. ^ Southworth, Susan; Southworth, Michael (1992). AIA Guide to Boston (2 ed.). Guilford, Connecticut: Globe Pequot. p. 19. ISBN 0-87106-188-0.
  30. ^ Daniel Immerwahr, How to Hide an Empire: A History of the Greater United States (New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2019), p. 123-136.
  31. ^ . Archived from the original on July 20, 2011. Retrieved June 4, 2008.
  32. ^ "Chicago's lake front". Memory.loc.gov. Retrieved June 24, 2016.
  33. ^ Burnham, Daniel H.; Carrere, John M.; Brunner, Arnold W. (August 1903). The Group Plan of the Public Buildings of the City of Cleveland (PDF) (Report). City of Cleveland. (PDF) from the original on October 7, 2016. Retrieved January 31, 2017.
  34. ^ Burnham, Daniel H.; Bennett, Edward H. (September 1905). O'Day, Edward F. (ed.). Report on a plan for San Francisco (Report). Association for the Improvement and Adornment of San Francisco. Retrieved January 31, 2017.
  35. ^ Burnham, D.H.; Anderson, Pierce (June 28, 1905). Exhibit B: Report on Improvement of Manila (Report). Government Printing Office. pp. 627–635.
  36. ^ Adams, C.F. (August 12, 1911). "Burnham's Plan for the Adornment of the Exposition City". San Francisco Call. Vol. 110, no. 73. p. 19. Retrieved January 31, 2017.
  37. ^ Movie: "Make No Little Plans"
  38. ^ Thomas E. Luebke, ed., Civic Art: A Centennial History of the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Commission of Fine Arts, 2013): Appendix B, p. 541.
  39. ^ Sullivan, Louis (1924) The Autobiography of an Idea, New York: Press of the American Institute of Architects. pp.320-21
  40. ^ Sullivan, Louis (1924) The Autobiography of an Idea, New York: Press of the American Institute of Architects. p.325
  41. ^ Abbot, Willis J. (January 18, 1927) "How Chicago Is Making Its Vision of Civic Splendor a Reality Is Told by Man Who Led in Project That Proves Economic Value of 'Mere Beauty'; Story of Commercial City's Education in Aesthetics Recited by Charles H. Wacker; Chicago Plan Commission's Former Head Shows How Transformation Has Been Wrought - Ideal Improvements, Once Pictured, Became Visible Goals of Community Endeavor - Were Even Taught In Schools" The Christian Science Monitor. p.8
  42. ^ Moore, Charles (1921) Daniel H. Burnham, Architect, Planner of Cities. Boston, Houghton Mifflin. Volume 2: Chapter XXV: "Closing in 1911-1912"
  43. ^ "AIA Presidents". American Institute of Architects. Retrieved June 4, 2008.
  44. ^ Larson (2003)< p.21
  45. ^ a b Larson (2003), p.28
  46. ^ a b Larson (2003), p.128
  47. ^ Rodkin, Dennis (November 8, 2010) Chicago Real Estate
  48. ^ Bullington, Jonathan (April 30, 2009) "Home in Evanston Fills My Longing Daniel Burnhams Evanston" Chicago Tribune
  49. ^ Rodkin, Dennis, (May 10, 2016) "Hisotrical Evanston mansion coming on market at $5.3 million" Crain's Chicago Business
  50. ^ Larson (2003), p.378
  51. ^ Larson (2003), pp.378
  52. ^ Larson (2003), pp.3-7,389-90
  53. ^ Staff (June 2, 1912) "Daniel Burnham, Architect, Dead" Chicago Tribune
  54. ^ Hines, Thomas S. (June 15, 1979). Burnham of Chicago: Architect and Planner. University of Chicago Press. pp. 360. ISBN 978-0-226-34171-2. daniel burnham cause of death food poisoning.
  55. ^ The Burnham Plan Centennial
  56. ^ Lancelot, Barbara (1988) A Walk Through Graceland Cemeter Chicago: Chicago Architecture Foundation. pp. 34-35
  57. ^ "National Planning Awards". American Planning Association. Retrieved June 4, 2008.
  58. ^ . Chicago chapter of the American Institute of Architects. Archived from the original on January 24, 2012. Retrieved March 15, 2012.
  59. ^ "Illinois - Cook County". National Register of Historic Places. Retrieved November 2, 2008.
  60. ^ Randall, Frank Alfred; John D. Randall (1999). History of the Development of Building Construction in Chicago. Urbana and Chicago, Illinois: University of Illinois Press. p. 286. ISBN 0-252-02416-8. Retrieved November 2, 2008.
  61. ^ a b c "Architectural Treasures of the Queen City: Part II". December 3, 2012.
  62. ^ Alexiou 2010, p. 59.
  63. ^ Brown, Dixon & Gillham 2014.
  64. ^ a b Potter, Janet Greenstein (1996). Great American Railroad Stations. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. pp. 264, 320–321. ISBN 978-0-471-14389-5.
  65. ^ "Daniel Burnham Film". The Archimedia Workshop. Retrieved April 6, 2009.
