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Samuel Plato

Samuel M. Plato (1882–1957) was an American architect and building contractor who is noted for his work on federal housing projects and U.S. post offices, as well as designing and building other structures in the United States such as private homes, banks, churches, and schools. During World War II, the Alabama native was one of the few African-American contractors in the country to be awarded wartime building contracts, which included Wake and Midway Halls (dormitories for more than 800 African-American defense workers in Washington, D.C.). He also received contracts to build at least thirty-eight U.S. post offices across the country.

Samuel M. Plato
Born1882
DiedMay 1957
NationalityAmerican
OccupationArchitect
BuildingsJ. Woodrow Wilson House (Marion, Indiana);
Broadway Temple A.M.E. Zion Church (Louisville, Kentucky);
Virginia Avenue Colored School, (Louisville)

Plato began his career as an architect and building contractor in 1902 in Marion, Indiana, at a time when segregation and racism made it challenging for African-American professionals such as architects. In 1921 he relocated to Louisville, Kentucky, where he spent the remainder of his life. Some of Plato's major buildings are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. These include Louisville's Broadway Temple A.M.E. Zion Church and the Virginia Avenue Colored School, two examples of his contributions to the city's African-American community. Other projects include the J. Woodrow Wilson House in Marion, Indiana, and the Second Baptist Church in Bloomington, Indiana.

Early life and education

Samuel M. Plato was born in 1882 Waugh in Montgomery County, Alabama, to James and Katie (Hendricks) Plato.[1][2][3] Samuel's father, James, was a farmer who taught him carpentry and other construction trades.[3]

Plato graduated from Mount Meigs Colored Institute near his home in Alabama and spent an additional year studying at Winston-Salem, North Carolina, before enrolling in 1898 at State University Normal School (present-day Simmons College of Kentucky) in Louisville, Kentucky. He began working at construction sites during summer breaks while still in college and graduated in 1902. He also completed a mail-order program in architecture from the International Correspondence Schools of Scranton, Pennsylvania.[1][3]

Career

Plato began working as a building contractor in the early 1900s, when discrimination against African Americans often relegated them to jobs as unskilled laborers. Despite these challenges, he found work as a carpenter, but refused to settle on this labor-intensive work. Instead, he chose to pursue a career as an architect and building contractor, which provided better employment opportunities and potential pay.[4][5] Plato was a pioneer African-American architect in the Midwest. Around 1902, soon after his graduation from college, he moved to Marion, Indiana, where he spent nineteen years as an architect and building contractor before returning to Louisville, Kentucky, around 1921.[6][7] In addition to projects in Indiana and Kentucky, Plato designed and built other structures across the United States.[8]

Indiana projects

During his year in Indiana, at a time when the Ku Klux Klan reached an all-time record half a million members in the state, Plato found support from wealthy business owners John Schaumleffel and J. Woodrow Wilson.[6] Plato also had a partnership for about ten years with Jasper Burden, a black building contractor in Marion. Plato's early projects in Marion include the Second Baptist Church, completed in 1905; the Classical Revival-style First Baptist Church, commissioned in 1913; and the Platonian Apartments, built in 1910.[9][10]

 
J. Woodrow Wilson House, July 2012

One of Plato's best-known residential projects was designing and building the fifteen-room J. Woodrow Wilson House in Marion in 1912. The Neoclassical-style home was "one of the finest structures in the city"[11] and reportedly cost $135,000 at the time of its construction. Wilson House (also known as the Wilson-Vaughan Home and the Hostess House) was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.[10][12]

Plato received contracts to design and build other private residences and commercial buildings in Marion and elsewhere in Indiana. Examples of his work include the First United Baptist Church in Wabash and the Second Baptist Church (added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983) in Bloomington, Indiana. Another project was the Swallow-Robin residence hall, which was built in 1917 on the Taylor University campus in Upland, Indiana.[12][13][14]

