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John E. Tourtellotte

John Everett Tourtellotte (February 22, 1869 – May 8, 1939) was a prominent western American architect, best known for his projects in Idaho. His work in Boise included the Idaho State Capitol, the Boise City National Bank, the Carnegie Library, and numerous other buildings for schools, universities, churches, and government institutions.[1] From 1922 to 1930, he worked in Portland, Oregon.

John E. Tourtellotte
Born
John Everett Tourtellotte

(1869-02-22)February 22, 1869
DiedMay 8, 1939(1939-05-08) (aged 70)
NationalityAmerican
OccupationArchitect
Spouse(s)Della Wallace Tourtellotte
(1869–1946)
Children2
PracticeJohn E. Tourtellotte & Company;
Tourtellotte & Hummel
BuildingsIdaho State Capitol,
U. of Idaho Administration Bldg.
Idaho State Capitol, Boise
Carnegie Library, Boise (defunct)
St. John's Cathedral, Boise
University of Idaho Administration Building, Moscow

He was associated with partnerships John E. Tourtellotte & Company and Tourtellotte & Hummel, based in Boise. Works by these firms were covered in a 1982 study and many of the buildings were immediately or later listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[2][3]

Early years edit

Tourtellotte was born in East Thompson, Connecticut, to a well-respected French Huguenot family. His father, Charles W. Tourtellotte, was a prosperous farmer and grist-mill owner. At age 17, he enrolled as an apprentice to the architectural firm of Cutting & Bishop, based in Webster, Massachusetts, where he studied architectural drawing for two years. During this time, he supervised roof construction for the Butler Insane Asylum in Providence, Rhode Island, and the Anne & Hope factory in Lonsdale, the largest factory in the United States.

Following his apprenticeship, Tourtellotte travelled westward, working on construction projects in Chicago, Kansas City, Albuquerque, and Pueblo, Colorado, before arriving in Boise in 1890, months after Idaho achieved statehood.

Idaho and Oregon edit

His architectural and construction business thrived in Boise, and by 1894, Tourtellotte devoted his business entirely to architecture. In 1903, he formed a partnership with German immigrant Charles Hummel (1857–1939), a university-trained architect who had previously worked for Tourtellotte's architecture and construction business.[4] "Charles Hummel, born in Germany in 1857, became the unspecified but probably indispensable second partner in the firm Tourtellotte & Company in 1900. He became a named partner in 1910, and was left fully responsible for the Boise operation when Tourtellotte went to Portland in 1913."[5]

"After 1900 it becomes increasingly difficult to attribute designs specifically to Tourtellotte, given that most of his energies were devoted to promotion. Hummel was probably the chief designer of the greater share of the key works between 1900 and 1920."[5]

"The community development hotels, a major accomplishment of Tourtellotte's little-documented Oregon years, were a direct reflection of [his persuasive business] skills. They were so valued that, when he and Charles Hummel severed most of the connections between their Portland and Boise offices in 1922. Tourtellotte retained ten percent of the gross receipts from the Idaho operation in return for "getting out quantities of plates, booklets, etc. for advertising purposes and also letters for direct solicitation of business. ... The two offices, though maintaining a common name, joint advertising, and a periodic association on particular projects, were hencefoth functionally separate."[5]

Tourtellotte then partnered with one of Charles Hummel's sons, fellow architect Frank K. Hummel (1892–1961). The two shared a Portland office from 1922 until Tourtellotte's retirement in 1930, and Frank Hummel worked there until its closure around 1934, when he returned to Boise. *Tourtellotte continued to work as he designed a proposed Portland City Hall in 1933 with architect Truman E. Phillips as well as a completed project, Linn County Courthouse in Albany, OR, which was in the building stages at the time of his death, also with Mr. PHillips, according to "Architect and Engineer", Vols. 136-139, page 55.[6]

After retiring, Tourtellotte continued to live in Portland,[6] where he died on May 8, 1939.[7] He and his wife Della (1869–1946) are buried in Idaho at Morris Hill Cemetery in Boise.