  66. ^ "Don't Miss This Behind-the-Scenes PBS Documentary of Christopher Wheeldon's "Nutcracker" at Joffrey Ballet". Pointe Magazine. November 29, 2017.

Bibliography

  • Alexiou, Alice Sparberg (2010). The Flatiron: The New York Landmark and the Incomparable City that Arose With It. New York: Thomas Dunne/St. Martin's Press. p. 59. ISBN 978-0-312-38468-5.
  • Brown, Lance Jay; Dixon, David & Gillham, Oliver (June 21, 2014). Urban Design for an Urban Century: Shaping More Livable, Equitable, and Resilient Cities (2nd ed.). Hoboken, New Jersey: Wiley. ISBN 978-1-118-45363-6.
  • Burnham, Daniel H. and Bennett, Edward H. (1910) Plan of Chicago, Chicago: The Commercial Club
  • . Chicago Landmarks. Archived from the original on October 10, 2004. Retrieved September 21, 2004.
  • Jameson, D. . Artists Represented. Archived from the original on December 16, 2005. Retrieved December 14, 2005.
  • Larson, Erik (2003). The Devil in the White City: Murder, Magic and Madness at the Fair that Changed America. New York, New York: Crown Publishers. ISBN 0-609-60844-4.
  • Moore, Charles (1921). "XXV "Closing in 1911–1912"". Daniel H. Burnham, Architect, Planner of Cities, Volume 2. Boston, Massachusetts: Houghton Mifflin. p. 1921.
  • Stolze, Greg (February 2002). Unknown Armies. St Paul, Minneapolis: Atlas Games. ISBN 1-58978-013-2.
  • . Chicago Stories. Archived from the original on August 21, 2004. Retrieved September 24, 2004.
  • "Today In History: September 4". American Memory. The Library of Congress. Retrieved September 24, 2004.

External links edit

daniel, burnham, also, architect, urban, planner, american, farmer, educator, newspaper, editor, politician, daniel, burnham, daniel, hudson, burnham, faia, september, 1846, june, 1912, american, architect, urban, designer, proponent, beaux, arts, movement, ha. For his son also an architect and urban planner see Daniel Burnham Jr For the American farmer educator newspaper editor and politician see Daniel F Burnham Daniel Hudson Burnham FAIA September 4 1846 June 1 1912 was an American architect and urban designer A proponent of the Beaux Arts movement he may have been the most successful power broker the American architectural profession has ever produced 1 Daniel BurnhamFAIABurnham in 1899BornDaniel Hudson Burnham 1846 09 04 September 4 1846Henderson New York USDiedJune 1 1912 1912 06 01 aged 65 Heidelberg German EmpireOccupationArchitectPracticeBurnham and RootD H Burnham amp CompanyBuildingsReliance Building Flatiron Building Union Station Washington D C Ellicott Square BuildingProjectsPlan of Chicago World s Columbian ExpositionA successful Chicago architect he was selected as Director of Works for the 1892 93 World s Columbian Exposition colloquially referred to as The White City He had prominent roles in the creation of master plans for the development of a number of cities including the Plan of Chicago and plans for Manila Baguio and downtown Washington D C He also designed several famous buildings including a number of notable skyscrapers in Chicago the Flatiron Building of triangular shape in New York City 2 Union Station in Washington D C London s Selfridges department store and San Francisco s Merchants Exchange Although best known for his skyscrapers city planning and for the White City almost one third of Burnham s total output 14 7 million square feet 1 37 million square meters consisted of buildings for shopping 3 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 World s Columbian Exposition 2 2 Post fair architecture 2 3 The Philippines 2 4 City planning and the Plan of Chicago 2 5 Plans in additional cities 3 Influence 4 Personal life 5 Beliefs 6 Death 7 Memorials 8 Notable commissions 8 1 Chicago 8 2 Cincinnati 8 3 Detroit 8 4 Indianapolis 8 5 New York 8 6 Philadelphia 8 7 Pittsburgh 8 8 San Francisco 8 9 Washington D C 8 10 Others 8 11 Philippines 9 In popular culture 10 References 11 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Burnham s childhood home in Henderson New YorkBurnham was born in Henderson New York the son of Elizabeth Keith Weeks and Edwin Arnold Burnham 4 He was raised in the teachings of the Swedenborgian also called The New Church 5 which ingrained in him the strong belief that man should strive to be of service to others 6 At the age of eight Burnham moved to Chicago 4 and his father established there a wholesale drug business which became a success 7 Burnham was not a good student but he was good at drawing He moved to the eastern part of the country at the age of 18 to be taught by private tutors in order to pass the admissions examinations for Harvard and Yale failing both apparently because of a bad case of test anxiety In 1867 when he was 21 he returned to Chicago and took an apprenticeship as a draftsman under William LeBaron Jenney of the architectural firm Loring amp Jenney Architecture seemed to be the calling he was looking for and he told his parents that he wanted to become the greatest architect in the city or country 7 Nevertheless the young Burnham still had a streak of wanderlust in him and in 1869 he left his apprenticeship to go to Nevada with friends to try mining gold at which he failed He then ran for the Nevada state legislature and failed to be elected Broke he returned again to Chicago and took a position with the architect L G Laurean When the Great Chicago Fire hit the city in October 1871 it seemed as if there would be endless work for architects but Burnham chose to strike out again becoming first a salesman of plate glass windows then a druggist He failed at the first and quit the second He