While working in Marion, Plato became known for providing employment opportunities for blacks and whites on his construction projects at a time when it was a rare practice for black businessmen to hire white workers in the early decades of the twentieth century. According to a 1928 national survey that was published in the 1931-32 Negro Year Book, less than 1.2 percent of black-owned businesses employed white workers. Plato's practice of hiring African-American workers for his projects, especially for work that required skilled labor, gave them a chance to improve their skills. His efforts were also successful in opening the building trade unions to African-American workers.[1][15]

Kentucky projects

 
Virginia Avenue School, Louisville, Kentucky

Plato left Marion around 1920 or 1921 to return to Louisville, Kentucky, where he continued his career as an architect and builder.[16] His major projects in the Louisville area include the Broadway Temple A.M.E. Zion Church (added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980)[17] and the James Lee Memorial Presbyterian Church. Plato also designed the Virginia Avenue Colored School (added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2004).[18] and Simmons College of Kentucky's Steward Hall, a part of the school's Municipal College Campus (added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1976),[19] as well as two banks in Louisville. A residential area that Plato helped develop was named Plato Terrace in his honor. Around 1945 he helped to establish the city's Westover subdivision of small, two-bedroom houses.[16][20][21]

Federal government projects

 
U.S. Post Office at Fredonia, New York

Plato is best known for his work on federal housing projects and reportedly became the first African-American to be awarded a contract to build a U.S. post office. He was awarded contracts, mostly in the 1930s, to build at least 38 U.S. post offices in towns such as Coldwater, Ohio; Goshen, New York; Fredonia, New York; Eaton, New York; Morgantown, West Virginia; and Decatur, Alabama. Officials hired Plato to work on the post office in Decatur without realizing he was black. To avoid a potentially unpleasant situation, he skipped the welcome party and immediately went to work on the project. Other federal government projects included a government building in New Philadelphia, Ohio, and contracts to build federal armories in Xenia and Zanesville, Ohio.[6][1][20][22]

Plato's federal government housing projects for defense workers during World War II brought him national attention. Between 1941 and 1946, Plato was one of the few African-American architects and contractors in the United States to be awarded wartime contracts. Although President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued Executive Order 8802 in June 1941 prohibiting discriminatory practices in defense jobs and in awarding federal defense contracts during World War II, national defense industries continued to discriminate against African Americans and overlooked black businesses in awarding federal government contracts.[1][23] Plato's defense workers housing projects include Wake and Midway Halls, which were dormitories to accommodate more than 800 African-American defense workers in Washington, D.C. Another of his federal housing projects was Sparrows Point, a 304-unit complex in Baltimore, Maryland.[24][25]

Community service

In addition to his architectural career, Plato was active in several civic organizations that included the Young Women's Christian Association, the National Urban League, and the National Negro Business League. Plato was a member of Phi Beta Sigma fraternity's Epsilon Beta Sigma alumni chapter. He also served as vice president of the National Negro Builders Association in 1927.[21][26] In addition, Plato was in demand as a speaker at the Tuskegee Institute, the Hampton Institute, and a special lecturer at Howard University's School of Engineering and Architecture.[1]

Marriage and family

Few details are known of Plato's personal life. His first wife, Nettie Plato, is buried at Marion, Indiana. His second wife, Elnora Davis Lucas Plato (1891–1975)[27] "built her own successful dressmaking business" before marrying Plato while he was a resident of Marion.[1] She also used funds from her business earnings to help her husband and was "his constant travel companion and business manager."[1] Around 1929, Samuel built a modified Tudor Revival-style home for himself and his wife in the Russell neighborhood of Louisville, Kentucky.[28]

Plato believed in helping others and devoting himself to his family. "In 1939 he devised a plan to move his sister and her family off the old homestead in Waugh, Alabama, and into a new home nearby."[1] Elnora Plato "funded the cost of Samuel's sister's new house in Waugh and "on more than one occasion, she was able to keep heir [sic] company from going bankrupt."[1] Samuel and Elnora Plato also "helped put several nieces and nephews though college and graduate school." In addition, he employed "some of them on jobs in Louisville and Washington, D.C.[1]