Tourtellotte was known for combining architectural motifs from disparate styles and eras, and the domed Idaho State Capitol is celebrated for its use of natural light. To celebrate the opening of the state capitol, Tourtellotte wrote an essay where he compared the architectural styles of various eras to the state of spiritual and moral development of civilization evident during those times, with the use of illumination and light signifying the increasing spiritual enlightenment of humanity.[8] The state capitol underwent an extensive restoration which was completed in 2010.[9]

Tourtellotte also designed the replacement Administration Building at the University of Idaho in Moscow. Construction of the Tudor Gothic-style structure began in 1907 and the main building was completed in 1909; its wings in 1912 and 1916. Based on the Hampton Court Palace in England, the UI Administration Building is a campus icon and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1978, at age 69.[10]

Tourtellotte fraternal affiliations were with the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, the Freemasons, and the Kiwanis.[11]

Works edit

John E. Tourtellotte, 1894-1901 edit

John E. Tourtellotte & Company, 1901-1910 edit

Tourtellotte & Hummel, 1910-1930 edit

John E. Tourtellotte, 1930-1937 edit

  • Portland City Hall, Portland, Oregon (1933) - Not built.

Tourtellotte & Phillips (1937-1939) edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Capitol of Light".
  2. ^ Patricia Wright (September 22, 1982). "Tourtellotte and Hummel Architecture Thematic Resources". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  3. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  4. ^ History of Idaho. French, Hiriam T. The Lewis Publishing Company, 1914.
  5. ^ a b c Wright, Patricia (1987). Tourtellotte & Hummel of Idaho : the standard practice of architecture. Lisa B. Reitzes, Idaho State Historical Society. Logan, Utah: Utah State University Press with Idaho State Historical Society. ISBN 0-87421-125-5. OCLC 15018496.
  6. ^ a b George T. Murphy (May 5, 1979). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: John Jacob Astor Hotel" (PDF). National Park Service. Item 8, p. 2. Retrieved October 10, 2013.
  7. ^ "Death Summons Noted Architect" (May 10, 1939). The Oregonian, p. 11.
  8. ^ "John E Tourtellotte: A Western Visionary" (PDF). About the History of Idaho's Capitol. Idaho Capitol Commission. p. 2. Retrieved December 13, 2013. (Note: The full essay is also included in the same PDF document, near the end.)
  9. ^ "Capitol of Light".
  10. ^ University of Idaho - special collections - UI buildings - A - accessed 2010-03-23
  11. ^ "Multnomah County OR Archives Biographies". files.usgwarchives.net. The S. J. Clarke Publishing Company.
  12. ^ "Guide to the Fletcher P. Homan papers 1902–1923 at the Mark O. Hatfield Library". Northwest Digital Archives. Retrieved July 25, 2011.
  13. ^ Engineering News-Record 1939: 108.
  14. ^ Western Architect and Engineer 1939: 55.

External links edit

  • Idaho Capitol Commission 2012-11-20 at the Wayback Machine - original architect - John E. Tourtellotte
  • Multnomah County archives John Tourtellotte
  • John Tourtellotte Architecture on Google maps
  • John E. Tourtellotte at Find a Grave