later remarked on a family tendency to get tired of doing the same thing for very long 7 Career edit nbsp The Montauk Building c 1886At age 26 Burnham moved on to the Chicago offices of Carter Drake and Wight where he met future business partner John Wellborn Root who was 21 and four years younger than Burnham The two became friends and then opened an architectural office together in 1873 Unlike his previous ventures Burnham stuck to this one 7 Burnham and Root went on to become a very successful firm Their first major commission came from John B Sherman the superintendent of the massive Union Stock Yards in Chicago which provided the livelihood directly or indirectly for one fifth of the city s population Sherman hired the firm to build for him a mansion on Prairie Avenue at Twenty first Street among the mansions of Chicago s other merchant barons Root made the initial design Burnham refined it and supervised the construction It was on the construction site that he met Sherman s daughter Margaret whom Burnham married in 1876 after a short courtship 8 Sherman commissioned other projects from Burnham and Root including the Stone Gate an entry portal to the stockyards which became a Chicago landmark 9 In 1881 the firm was commissioned to build the Montauk Building which was then the tallest building in Chicago at the time To solve the problem of the city s water saturated sandy soil and bedrock 125 feet 38 m below the surface Root came up with a plan to dig down to a hardpan layer of clay on which was laid a 2 foot 0 61 m thick pad of concrete overlaid with steel rails placed at right angles to form a lattice grill which was then filled with Portland cement This floating foundation was in effect artificially created bedrock on which the building could be constructed The completed building was so tall compared to existing buildings that it defied easy description and the name skyscraper was coined to describe it Thomas Talmadge an architect and architectural critic said of the building What Chartres was to the Gothic cathedral the Montauk Block was to the high commercial building 10 nbsp Masonic Temple Building in ChicagoBurnham and Root went on to build more of the first American skyscrapers such as the Masonic Temple Building 11 in Chicago Measuring 21 stories and 302 feet the temple held claims as the tallest building of its time but was torn down in 1939 The talents of the two partners were complementary Both men were artists and gifted architects but Root had a knack for conceiving elegant designs and was able to see almost at once the totality of the necessary structure Burnham on the other hand excelled at bringing in clients and supervising the building of Root s designs They each appreciated the value of the other to the firm Burnham also took steps to ensure their employees were happy he installed a gym in the office gave fencing lessons and let employees play handball at lunch time Root a pianist and organist gave piano recitals in the office on a rented piano Paul Starrett who joined the office in 1888 said The office was full of a rush of work but the spirit of the place was delightfully free and easy and human in comparison to other offices I had worked in 12 Although the firm was extremely successful there were several notable setbacks One of their designs the Grannis Block in which their office was located burned down in 1885 necessitating a move to the top floor of The Rookery another of their designs Then in 1888 a Kansas City Missouri hotel they had designed collapsed during construction killing one man and injuring several others At the coroner s inquest the building s design came in for criticism The negative publicity shook and depressed Burnham Then in a further setback Burnham and Root also failed to win the commission for design of the giant Auditorium Building which went instead to their rivals Adler amp Sullivan 13 On January 15 1891 while the firm was deep in meetings for the design of the World s Columbian Exposition Root died after a three day course of pneumonia As Root had been only 41 years old his death stunned both Burnham and Chicago society 14 After Root s death the firm of Burnham and Root which had had tremendous success producing modern buildings as part of the Chicago School of architecture was renamed D H Burnham amp Company After that the firm continued its successes and Burnham extended his reach into city design 15 nbsp Court of Honor and Grand Basin World s Columbian Exposition nbsp The Agricultural Building at night 1893 World s Columbian Exposition edit Burnham and Root had accepted responsibility to oversee the design and construction of the World s Columbian Exposition in Chicago s then desolate Jackson Park on the south lakefront The largest world s fair to that date 1893 it celebrated the 400 year anniversary of Christopher Columbus s famous voyage After Root s sudden and unexpected death a team of distinguished American architects and landscape architects including Burnham Frederick Law Olmsted Charles McKim Richard M Hunt George B Post and Henry Van Brunt radically changed Root s modern and colorful style to a Classical Revival style Only the pavilion by Louis Sullivan was designed in a non Classical style To ensure the project s success Burnham moved his personal residence into a wooden headquarters called the shanty on the burgeoning fairgrounds to improve his ability to oversee construction 16 The construction of the fair faced huge financial and logistical hurdles including a worldwide financial panic and an extremely tight timeframe to open on time Considered the