Death and legacy

Plato died in May 1957 in Louisville, Kentucky.[21][25] He was a nationally-recognized as a pioneer an African-American architect and builder during the early 20th century. He began his career at a time when segregation and racism made it challenging for African-American professionals such as architects. Plato "was admired and respected"[1] in the community. He once commented, "My whole goal in life has been to improve and help others who come up behind me."[21] According to his wife, Elnora Plato, he "was a pioneer for years and he wanted his business to live. Then, too, he wanted to inspire young engineers."[1]

Historians attribute Plato's successful career was due to his persistent efforts and his reputation for quality and integrity.[6][1] His work was recognized in newspapers, the Negro Year Book, and Ebony magazine, among other publications. After visiting Wake and Midway Halls, two of his wartime federal defense workers' housing projects, First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt wrote about them in her newspaper column, "My Day," on May 20, 1943.[29]

 
Broadway Temple A.M.E. Zion Church, Louisville, Kentucky

Plato designed and built a variety of structures in buildings Alabama, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Washington D.C. He is reportedly the first African American to design a U.S. post office and is credited with receiving contracts to build at least thirty-eight post offices across the United States.[20][24] His work also included "Greek Revival and Craftsman-style houses" and "elegant mansions," as well as "banks, churches, schools, office buildings, theaters," and "federal government housing projects."[1] At least eight of his projects are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[20] These include the Broadway Temple A.M.E. Zion Church and the Virginia Avenue Colored School in Louisville, Kentucky;[1][16] the J. Woodrow Wilson House at Marion, Indiana;[6][30] and the Second Baptist Church in Bloomington, Indiana,[14] among others.[31]

Honors and awards

  • Howard University's School of Engineering and Architecture, where Plato had been special lecturer, honored him posthumously in 1960.[1]
  • The Indiana Historical Bureau dedicated a state historical marker in Plato's honor on July 25, 2015, in front of the J. Woodrow Wilson House (Hostess House) in Marion, Indiana.[32]
  • A Kentucky state historical marker dedicated to Plato was erected in front of Broadway Temple A.M.E. Zion Church in Louisville, Kentucky, and dedicated in February 1919.[20]

Selected works

 
Swallow-Robin Hall at Taylor University in Upland, Indiana, was designed by Samuel Plato[6]

Indiana

  • First Baptist Church, Marion[13]
  • First United Baptist Church, Wabash[31]
  • J. Woodrow Wilson House (NRHP), Marion[10]
  • Platonian Apartments, Marion[13]
  • Second Baptist Church (NRHP), Bloomington[14]
  • Swallow-Robin residence hall at Taylor University, Upland[31]

Kentucky

  • Broadway Temple A.M.E. Zion Church (NRHP), Louisville[17]
  • Green Street Baptist Church, Louisville[20]
  • James Lee Presbyterian Church, Louisville[20]
  • Virginia Avenue School (NRHP), Louisville[18]
  • Steward Hall at Simmons College of Kentucky, Louisville[21]

