ELLIS F. LAWRENCE

East entrance of Knight Library in Eugene, Oregon

'Ellis Fuller Lawrence' (November 13 1879–February 27 1946) was an American architect, working primarily in the U.S. state of Oregon. In 1914, he helped found and was the first dean of the University of Oregon's School of Architecture and Allied Arts, a position he held until his death. Lawrence concurrently served as campus architect for the University of Oregon and designed many campus buildings, including Knight Library and the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art. Lawrence Hall on the university campus was named in his honor in 1956, somewhat ironically since the new structure replaced Lawrence's Architecture and Art Building of 1923. His body of over 500 projects --well-documented in the online ''Ellis Lawrence Building Survey''-- includes churches, residences, commercial and industrial buildings, funerary buildings, multi-family residences, and public buildings.
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Contents
Biography
Buildings designed by Lawrence
Portland, Oregon
Other Oregon NRHP structures
Other buildings
See also
References
External links

Biography


Ellis F. Lawrence was born in Malden, Massachusetts and received both his bachelor's and master's degrees at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), the first school of architecture in the United States. After graduation in 1902, Lawrence worked for several architectural firms then traveled in Europe. He was employed by the Boston architectural firm Codman & Despradelle in 1905.
In 1906, Codman & Despradelle (Boston), sent Lawrence to San Francisco to commence work there, but the 1906 San Francisco earthquake convinced him to stay in Portland, Oregon where he had stopped on the way. He lived in Portland the rest of his life and commuted to his work as dean and campus architect in Eugene.
He was associated with several Oregon-based architecture firms: MacNaughton Raymond & Lawrence (1906-1910); Lawrence & Holford (1913-1928); Lawrence, Holford, Allyn & Bean (1928-1933); and Lawrence, Holford, & Allyn (1933-1941). Lawrence's final partnership, Lawrence & Lawrence (1944-1946), was with his son, Henry Abbott Lawrence.

Buildings designed by Lawrence


Detail of Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art entrance

===On the National Register of Historic Places

Eugene, Oregon



Alpha Phi Sorority House, University of Oregon

Chambers House

Knight Library, University of Oregon

Hope Abbey Mausoleum

Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art, University of Oregon

Women's Memorial Quadrangle (includes Gerlinger Hall, Susan Campbell Hall, and Hendricks Hall), University of Oregon [1]
Portland, Oregon


Belle Court Apartments

Cumberland Apartments

Henry B. Dickson House

Lewis T. Gilliland House

Albert, Oscar, and Linda Heintz House

Dr. Harry M. Hendershott House

James Hickey House

Irvington Tennis Club

William H. Lewis Model House

Alexander D. McDougall House

Natt and Christena McDougall House

Henry B. Miller House

Paul C. Murphy House

Isaac Neuberger House

Harry T. Nicolai House

John V. G. Posey House

O. L. Price House

Samuel G. Reed House

Maurice Seitz House

Blaine Smith House

Stanley C. E. Smith House

Arthur Champlin Spencer and Margaret Fenton Spencer House

John A. Sprouse Jr. House

Alice Henderson Strong House

Fred E. Taylor House

Troy Laundry Building

Wells-Guthrie House

James E. Wheeler House
Other Oregon NRHP structures

Interior of the Elsinore Theatre


Old Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority House, Corvallis

James M. and Paul R. Kelty House, Lafayette

Hall-Chaney House, Milwaukie

Elsinore Theater, Salem

Mahonia Hall, (Oregon Governor's mansion), Salem
Other buildings

McArthur Court


McArthur Court, University of Oregon, Eugene

★ Oceanview Cemetery Mausoleum, Astoria [2]

★ Cooley House, Lewis and Clark College, Portland

★ Franklin Building, Salem

★ Mount Crest Abbey Mausoleum, Salem

See also



List of Registered Historic Places in Oregon

References



★ ''Harmony in Diversity : The Architecture and Teaching of Ellis F. Lawrence''. Edited by Michael Shellenbarger ; essays by Kimberly K. Lakin, Leland M. Roth, Michael Shellenbarger. Eugene, Or. : Museum of Art and the Historic Preservation Program, School of Architecture and Allied Arts, University of Oregon, 1989.

★ Ritz, Richard Ellison. "Lawrence, Ellis Fuller," ''Architects of Oregon; A Biographical Dictionary of Architects Deceased—19th and 20th Centuries''. Portland, OR: Lair Hill Publishing, 2002.

External links



''Ellis Lawrence Building Survey''. University of Oregon Libraries.

Architecture of Ellis F. Lawrence National Register of Historic Places multiple property submission (PDF)

Ellis F. Lawrence, in The Architecture of the University of Oregon: A History, Bibliography, and Research Guide

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