first example of a comprehensive planning document in the nation the fairground featured grand boulevards classical building facades and lush gardens Often called the White City it popularized neoclassical architecture in a monumental yet rational Beaux Arts style As a result of the fair s popularity architects across the U S were said to be inundated with requests by clients to incorporate similar elements into their designs The control of the fair s design and construction was a matter of dispute between various entities particularly the National Commission which was headed by George R Davis who served as Director General of the fair It was also headed by the Exposition Company which consisted of the city s leading merchants led by Lyman Gage which had raised the money needed to build the fair and Burnham as Director of Works In addition the large number of committees made it difficult for construction to move forward at the pace needed to meet the opening day deadline 17 After a major accident which destroyed one of the fair s premiere buildings Burnham moved to take tighter control of construction distributing a memo to all the fair s department heads which read I have assumed personal control of the active work within the grounds of the World s Columbian Exposition Henceforward and until further notice you will report to and receive orders from me exclusively 18 After the fair opened Olmsted who designed the fairgrounds said of Burnham that too high an estimate cannot be placed on the industry skill and tact with which this result was secured by the master of us all 19 Burnham himself rejected the suggestion that Root had been largely responsible for the fair s design writing afterwards What was done up to the time of his death was the faintest suggestion of a plan The impression concerning his part has been gradually built up by a few people close friends of his and mostly women who naturally after the Fair proved beautiful desired to more broadly identify his memory with it 20 Post fair architecture edit Nevertheless Burnham s reputation was considerably enhanced by the success and beauty of the fair Harvard and Yale both presented him honorary master s degrees ameliorating his having failed their entrance exams in his youth The common perception while Root was alive was that he was the architectural artist and Burnham had run the business side of the firm Root s death while devastating to Burnham personally allowed him to develop as an architect in a way it might not have had Root lived on 21 In 1901 Burnham designed the Flatiron Building in New York City a trailblazing structure that utilized an internal steel skeleton to provide structural integrity the exterior masonry walls were not load bearing This allowed the building to rise to 22 stories 22 The design was that of a vertical Renaissance palazzo with Beaux Arts styling divided like a classical column into base shaft and capital 23 24 Other Burnham post fair designs included the Land Title Building 1897 in Philadelphia the first major building in that city not designed by local architects and known as the finest example of early skyscraper design there 25 John Wanamaker s Department Store 1902 1911 in Philadelphia now Macy s which is built around a central court 26 Wanamaker s Annex 1904 addition 1907 1910 in New York City a 19 story full block building which contains as much floorspace as the Empire State Building 27 the neo classical Gimbels Department Store 1908 1912 also in New York now the Manhattan Mall with a completely new facade 28 the stunningly Art Deco Mount Wilson Observatory in the hills above Pasadena California 20 and Filene s Department Store 1912 in Boston the last major building designed by Burnham 29 The Philippines edit In 1904 Burnham accepted a commission from Philippines Governor General William Howard Taft He had the opportunity to redesign Manila and plan a summer capital to be constructed in Baguio Due to the Philippines status as a territory Burnham was able to pursue his vision without having to win local approval Altogether the project took six months to design with only six weeks spent in the Philippines During his time there Burnham did not interact with Filipino locals concerning the project After his plans were approved by William Cameron Forbes Commissioner of Commerce and Police in the Philippines Burnham was allowed to choose the principal architect William E Parsons Burnham then departed to keep tabs on the project from the mainland Burnham s plans emphasized improved sanitation a cohesive aesthetic Mission Revival and visual reminders of government authority In Manila wide boulevards radiated out from the capital building while in Baguio government structures loomed from the cliffs above the town The land for the Baguio project 14 000 acres 5 700 ha in total was seized from local Igorots with approval of the Philippine Supreme Court In Manila neighborhoods ravaged by the war for independence were left untouched while a luxury hotel casino and boat clubs were designed for visiting mainland dignitaries 30 nbsp Title page of first editionCity planning and the Plan of Chicago edit Main article Burnham Plan Initiated in 1906 and published in 1909 Burnham and his co author Edward H Bennett prepared a Plan of Chicago which laid out plans for the future of the city It was the first comprehensive plan for the controlled growth of an American city and an outgrowth of the City Beautiful movement The plan included ambitious proposals for the lakefront and river It also asserted that every citizen should be within walking