New York

Ohio

  • Pythian Temple, the present-day Martin Luther King Performing and Cultural Arts Complex, Columbus[21]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Pen Bogert. . The Filson Newsmagazine. The Filson Historical Society. Archived from the original on July 6, 2007.
  2. ^ Plato's birth year is uncertain, but based on U.S. census records, his World War II draft card, and his gravestone, it is believed to be 1882. See: "Samuel Plato". Indiana Historical Bureau. Retrieved November 22, 2019.
  3. ^ a b c Katherine M. Jourdan, "The Architecture of Samuel M. Plato," in Wilma L. Gibbs, ed. (2007). Indiana's African American Heritage: Essays from Black History News & Notes (2nd ed.). Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. p. 177. ISBN 978-0871950994.
  4. ^ Footnote 10 in "Samuel Plato". Indiana Historical Bureau. Retrieved November 13, 2019.
  5. ^ Jourdan, p. 179.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Erik Kielisch (March 4, 2005). "Plato's Influence Remains on Campus: Works of Swallow Robin's Architect Comes to the Archives". The Echo. Vol. 92, no. 20. Upland, Indiana: Taylor University. pp. 1–2.
  7. ^ Indiana Historical Bureau, "Samuel Plato," footnote 3.
  8. ^ Indiana Historical Bureau, "Samuel Plato," footnote 5.
  9. ^ The U-shaped Platonian Apartments complex, which was designed, built, and named after the architect, had three buildings with ten, two-story units. See: Jourdan, pp. 179–82.
  10. ^ a b c "Indiana State Historic Architectural and Archaeological Research Database (SHAARD)" (Searchable database). Department of Natural Resources, Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology. Retrieved December 4, 2019. Note: This includes Katherine M. Jourdan (January 1988). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: J. Woodrow Wilson House" (PDF). Retrieved December 4, 2019. and accompanying photographs.
  11. ^ Jourdan, p. 181.
  12. ^ a b Indiana Historical Bureau, "Samuel Plato," footnotes 4 and 5.
  13. ^ a b c Jourdan, pp. 179–82.
  14. ^ a b c "Indiana State Historic Architectural and Archaeological Research Database (SHAARD)" (Searchable database). Department of Natural Resources, Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology. Retrieved December 4, 2019. Note: This includes Kathleen S. Branigan (December 1994). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: Second Baptist Church" (PDF). Retrieved December 4, 2019. and accompanying photographs.
  15. ^ Indiana Historical Bureau, "Samuel Plato," footnotes 12 and 14.
  16. ^ a b c Jourdan, pp. 182–84.
  17. ^ a b "Broadway Temple A.M.E. Zion Church". NPGallery: Digital Asset Management System. National Park Service. Retrieved December 3, 2019. Note: This includes Hugh B. Foshee (August 5, 1980). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: Broadway Temple A.M.E. Zion Church" (PDF). Retrieved December 3, 2019. and accompanying photographs.
  18. ^ a b "Virginia Avenue Colored School". NPGallery: Digital Asset Management System. National Park Service. Retrieved December 3, 2019. Note: This includes Mark D. Frazar. "National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: Virginia Avenue Colored School" (PDF). Retrieved December 3, 2019. and accompanying photographs.
  19. ^ "Municipal College Campus (Simmons University)". NPGallery: Digital Asset Management System. National Park Service. Retrieved December 3, 2019. Note: This includes Douglas Stern. "National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: Municipal College Campus (Simmons University)" (PDF). p. section 8, page 5. Retrieved December 3, 2019. and accompanying photographs. See also: "Campus Life". Simmons College of Kentucky. Retrieved December 4, 2019.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g Erin O'Neil (February 17, 2019). "Kentucky Historical Marker dedicated to architect Samuel Plato". WAVE 3 News. Retrieved December 2, 2019.
  21. ^ a b c d e f "Bro. Samuel Plato". The Chapter: Epsilon Beta Sigma Alumni Chapter. Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity. Retrieved November 13, 2019.
  22. ^ a b Indiana Historical Bureau, "Samuel Plato," footnotes 5 and 6.
  23. ^ Indiana Historical Bureau, "Samuel Plato," footnotes 7 and 8.
  24. ^ a b Indiana Historical Bureau, "Samuel Plato," footnote 7.
  25. ^ a b Jourdan, p. 184.
  26. ^ Indiana Historical Bureau, "Samuel Plato, " footnote 11.
  27. ^ Jourdan, p. 180.
  28. ^ The Russell Historic District was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. See: "Virginia Avenue Colored School". NPGallery: Digital Asset Management System. National Park Service. Retrieved December 3, 2019. Note: This includes Mark D. Frazar. "National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: Virginia Avenue Colored School" (PDF). p. section 8, p. 3. Retrieved December 3, 2019. and accompanying photographs.
  29. ^ Indiana Historical Bureau, "Samuel Plato," footnotes 7, 8, and 10.
  30. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  31. ^ a b c Indiana Historical Bureau, “Samuel Plato,” footnote 5.
  32. ^ "Samuel Plato Marker Dedication". Indiana Historical Bureau. Retrieved December 2, 2019.