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For the American Union Civil War officer see John Eaton Tourtellotte John Everett Tourtellotte February 22 1869 May 8 1939 was a prominent western American architect best known for his projects in Idaho His work in Boise included the Idaho State Capitol the Boise City National Bank the Carnegie Library and numerous other buildings for schools universities churches and government institutions 1 From 1922 to 1930 he worked in Portland Oregon John E TourtellotteBornJohn Everett Tourtellotte 1869 02 22 February 22 1869East Thompson ConnecticutDiedMay 8 1939 1939 05 08 aged 70 Portland OregonNationalityAmericanOccupationArchitectSpouse s Della Wallace Tourtellotte 1869 1946 Children2PracticeJohn E Tourtellotte amp Company Tourtellotte amp HummelBuildingsIdaho State Capitol U of Idaho Administration Bldg Idaho State Capitol Boise Carnegie Library Boise defunct St John s Cathedral Boise University of Idaho Administration Building Moscow He was associated with partnerships John E Tourtellotte amp Company and Tourtellotte amp Hummel based in Boise Works by these firms were covered in a 1982 study and many of the buildings were immediately or later listed on the National Register of Historic Places 2 3 Contents 1 Early years 2 Idaho and Oregon 3 Works 3 1 John E Tourtellotte 1894 1901 3 2 John E Tourtellotte amp Company 1901 1910 3 3 Tourtellotte amp Hummel 1910 1930 3 4 John E Tourtellotte 1930 1937 3 5 Tourtellotte amp Phillips 1937 1939 4 References 5 External linksEarly years editTourtellotte was born in East Thompson Connecticut to a well respected French Huguenot family His father Charles W Tourtellotte was a prosperous farmer and grist mill owner At age 17 he enrolled as an apprentice to the architectural firm of Cutting amp Bishop based in Webster Massachusetts where he studied architectural drawing for two years During this time he supervised roof construction for the Butler Insane Asylum in Providence Rhode Island and the Anne amp Hope factory in Lonsdale the largest factory in the United States Following his apprenticeship Tourtellotte travelled westward working on construction projects in Chicago Kansas City Albuquerque and Pueblo Colorado before arriving in Boise in 1890 months after Idaho achieved statehood Idaho and Oregon editHis architectural and construction business thrived in Boise and by 1894 Tourtellotte devoted his business entirely to architecture In 1903 he formed a partnership with German immigrant Charles Hummel 1857 1939 a university trained architect who had previously worked for Tourtellotte s architecture and construction business 4 Charles Hummel born in Germany in 1857 became the unspecified but probably indispensable second partner in the firm Tourtellotte amp Company in 1900 He became a named partner in 1910 and was left fully responsible for the Boise operation when Tourtellotte went to Portland in 1913 5 After 1900 it becomes increasingly difficult to attribute designs specifically to Tourtellotte given that most of his energies were devoted to promotion Hummel was probably the chief designer of the greater share of the key works between 1900 and 1920 5 The community development hotels a major accomplishment of Tourtellotte s little documented Oregon years were a direct reflection of his persuasive business skills They were so valued that when he and Charles Hummel severed most of the connections between their Portland and Boise offices in 1922 Tourtellotte retained ten percent of the gross receipts from the Idaho operation in return for getting out quantities of plates booklets etc for advertising purposes and also letters for direct solicitation of business The two offices though maintaining a common name joint advertising and a periodic association on particular projects were hencefoth functionally separate 5 Tourtellotte then partnered with one of Charles Hummel s sons fellow architect Frank K Hummel 1892 