distance of a park Sponsored by the Commercial Club of Chicago 31 Burnham donated his services in hopes of furthering his own cause Building off plans and conceptual designs from the World s Fair for the south lakefront 32 Burnham envisioned Chicago as a Paris on the Prairie French inspired public works constructions fountains and boulevards radiating from a central domed municipal palace became Chicago s new backdrop Though only parts of the plan were actually implemented it set the standard for urban design anticipating the future need to control urban growth and continuing to influence the development of Chicago long after Burnham s death Plans in additional cities edit nbsp Burnham and Bennett s plan for San FranciscoBurnham s city planning projects did not stop at Chicago Burnham had previously contributed to plans for cities such as Cleveland the 1903 Group Plan 33 San Francisco 1905 34 Manila 1905 35 and Baguio in the Philippines details of which appear in the 1909 Plan of Chicago publication His plans for the redesign of San Francisco were delivered to the Board of Supervisors in September 1905 36 but in the haste to rebuild the city after the 1906 earthquake and fires Burnham s plans were ultimately ignored In the Philippines Burnham s Plan for Manila never materialized due to the outbreak of World War II and the relocation of the capital to another city after the war Some components of the plan however did come into fruition including the shore road which became Dewey Boulevard now known as Roxas Boulevard and the various neoclassical government buildings around Luneta Park which very much resemble a miniature version of Washington D C in their arrangement In Washington D C Burnham did much to shape the 1901 McMillan Plan which led to the completion of the overall design of the National Mall The Senate Park Commission or McMillan Commission established by Michigan Senator James McMillan brought together Burnham and three of his colleagues from the World s Columbian Exposition architect Charles Follen McKim landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted Jr and sculptor Augustus Saint Gaudens Going well beyond Pierre L Enfant s original vision for the city the plan provided for the extension of the Mall beyond the Washington Monument to a new Lincoln Memorial and a pantheon that eventually materialized as the Jefferson Memorial This plan involved significant reclamation of land from swamp and the Potomac River and the relocation of an existing railroad station which was replaced by Burnham s design for Union Station 37 As a result of his service on the McMillan Commission in 1910 Burnham was appointed a member and first chairman of the United States Commission of Fine Arts helping to ensure implementation of the McMillan Plan s vision Burnham served on the commission until his death in 1912 38 Influence editIn his career after the fair Burnham became one of the country s most prominent advocates for the Beaux Arts movement as well as the revival of Neo classical architecture which began with the fair 25 Much of Burnham s work was based on the classical style of Greece and Rome In his 1924 autobiography Louis Sullivan one of the leading architects of the Chicago School but one who had a difficult relationship with Burnham over an extended period of time criticized Burnham for what Sullivan viewed as his lack of original expression and dependence on classicism 39 Sullivan went on to claim that the damage wrought by the World s Fair will last for half a century from its date if not longer 40 a sentiment edged with bitterness as corporate America of the early 20th century had demonstrated a strong preference for Burnham s architectural style over Sullivan s nbsp Burnham c early 1900sBurnham is famously quoted as saying Make no little plans They have no magic to stir men s blood and probably will not themselves be realized This slogan has been taken to capture the essence of Burnham s spirit 41 42 A man of influence Burnham was considered the pre eminent architect in America at the start of the 20th century He held many positions during his lifetime including the presidency of the American Institute of Architects 43 Other notable architects began their careers under his aegis such as Joseph W McCarthy Several of his descendants have worked as influential architects and planners in the United States including his son Daniel Burnham Jr and grandchildren Burnham Kelly and Margaret Burnham Geddes Personal life editBurnham married Margaret Sherman the daughter of his first major client John B Sherman on January 20 1876 They first met on the construction site of her father s house Her father had a house built for the couple to live in During their courtship there was a scandal in which Burnham s older brother was accused of having forged checks Burnham immediately went to John Sherman and offered to break the engagement as a matter of honor but Sherman rejected the offer saying There is a black sheep in every family However Sherman remained wary of his son in law who he thought drank too much 44 Burnham and Margaret remained married for the rest of his life They had five children two daughters and three sons including Daniel Burnham Jr born in February 1886 45 who became an architect and urban planner like his father He worked in his father s firm until 1917 and served as the Director of Public Works for the 1933 34 Chicago World s Fair known as the Century of Progress The Burnham family lived in Chicago until 1886 when he purchased a 16 room farmhouse and estate on Lake Michigan in the suburb of Evanston