samuel, plato, bolivian, politician, samuel, plata, samuel, plato, 1882, 1957, american, architect, building, contractor, noted, work, federal, housing, projects, post, offices, well, designing, building, other, structures, united, states, such, private, homes. For the Bolivian politician see Samuel Plata Samuel M Plato 1882 1957 was an American architect and building contractor who is noted for his work on federal housing projects and U S post offices as well as designing and building other structures in the United States such as private homes banks churches and schools During World War II the Alabama native was one of the few African American contractors in the country to be awarded wartime building contracts which included Wake and Midway Halls dormitories for more than 800 African American defense workers in Washington D C He also received contracts to build at least thirty eight U S post offices across the country Samuel M PlatoBorn1882Waugh AlabamaDiedMay 1957Louisville KentuckyNationalityAmericanOccupationArchitectBuildingsJ Woodrow Wilson House Marion Indiana Broadway Temple A M E Zion Church Louisville Kentucky Virginia Avenue Colored School Louisville Plato began his career as an architect and building contractor in 1902 in Marion Indiana at a time when segregation and racism made it challenging for African American professionals such as architects In 1921 he relocated to Louisville Kentucky where he spent the remainder of his life Some of Plato s major buildings are listed on the National Register of Historic Places These include Louisville s Broadway Temple A M E Zion Church and the Virginia Avenue Colored School two examples of his contributions to the city s African American community Other projects include the J Woodrow Wilson House in Marion Indiana and the Second Baptist Church in Bloomington Indiana Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Indiana projects 2 2 Kentucky projects 2 3 Federal government projects 3 Community service 4 Marriage and family 5 Death and legacy 6 Honors and awards 7 Selected works 7 1 Indiana 7 2 Kentucky 7 3 New York 7 4 Ohio 8 ReferencesEarly life and education EditSamuel M Plato was born in 1882 Waugh in Montgomery County Alabama to James and Katie Hendricks Plato 1 2 3 Samuel s father James was a farmer who taught him carpentry and other construction trades 3 Plato graduated from Mount Meigs Colored Institute near his home in Alabama and spent an additional year studying at Winston Salem North Carolina before enrolling in 1898 at State University Normal School present day Simmons College of Kentucky in Louisville Kentucky He began working at construction sites during summer breaks while still in college and graduated in 1902 He also completed a mail order program in architecture from the International Correspondence Schools of Scranton Pennsylvania 1 3 Career EditPlato began working as a building contractor in the early 1900s when discrimination against African Americans often relegated them to jobs as unskilled laborers Despite these challenges he found work as a carpenter but refused to settle on this labor intensive work Instead he chose to pursue a career as an architect and building contractor which provided better employment opportunities and potential pay 4 5 Plato was a pioneer African American architect in the Midwest Around 1902 soon after his graduation from college he moved to Marion Indiana where he spent nineteen years as an architect and building contractor before returning to Louisville Kentucky around 1921 6 7 In addition to projects in Indiana and Kentucky Plato designed and built other structures across the United States 8 Indiana projects Edit During his year in Indiana at a time when the Ku Klux Klan reached an all time record half a million members in the state Plato found support from wealthy business owners John Schaumleffel and J Woodrow Wilson 6 Plato also had a partnership for about ten years with Jasper Burden a black building contractor in Marion Plato s early projects in Marion include the Second Baptist Church completed in 1905 the Classical Revival style First Baptist Church commissioned in 1913 and the Platonian Apartments built in 1910 9 10 J Woodrow Wilson House July 2012 One of Plato s best known residential projects was designing and building the fifteen room J Woodrow Wilson House in Marion in 1912 The Neoclassical style home was one of the finest structures in the city 11 and reportedly cost 135 000 at the time of its construction Wilson House also