1961 The two shared a Portland office from 1922 until Tourtellotte s retirement in 1930 and Frank Hummel worked there until its closure around 1934 when he returned to Boise Tourtellotte continued to work as he designed a proposed Portland City Hall in 1933 with architect Truman E Phillips as well as a completed project Linn County Courthouse in Albany OR which was in the building stages at the time of his death also with Mr PHillips according to Architect and Engineer Vols 136 139 page 55 6 After retiring Tourtellotte continued to live in Portland 6 where he died on May 8 1939 7 He and his wife Della 1869 1946 are buried in Idaho at Morris Hill Cemetery in Boise Tourtellotte was known for combining architectural motifs from disparate styles and eras and the domed Idaho State Capitol is celebrated for its use of natural light To celebrate the opening of the state capitol Tourtellotte wrote an essay where he compared the architectural styles of various eras to the state of spiritual and moral development of civilization evident during those times with the use of illumination and light signifying the increasing spiritual enlightenment of humanity 8 The state capitol underwent an extensive restoration which was completed in 2010 9 Tourtellotte also designed the replacement Administration Building at the University of Idaho in Moscow Construction of the Tudor Gothic style structure began in 1907 and the main building was completed in 1909 its wings in 1912 and 1916 Based on the Hampton Court Palace in England the UI Administration Building is a campus icon and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1978 at age 69 10 Tourtellotte fraternal affiliations were with the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks the Freemasons and the Kiwanis 11 Works editJohn E Tourtellotte 1894 1901 edit W Scott Neal House 215 E Jefferson St Boise Idaho 1897 1914 Walter E Pierce House 5801 Branstetter St Garden City Idaho 1897 J M Johnson House 1002 W Franklin St Boise Idaho 1898 Willis Mickle House 1415 N 8th St Boise Idaho 1898 Herbert Dunton House 906 W Hays St Boise Idaho 1899 1913 Mrs W B Kurtz House 439 W 3rd St Weiser Idaho 1899 1902 Morris Sommer House 548 W 2nd St Weiser Idaho 1899 A B Anderson House 547 W 1st St Weiser Idaho 1900 James Funsten House Remodeling 2420 Old Penitentiary Rd Boise Idaho 1900 Herman Haas House 253 W Idaho St Weiser Idaho 1900 Charles Paynton House 1213 N 8th St Boise Idaho 1900 Nathan Smith House 2315 S Broadway Ave Boise Idaho 1900 Union Block 720 W Idaho St Boise Idaho 1900 01 Marion Allsup House 1601 N 10th St Boise Idaho 1901 John E Tourtellotte amp Company 1901 1910 edit H E McElroy House 924 W Fort St Boise Idaho 1901 Alva Fleharty House 907 W Hays St Boise Idaho 1902 Mackay Episcopal Church Park Ave amp College St Mackay Idaho 1902 Walter Abbs House 915 Fort St Boise Idaho 1903 Ada Odd Fellows Temple 109 115 N 9th St Boise Idaho 1903 Demolished Gymnasium and Armory University of Idaho Moscow Idaho 1903 Bernard Haas House 377 E Main St Weiser Idaho 1903 Louis Kieldson Duplex 413 415 Jefferson St Boise Idaho 1903 Axel Nixon House 815 N Hays St Boise Idaho 1903 Mary Elizabeth Sommercamp House 411 W 3rd St Weiser Idaho 1903 J N Wallace House 1202 Franklin St Boise Idaho 1903 05 Albert Beck House 1101 Fort St Boise Idaho 1904 Carnegie Public Library 815 Washington St Boise Idaho 1904 05 James Davies House 1107 W Washington St Boise Idaho 1904 Harry K Fritchman House 1207 W Hays St Boise Idaho 1904 John Haines House 919 W Hays St Boise Idaho 1904 T J Jones Apartments 10th amp Fort Sts Boise Idaho 1904 Pythian Castle 30 E Idaho St Weiser Idaho 1904 Ross Fork Episcopal Church Mission Rd Fort Hall Idaho 1904 A K Steunenberg House 409 N Kimball Ave Caldwell Idaho 1904 Bishop s Residence 804 N 8th St Boise Idaho 1905 06 Henry N Coffin House 1403 W Franklin St Boise Idaho 1905 Joseph Kinney Mausoleum Morris Hill Cemetery Boise Idaho 1905 Dr J R Numbers House 