Illinois 46 47 48 49 Burnham had become wary of Chicago which he felt was becoming dirtier and more dangerous as its population increased Burnham explained to his mother whom he did not tell of the move in advance I did it because I can no longer bear to have my children on the streets of Chicago 45 When Burnham moved into the shanty in Jackson Park to better supervise construction of the fair his wife Margaret and their children remained in Evanston 46 Beliefs editBurnham was an early environmentalist writing Up to our time strict economy in the use of natural resources has not been practiced but it must be henceforth unless we are immoral enough to impair conditions in which our children are to live although he also believed the automobile would be a positive environmental factor with the end of horse based transportation bringing a real step in civilization With no smoke no gases no litter of horses your air and streets will be clean and pure This means does it not that the health and spirits of men will be better Like many men of his time he also showed an interest in the supernatural saying If I were able to take the time I believe that I could prove the continuation of life beyond the grave reasoning from the necessity philosophically speaking of a belief in an absolute and universal power 50 Death edit nbsp Daniel Burnham s headstone in Graceland Cemetery Chicago IllinoisWhen Burnham was in his fifties his health began to decline He developed colitis and in 1909 was diagnosed with diabetes which affected his circulatory system and led to an infection in his foot which was to continue for the remainder of his life 51 On April 14 1912 Burnham and his wife were aboard the RMSOlympic of the White Star Line traveling to Europe to tour Heidelberg Germany When he attempted to send a telegram to his friend Frank Millet who was traveling the opposite direction from Europe to the United States on the RMSTitanic he learned that the ship had sunk in an accident and Millet did not survive Burnham died only 47 days later 52 from colitis complicated by his diabetes and food poisoning from a meal eaten in Heidelberg 53 54 At the time of his death D H Burnham and Co was the world s largest architectural firm Even legendary architect Frank Lloyd Wright although strongly critical of Burnham s Beaux Arts European influences still admired him as a man and eulogized him saying Burnham made masterful use of the methods and men of his time As an enthusiastic promoter of great construction enterprises his powerful personality was supreme The successor firm to Burnham s practice was Graham Anderson Probst amp White which continued in some form until 2006 55 Burnham was interred at Graceland Cemetery in Chicago 56 Memorials editTributes to Burnham include Burnham Park and Daniel Burnham Court in Chicago Burnham Park in Baguio in the Philippines Daniel Burnham Court in San Francisco formerly Hemlock Street between Van Ness Avenue and Franklin Street the annual Daniel Burnham Award for a Comprehensive Plan run by the American Planning Association 57 and the Burnham Memorial Competition which was held in 2009 to create a memorial to Burnham and his Plan of Chicago 58 Collections of Burnham s personal and professional papers photographs and other archival materials are held by the Ryerson amp Burnham Libraries at the Art Institute of Chicago In addition the Reliance Building in Chicago which was designed by Burnham and Root is now the Hotel Burnham although Root was the primary architect before his death in 1891 Notable commissions edit nbsp Flatiron Building 1901 nbsp Reliance Building 1890 1895 nbsp Union Stock Yard Gate Chicago 1879 nbsp The Rookery Building in Chicago 1886 nbsp 770 Broadway New York City 1904 addition 1907 1910 nbsp Pennsylvania Union Station 1900 1902 nbsp Union Station in Washington D C 1908 nbsp Gilbert M Simmons Memorial Library Kenosha Wisconsin 1900 nbsp Union Station El Paso Texas 1905 1906 Chicago edit Union Stock Yard Gate 1879 Union Station 1881 Montauk Building 1882 1883 Kent House 1883 Rookery Building 1886 Reliance Building 1890 1895 Monadnock Building northern half 1891 Marshall Field and Company Building now Macy s 1891 1892 Fisher Building 1896 Orchestra Hall 1904 Heyworth Building 1904 Boyce Building on the National Register of Historic Places 1915 59 60 Butler Brothers Warehouse now The Gogo Building 1913 Cincinnati edit Union Savings Bank and Trust Building later the Fifth Third Union Trust Building the Bartlett Building and now the Renaissance Hotel 1901 61 Tri State Building 1902 61 First National Bank Building later the Clopay Building and now the Fourth amp Walnut Center 1904 Fourth National Bank Building 1904 61 Detroit edit Majestic Building 1896 demolished 1962 Ford Building 1907 1908 Dime Building 1912 Indianapolis edit Indianapolis Traction Terminal 1903 demolished 1972 Barnes and Thornburg Building formerly the Merchants National Bank Building 1912 New York edit Flatiron Building 1901 62 A Wanamaker s Annex full city block department store 1904 addition 1907 1910 Gimbels Department Store 1908 1912 Philadelphia edit Land Title Building 1897 John Wanamaker s Department Store now housing a Macy s and offices 1902 1911 Pittsburgh edit Union Trust Building 1898 337 Fourth Avenue not the 1917 structure of the same name on Grant Street Pennsylvania Union Station 1900 1902 Frick Building 1902 McCreery Department Store now offices 300 Sixth Avenue Building 1904 Highland Building 1910 121 South Highland Avenue Henry W Oliver Building 1910 San Francisco edit Merchants Exchange Building 1904 The Mills