known as the Wilson Vaughan Home and the Hostess House was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1988 10 12 Plato received contracts to design and build other private residences and commercial buildings in Marion and elsewhere in Indiana Examples of his work include the First United Baptist Church in Wabash and the Second Baptist Church added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983 in Bloomington Indiana Another project was the Swallow Robin residence hall which was built in 1917 on the Taylor University campus in Upland Indiana 12 13 14 While working in Marion Plato became known for providing employment opportunities for blacks and whites on his construction projects at a time when it was a rare practice for black businessmen to hire white workers in the early decades of the twentieth century According to a 1928 national survey that was published in the 1931 32 Negro Year Book less than 1 2 percent of black owned businesses employed white workers Plato s practice of hiring African American workers for his projects especially for work that required skilled labor gave them a chance to improve their skills His efforts were also successful in opening the building trade unions to African American workers 1 15 Kentucky projects Edit Virginia Avenue School Louisville Kentucky Plato left Marion around 1920 or 1921 to return to Louisville Kentucky where he continued his career as an architect and builder 16 His major projects in the Louisville area include the Broadway Temple A M E Zion Church added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980 17 and the James Lee Memorial Presbyterian Church Plato also designed the Virginia Avenue Colored School added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2004 18 and Simmons College of Kentucky s Steward Hall a part of the school s Municipal College Campus added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1976 19 as well as two banks in Louisville A residential area that Plato helped develop was named Plato Terrace in his honor Around 1945 he helped to establish the city s Westover subdivision of small two bedroom houses 16 20 21 Federal government projects Edit U S Post Office at Fredonia New York Plato is best known for his work on federal housing projects and reportedly became the first African American to be awarded a contract to build a U S post office He was awarded contracts mostly in the 1930s to build at least 38 U S post offices in towns such as Coldwater Ohio Goshen New York Fredonia New York Eaton New York Morgantown West Virginia and Decatur Alabama Officials hired Plato to work on the post office in Decatur without realizing he was black To avoid a potentially unpleasant situation he skipped the welcome party and immediately went to work on the project Other federal government projects included a government building in New Philadelphia Ohio and contracts to build federal armories in Xenia and Zanesville Ohio 6 1 20 22 Plato s federal government housing projects for defense workers during World War II brought him national attention Between 1941 and 1946 Plato was one of the few African American architects and contractors in the United States to be awarded wartime contracts Although President Franklin D Roosevelt issued Executive Order 8802 in June 1941 prohibiting discriminatory practices in defense jobs and in awarding federal defense contracts during World War II national defense industries continued to discriminate against African Americans and overlooked black businesses in awarding federal government contracts 1 23 Plato s defense workers housing projects include Wake and Midway Halls which were dormitories to accommodate more than 800 African American defense workers in Washington D C Another of his federal housing projects was Sparrows Point a 304 unit complex in Baltimore Maryland 24 25 Community service EditIn addition to his architectural career Plato was active in several civic organizations that included the Young Women s Christian Association the National Urban League and the National Negro Business League Plato was a member of Phi Beta Sigma fraternity s Epsilon Beta Sigma alumni chapter He also served as vice president of the National Negro Builders Association in 1927 21 26 In addition Plato was in demand as a speaker at the Tuskegee Institute the Hampton Institute and a special lecturer at Howard University s School of Engineering and Architecture 1 Marriage and family EditFew details are known of Plato s personal life His