240 W Main St Weiser Idaho 1905 R K Davis House 1016 Franklin St Boise Idaho 1906 Idaho State Capitol Building 700 W Jefferson St Boise Idaho 1906 12 1920 Mitchell Hotel 10th amp Front Sts Boise Idaho 1906 Demolished Mrs A F Rossi House 1711 Boise Ave Boise Idaho 1906 Cathedral of St John the Evangelist 775 N 8th St Boise Idaho 1906 21 H A Schmelzel House 615 W Hays St Boise ID 1906 Administration Building University of Idaho Moscow Idaho 1907 09 Eaton Hall Willamette University Salem Oregon 1907 08 12 Idaho Grocery Warehouses 1209 Main St Lewiston Idaho 1907 1911 Rosedale Odd Fellows Temple 1755 Broadway Boise Idaho 1907 Trinity Episcopal Church 7th amp Idaho Sts Gooding Idaho 1907 Boise High School Washington St Boise Idaho 1908 1912 1921 Fred Hottes House 509 W Hays St Boise Idaho 1908 N Adolph Jacobsen Building 40 N Main St Payette Idaho 1908 Montandon Building 722 W Idaho Street Boise Idaho 1908 Mountain Home Baptist Church 265 N 4th St E Mountain Home Idaho 1908 Albert Wolters Duplexes 712 716 and 720 722 N 8th St Boise Idaho 1908 09 Woodward Building 23 8th St Payette Idaho 1908 F T Bliss House E 2nd amp McKinley Sts Emmett Idaho 1909 Fred Brunzell House 916 W Franklin St Boise Idaho 1909 John Green Mausoleum Morris Hill Cemetery Boise Idaho 1909 Lewiston City Hall 207 3rd St Lewiston Idaho 1909 G V Nesbit House 308 W Liberty St Weiser Idaho 1909 W A Simpson House 1004 N 10 St Boise Idaho 1909 B S Varian House 241 Main St Weiser Idaho 1909 C H Waymire Building 1521 N 13th St Boise Idaho 1909 Idaho Building 280 N 8th St Boise Idaho 1910 With Henry J Schlacks Archie Larsen House Larsen Rd Weiser Idaho 1910 Demolished Lewiston Vineyards Gates 18th Ave amp 10th St Lewiston Idaho 1910 Tourtellotte amp Hummel 1910 1930 edit Pilot Butte Inn 1121 Wall Street Bend Oregon 1916 Main article Tourtellotte amp Hummel John E Tourtellotte 1930 1937 edit Portland City Hall Portland Oregon 1933 Not built Tourtellotte amp Phillips 1937 1939 edit Gresham High School Remodeling N Main Ave Gresham Oregon 1939 40 13 Linn County Courthouse 300 SW 1st Ave Albany Oregon 1939 40 14 References edit Capitol of Light Patricia Wright September 22 1982 Tourtellotte and Hummel Architecture Thematic Resources National Register of Historic Places National Park Service National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service March 13 2009 History of Idaho French Hiriam T The Lewis Publishing Company 1914 a b c Wright Patricia 1987 Tourtellotte amp Hummel of Idaho the standard practice of architecture Lisa B Reitzes Idaho State Historical Society Logan Utah Utah State University Press with Idaho State Historical Society ISBN 0 87421 125 5 OCLC 15018496 a b George T Murphy May 5 1979 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form John Jacob Astor Hotel PDF National Park Service Item 8 p 2 Retrieved October 10 2013 Death Summons Noted Architect May 10 1939 The Oregonian p 11 John E Tourtellotte A Western Visionary PDF About the History of Idaho s Capitol Idaho Capitol Commission p 2 Retrieved December 13 2013 Note The full essay is also included in the same PDF document near the end Capitol of Light University of Idaho special collections UI buildings A accessed 2010 03 23 Multnomah County OR Archives Biographies files usgwarchives net The S J Clarke Publishing Company Guide to the Fletcher P Homan papers 1902 1923 at the Mark O Hatfield Library Northwest Digital Archives Retrieved July 25 2011 Engineering News Record 1939 108 Western Architect and Engineer 1939 55 External links editIdaho Capitol Commission Archived 2012 11 20 at the Wayback Machine original architect John E Tourtellotte Multnomah County archives John Tourtellotte John Tourtellotte Architecture on Google maps John E Tourtellotte at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John E Tourtellotte amp oldid 1147412158, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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