Building 1892 restoration and expansion 1907 1909 Washington D C edit Union Station 1908 Postal Square Building 1911 1914 Columbus Fountain 1912 Others edit Keokuk Union Depot Keokuk Iowa 1891 64 Pearsons Hall of Science Beloit Wisconsin 1892 1893 Ellicott Square Building Buffalo New York 1896 Columbus Union Station Columbus Ohio 1897 Wyandotte Building Columbus Ohio 1897 1898 Gilbert M Simmons Memorial Library Kenosha Wisconsin 1900 Continental Trust Company Building Baltimore 1901 southeast corner South Calvert and East Baltimore Streets damaged during Great Baltimore Fire of February 1904 but upon inspection the steel and masonry exterior was deemed sound the damaged interior was later reconstructed First National Bank Building now Fayette Building Uniontown Pennsylvania 1902 Pennsylvania Railroad Station Richmond Indiana 1902 Cleveland Mall with Arnold Brunner and John Carrere Cleveland 1903 Union Station El Paso Texas 1905 1906 The Fleming Building Des Moines Iowa 1907 Yazoo amp Mississippi Valley Railroad station Vicksburg Mississippi 1907 64 Duluth Civic Center Historic District Duluth Minnesota 1908 1909 four buildings Selfridge amp Co Department Store Oxford Street London 1909 Miners National Bank Building Wilkes Barre Pennsylvania 1911 now Citizens Bank Financial Center Terminal Arcade Terre Haute Indiana 1911 Filene s Department Store Boston 1912 Starks Building Louisville Kentucky 1912 Second National Bank Building Toledo Ohio 1913 now Riverfront Apartments El Granada California city master plan First National Bank Building Milwaukee Joliet Public Library Joliet Illinois 1903 Kenilworth Train Station Kenilworth Illinois Mount Wilson Observatory Pasadena California nbsp Burnham s Plan for ManilaPhilippines edit City planning for Manila City planning for Baguio Provincial Capitol Building in Bacolod Negros Occidental Pangasinan Provincial Capitol Burnham ParkIn popular culture editMake No Little Plans Daniel Burnham and the American City 65 is the first feature length documentary film about noted architect and urban planner Daniel Hudson Burnham produced by the Archimedia Workshop National distribution in 2009 coincided with the centennial celebration of Daniel Burnham and Edward Bennett s 1909 Plan of Chicago The Devil in the White City a non fiction book by Erik Larson intertwines the true tales of two men H H Holmes a serial killer famed for his murderous hotel in Chicago and Daniel Burnham In the role playing game Unknown Armies James K McGowan the True King of Chicago quotes Daniel Burnham and regards him as a paragon of the Windy City s mysterious and magical past In the episode Legendaddy of TV sitcom How I Met Your Mother the character Ted who is professor of architecture describes Burnham as an architectural chameleon In the episode Household of Hulu original The Handmaid s Tale Daniel Burnham is indirectly mentioned and only named as a Heretic for the reason the Gilead government demolished and replaced Washington D C s Union Station In Joffrey Ballet s version of The Nutcracker choreographed by Christopher Wheeldon Daniel Burnham is the Drosselmeyer character of the ballet 66 References editInformational notes By 1903 Chicago s Daniel H Burnham had completed the twenty one story Fuller Building in New York City which the public quickly redubbed the Flatiron Building because of its iconic triangular plan 63 Citations Goldberger Paul March 2 2009 Toddlin Town The New Yorker published March 9 2009 Retrieved May 2 2020 Laurin Dale 2008 Grace and Seriousness in the Flatiron Building and Ourselves PDF Aesthetic Realism Looks at NYC Aesthetic Realism Foundation pp 1 4 Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Graham Wade 2016 Dream Cities Seven Urban Ideas That Shape the World New York Harper Perennial p 207 ISBN 978 0 06 219632 3 a b Norton Burhnam House National Register of Historic Places Registration National Park Service January 8 2016 Website New Church June 20 2014 Retrieved June 24 2016 Carl Smith The Plan of Chicago Daniel Burnham and the Remaking of the American City p 56 a b c d Larson 2003 p 19 Larson 2003 pp 20 21 Larson 2003 p 22 Larson 2003 pp 24 25 Masonic Temple Chicago Old Chicago in Vintage Postcards Archived from the original on May 18 2008 Retrieved June 4 2008 Larson 2003 pp 26 27 Larson 2003 pp 29 30 Larson 2003 pp 104 108 Caves R W 2004 Encyclopedia of the City Routledge p 58 Larson 2003 pp 76 77 Larson 2003 pp 119 120 Larson 2003 p 178 Larson 2003 p 283 a b Larson 2003 p 377 Larson 2003 pp 376 377 Terranova Antonino 2003 Skyscrapers White Star Publishers ISBN 88 8095 230 7 Flatiron Building on Destination 360 Gillon Edmund Vincent photographs and Reed Henry Hope text Beaux Arts Architecture in New York A Photographic Guide New York Dover 1988 p 26 a b Gallery John Andrew ed 2004 Philadelphia Architecture A Guide to the City 2nd ed Philadelphia Foundation for Architecture p 83 ISBN 0962290815 Gallery John Andrew ed 2004 Philadelphia Architecture A Guide to the City 2nd ed Philadelphia Foundation for Architecture p 85 ISBN 0962290815 White Norval Willensky Elliot Leadon Fran 2010 AIA Guide to New York City 5th ed New York Oxford University Press p 159 ISBN 978 0 19538 386 7 White Norval Willensky Elliot Leadon Fran 2010 AIA Guide to New York City 5th ed New York Oxford University Press p 265 ISBN 978 0 19538 386 7 Southworth Susan Southworth Michael 1992 AIA Guide to Boston 2 ed Guilford Connecticut Globe Pequot p 19 ISBN 0 87106 188 0 Daniel Immerwahr How to Hide an Empire A History of the Greater United States New York Farrar Straus and Giroux 2019 p 123 136 The Commercial