first wife Nettie Plato is buried at Marion Indiana His second wife Elnora Davis Lucas Plato 1891 1975 27 built her own successful dressmaking business before marrying Plato while he was a resident of Marion 1 She also used funds from her business earnings to help her husband and was his constant travel companion and business manager 1 Around 1929 Samuel built a modified Tudor Revival style home for himself and his wife in the Russell neighborhood of Louisville Kentucky 28 Plato believed in helping others and devoting himself to his family In 1939 he devised a plan to move his sister and her family off the old homestead in Waugh Alabama and into a new home nearby 1 Elnora Plato funded the cost of Samuel s sister s new house in Waugh and on more than one occasion she was able to keep heir sic company from going bankrupt 1 Samuel and Elnora Plato also helped put several nieces and nephews though college and graduate school In addition he employed some of them on jobs in Louisville and Washington D C 1 Death and legacy Edit Plato s Second Baptist Church in Bloomington Indiana Plato died in May 1957 in Louisville Kentucky 21 25 He was a nationally recognized as a pioneer an African American architect and builder during the early 20th century He began his career at a time when segregation and racism made it challenging for African American professionals such as architects Plato was admired and respected 1 in the community He once commented My whole goal in life has been to improve and help others who come up behind me 21 According to his wife Elnora Plato he was a pioneer for years and he wanted his business to live Then too he wanted to inspire young engineers 1 Historians attribute Plato s successful career was due to his persistent efforts and his reputation for quality and integrity 6 1 His work was recognized in newspapers the Negro Year Book and Ebony magazine among other publications After visiting Wake and Midway Halls two of his wartime federal defense workers housing projects First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt wrote about them in her newspaper column My Day on May 20 1943 29 Broadway Temple A M E Zion Church Louisville Kentucky Plato designed and built a variety of structures in buildings Alabama Indiana Kentucky Maryland New York Ohio Pennsylvania West Virginia and Washington D C He is reportedly the first African American to design a U S post office and is credited with receiving contracts to build at least thirty eight post offices across the United States 20 24 His work also included Greek Revival and Craftsman style houses and elegant mansions as well as banks churches schools office buildings theaters and federal government housing projects 1 At least eight of his projects are listed on the National Register of Historic Places 20 These include the Broadway Temple A M E Zion Church and the Virginia Avenue Colored School in Louisville Kentucky 1 16 the J Woodrow Wilson House at Marion Indiana 6 30 and the Second Baptist Church in Bloomington Indiana 14 among others 31 Honors and awards EditHoward University s School of Engineering and Architecture where Plato had been special lecturer honored him posthumously in 1960 1 The Indiana Historical Bureau dedicated a state historical marker in Plato s honor on July 25 2015 in front of the J Woodrow Wilson House Hostess House in Marion Indiana 32 A Kentucky state historical marker dedicated to Plato was erected in front of Broadway Temple A M E Zion Church in Louisville Kentucky and dedicated in February 1919 20 Selected works Edit Swallow Robin Hall at Taylor University in Upland Indiana was designed by Samuel Plato 6 Indiana Edit First Baptist Church Marion 13 First United Baptist Church Wabash 31 J Woodrow Wilson House NRHP Marion 10 Platonian Apartments Marion 13 Second Baptist Church NRHP Bloomington 14 Swallow Robin residence hall at Taylor University Upland 31 Kentucky Edit Broadway Temple A M E Zion Church NRHP Louisville 17 Green Street Baptist Church Louisville 20 James Lee Presbyterian Church Louisville 20 Virginia Avenue School NRHP Louisville 18 Steward Hall at Simmons College of Kentucky Louisville 21 New York Edit U S Post Office Fredonia 22 Ohio Edit Pythian Temple the present day Martin Luther King Performing and Cultural Arts Complex Columbus 21 References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Pen Bogert Samuel M Plato Building a Dream The Filson Newsmagazine The Filson Historical Society Archived from the original on July 6 2007 Plato