Club of Chicago Purpose amp History Archived from the original on July 20 2011 Retrieved June 4 2008 Chicago s lake front Memory loc gov Retrieved June 24 2016 Burnham Daniel H Carrere John M Brunner Arnold W August 1903 The Group Plan of the Public Buildings of the City of Cleveland PDF Report City of Cleveland Archived PDF from the original on October 7 2016 Retrieved January 31 2017 Burnham Daniel H Bennett Edward H September 1905 O Day Edward F ed Report on a plan for San Francisco Report Association for the Improvement and Adornment of San Francisco Retrieved January 31 2017 Burnham D H Anderson Pierce June 28 1905 Exhibit B Report on Improvement of Manila Report Government Printing Office pp 627 635 Adams C F August 12 1911 Burnham s Plan for the Adornment of the Exposition City San Francisco Call Vol 110 no 73 p 19 Retrieved January 31 2017 Movie Make No Little Plans Thomas E Luebke ed Civic Art A Centennial History of the U S Commission of Fine Arts Washington D C U S Commission of Fine Arts 2013 Appendix B p 541 Sullivan Louis 1924 The Autobiography of an Idea New York Press of the American Institute of Architects pp 320 21 Sullivan Louis 1924 The Autobiography of an Idea New York Press of the American Institute of Architects p 325 Abbot Willis J January 18 1927 How Chicago Is Making Its Vision of Civic Splendor a Reality Is Told by Man Who Led in Project That Proves Economic Value of Mere Beauty Story of Commercial City s Education in Aesthetics Recited by Charles H Wacker Chicago Plan Commission s Former Head Shows How Transformation Has Been Wrought Ideal Improvements Once Pictured Became Visible Goals of Community Endeavor Were Even Taught In Schools The Christian Science Monitor p 8 Moore Charles 1921 Daniel H Burnham Architect Planner of Cities Boston Houghton Mifflin Volume 2 Chapter XXV Closing in 1911 1912 AIA Presidents American Institute of Architects Retrieved June 4 2008 Larson 2003 lt p 21 a b Larson 2003 p 28 a b Larson 2003 p 128 Rodkin Dennis November 8 2010 Evanston House Occupies Former Daniel Burnham Estate Chicago Real Estate Bullington Jonathan April 30 2009 Home in Evanston Fills My Longing Daniel Burnhams Evanston Chicago Tribune Rodkin Dennis May 10 2016 Hisotrical Evanston mansion coming on market at 5 3 million Crain s Chicago Business Larson 2003 p 378 Larson 2003 pp 378 Larson 2003 pp 3 7 389 90 Staff June 2 1912 Daniel Burnham Architect Dead Chicago Tribune Hines Thomas S June 15 1979 Burnham of Chicago Architect and Planner University of Chicago Press pp 360 ISBN 978 0 226 34171 2 daniel burnham cause of death food poisoning Burham in Evanston Talk The Burnham Plan Centennial Lancelot Barbara 1988 A Walk Through Graceland Cemeter Chicago Chicago Architecture Foundation pp 34 35 National Planning Awards American Planning Association Retrieved June 4 2008 Design Competition and Exhibit Chicago chapter of the American Institute of Architects Archived from the original on January 24 2012 Retrieved March 15 2012 Illinois Cook County National Register of Historic Places Retrieved November 2 2008 Randall Frank Alfred John D Randall 1999 History of the Development of Building Construction in Chicago Urbana and Chicago Illinois University of Illinois Press p 286 ISBN 0 252 02416 8 Retrieved November 2 2008 a b c Architectural Treasures of the Queen City Part II December 3 2012 Alexiou 2010 p 59 Brown Dixon amp Gillham 2014 a b Potter Janet Greenstein 1996 Great American Railroad Stations New York John Wiley amp Sons Inc pp 264 320 321 ISBN 978 0 471 14389 5 Daniel Burnham Film The Archimedia Workshop Retrieved April 6 2009 Don t Miss This Behind the Scenes PBS Documentary of Christopher Wheeldon s Nutcracker at Joffrey Ballet Pointe Magazine November 29 2017 Bibliography Alexiou Alice Sparberg 2010 The Flatiron The New York Landmark and the Incomparable City that Arose With It New York Thomas Dunne St Martin s Press p 59 ISBN 978 0 312 38468 5 Brown Lance Jay Dixon David amp Gillham Oliver June 21 2014 Urban Design for an Urban Century Shaping More Livable Equitable and Resilient Cities 2nd ed Hoboken New Jersey Wiley ISBN 978 1 118 45363 6 Burnham Daniel H and Bennett Edward H 1910 Plan of Chicago Chicago The Commercial Club Daniel Burnham Chicago Landmarks Archived from the original on October 10 2004 Retrieved September 21 2004 Jameson D Daniel Hudson Burnham Artists Represented Archived from the original on December 16 2005 Retrieved December 14 2005 Larson Erik 2003 The Devil in the White City Murder Magic and Madness at the Fair that Changed America New York New York Crown Publishers ISBN 0 609 60844 4 Moore Charles 1921 XXV Closing in 1911 1912 Daniel H Burnham Architect Planner of Cities Volume 2 Boston Massachusetts Houghton Mifflin p 1921 Stolze Greg February 2002 Unknown Armies St Paul Minneapolis Atlas Games ISBN 1 58978 013 2 Daniel Hudson Burnham Chicago Stories Archived from the original on August 21 2004 Retrieved September 24 2004 Today In History September 4 American Memory The Library of Congress Retrieved September 24 2004 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Daniel Burnham nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Daniel Burnham Ryerson amp Burnham Libraries at The Art Institute of Chicago Burnham Beaux Arts Plan of Chicago amp Fairs Daniel Burnham at Curlie Booknotes interview with Erik Larson on The Devil in the White City September 14 2003 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Daniel Burnham amp oldid 1164440800, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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