s birth year is uncertain but based on U S census records his World War II draft card and his gravestone it is believed to be 1882 See Samuel Plato Indiana Historical Bureau Retrieved November 22 2019 a b c Katherine M Jourdan The Architecture of Samuel M Plato in Wilma L Gibbs ed 2007 Indiana s African American Heritage Essays fromBlack History News amp Notes 2nd ed Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society p 177 ISBN 978 0871950994 Footnote 10 in Samuel Plato Indiana Historical Bureau Retrieved November 13 2019 Jourdan p 179 a b c d e f Erik Kielisch March 4 2005 Plato s Influence Remains on Campus Works of Swallow Robin s Architect Comes to the Archives The Echo Vol 92 no 20 Upland Indiana Taylor University pp 1 2 Indiana Historical Bureau Samuel Plato footnote 3 Indiana Historical Bureau Samuel Plato footnote 5 The U shaped Platonian Apartments complex which was designed built and named after the architect had three buildings with ten two story units See Jourdan pp 179 82 a b c Indiana State Historic Architectural and Archaeological Research Database SHAARD Searchable database Department of Natural Resources Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology Retrieved December 4 2019 Note This includes Katherine M Jourdan January 1988 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form J Woodrow Wilson House PDF Retrieved December 4 2019 and accompanying photographs Jourdan p 181 a b Indiana Historical Bureau Samuel Plato footnotes 4 and 5 a b c Jourdan pp 179 82 a b c Indiana State Historic Architectural and Archaeological Research Database SHAARD Searchable database Department of Natural Resources Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology Retrieved December 4 2019 Note This includes Kathleen S Branigan December 1994 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form Second Baptist Church PDF Retrieved December 4 2019 and accompanying photographs Indiana Historical Bureau Samuel Plato footnotes 12 and 14 a b c Jourdan pp 182 84 a b Broadway Temple A M E Zion Church NPGallery Digital Asset Management System National Park Service Retrieved December 3 2019 Note This includes Hugh B Foshee August 5 1980 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form Broadway Temple A M E Zion Church PDF Retrieved December 3 2019 and accompanying photographs a b Virginia Avenue Colored School NPGallery Digital Asset Management System National Park Service Retrieved December 3 2019 Note This includes Mark D Frazar National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form Virginia Avenue Colored School PDF Retrieved December 3 2019 and accompanying photographs Municipal College Campus Simmons University NPGallery Digital Asset Management System National Park Service Retrieved December 3 2019 Note This includes Douglas Stern National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form Municipal College Campus Simmons University PDF p section 8 page 5 Retrieved December 3 2019 and accompanying photographs See also Campus Life Simmons College of Kentucky Retrieved December 4 2019 a b c d e f g Erin O Neil February 17 2019 Kentucky Historical Marker dedicated to architect Samuel Plato WAVE 3 News Retrieved December 2 2019 a b c d e f Bro Samuel Plato The Chapter Epsilon Beta Sigma Alumni Chapter Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity Retrieved November 13 2019 a b Indiana Historical Bureau Samuel Plato footnotes 5 and 6 Indiana Historical Bureau Samuel Plato footnotes 7 and 8 a b Indiana Historical Bureau Samuel Plato footnote 7 a b Jourdan p 184 Indiana Historical Bureau Samuel Plato footnote 11 Jourdan p 180 The Russell Historic District was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980 See Virginia Avenue Colored School NPGallery Digital Asset Management System National Park Service Retrieved December 3 2019 Note This includes Mark D Frazar National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form Virginia Avenue Colored School PDF p section 8 p 3 Retrieved December 3 2019 and accompanying photographs Indiana Historical Bureau Samuel Plato footnotes 7 8 and 10 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service July 9 2010 a b c Indiana Historical Bureau Samuel Plato footnote 5 Samuel Plato Marker Dedication Indiana Historical Bureau Retrieved December 2 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Samuel Plato amp oldid 1121193370, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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