Emlen T. Littell Explained

Emien T. Littell
Birth Name:Emien Trenchard Littell
Alma Mater:University of Pennsylvania
Birth Date:February 12, 1838
Birth Place:Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Death Place:New York City, New York, U.S.
Death Date:March 4, 1891
Significant Buildings:Church of the Incarnation

Emlen Trenchard Littell (February 12, 1838  - March 4, 1891) was an American architect known for designing Gothic Revival style churches.[1]

Early life

Littell was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[2] [3] He was the son of Mary Graff Emien and Dr. Squire L. Littelll.[4]

He attended the University of Pennsylvania, graduating with a B.A. in 1846 and an M.A. in 1859.[5] While there, he was a member of the Fraternity of Delta Psi (aka St. Anthony Hall).

Career

Littell moved to New York City where he established an architectural practice of Congdon and Littell with Columbia University graduate Henry Martyn. Congdon in 1859.[6] They advertised that they were successors to John W. Priest, a founding member of the American Institute of Architects who died in 1859; Congdon had previously served as Priest's assistant.[7] Their office was located at 335 Broadway. They offered designs and working drawings for churches, church furniture, cottages, parsonages, monuments, schools, stained glass, and country and farm houses. Although both architects became noted for designing churches, their partnership only lasted through 1860, with Little establishing an independent practice in 1861.

After the Civil War, Charles Coolidge Haight worked with Littell to receive training and experience, before leaving to start his successful practice in 1867.[8] [9] In 1867, he formed a practice with Henry Hobson Richardson in the Trinity Building at 111 Broadway in Manhattan.[10] [11] However, Richardson left after a few months to form another partnership. Littell remained in the same office.

By 1884, his office was at 48 Exchange Place in New York City.[12] There, he had a partnership, Littell & Smith, with Douglas Smyth from around 1884 to 1886.

Churches

Littell specialized in church designs in a style characterized as parish Gothic: nave plan, chancel, pointed windows, and other Gothic elements. He was so enamored with this style that he said, "It is hardly to be presumed that in the selection of the true style to form a basis for our church architecture many will seriously maintain that we have a choice other than English Gothic."[13]

At the Fourth Church Conference in New York City on October 30, 1877, he presented a paper "The Church Architecture that We Need."[14] During his presentation, he noted, "The building should declare its nature at first sight, not only showing that it is intended for a place of worship, it should distinctly impress upon the minds of beholders that it is a church, belonging to the lineage of the Anglican Church, and could by no possibility have been designed for any other use. …And it should be a landmark, so set and built that even in the midst of a crowded city it cannot be passed by unwittingly. In the city or undulating country, the lofty spires should mark its location, breaking the skyline with their sharp, cross-surmounted peaks."

He also noted that church architecture must be symbolic and truthful with no imitation or cheap materials. Comfort was also important for both physical and practical reasons; he said, "The uneasiness of the body necessarily distracts the mind from worship, and every ancient or modern appliance which provides fresh air, full light, gentle heat, et cetera, should be faithfully used to the end that the congregation shall not undergo unwilling penance. Then, as a natural sequence of true comfort, our churches will be healthful, and hereafter darkness, dampness, and foul air will not depress the vital powers and sow the seeds of disease."

In New York City, his work includes the Church of the Incarnation in Manhattan, the St. John the Baptist House on 17th Street, and the rectory of the Zion Church on Madison Avenue.[15] [16] The Church of the Incarnation is "a significant example of Gothic Revival architecture".[17] It was featured in the 42nd annual exhibition of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in 1865.[18] The Zion Church rectory was also a Gothic Revival structure that feature blocks of bluestone that were eighteen by twenty inches, bay windows decorated with brown stone, and porch shafts of Nova Scotia stone.

In New York state, he designed St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Poughkeepsie, St. John's Episcopal Church in Canandaigua, and Zion Episcopal Church in Palmyra. In 1870, he also designed St. John's Protestant Episcopal Church in Ogdensburg, New York.[19] Planned as a Gothic style cathedral for a northern diocese, St. John's featured local dark-blue sandstone with trim of light-buff Ohio freestone, Tiffany stained glass windows, and a roof of red, purple, and green Vermont slate.[20] The NaNfeet church had a canopied entrance, chancel, nave, organ chamber, sacristy, and 110feet tall tower connected to an open stone parapet. It also had eight bays, separated by lancet windows and buttresses. At the time, it was "the finest and costliest in the northern part of the State."

In Philadelphia, he designed the Church of St. James and its school building, the House of Prayer Episcopal Church, St. Stephen's Episcopal Church Manayunk, and St. Timothy's Episcopal Church, Roxborough.[21] [22] The latter project was in association with Philadelphia architect Charles Marquedent Burns who served as the decorator.[23] Littell designed St. Timothy's to look like "a handsome country parish church within a walled churchyard."[24] In 1863, Littell designed St. James' Memorial Church in Titusville in Crawford County, Pennsylvania.[25] He donated his work as a contribution to the memorial fund.

He also designed the parish house and Sunday school building for the Cathedral Church of St. John in Wilmington, Delaware.[26] [27] His 1875 Christ Episcopal Church in Blacksburg, Virginia was the first church in the United States "to reject the simple nave plan in favor of a side entry, chancel, and pointed windows."[28] [29] In 1880, he designed a memorial tower and spire to add to St. John's Episcopal Church in Hagerstown, Maryland.[30]

Residential

In April 1880, Littell designed an apartment building and four houses for 54th Street, between 6th and 7th Avenue in New York City.[31] This $60,000 project incorporated brick, stone, and terra cotta. In February 1884, he renovated numerous residences for John S. Davidson at 16, 18, and 20 Stone Street and 33 and 35 Bridge Street in New York City, adding two-story and four-story brick extensions with gravel roofs for a cost of $30,000.[32]

Commercial

In May 1881, he designed a three-story brick stable at 41st Street in New York for Francis H. Weeks. The $35,000 stable project also included a tennis court.[33] His other commercial projects include the Jefferson Market in New York City. In 1887, he designed a frame building for South Mexican Telegraph Company in Guatemala.[34]

Government

Little designed the Battle of Monmouth Monument for Freehold, New Jersey, with New Yorkers Douglas Smythe and sculptor James E. Kelly.[35] [36] Construction of this ninety-foot tall monument started at the 100 anniversary of the battle on June 28, 1878, but construction would continue for six years, with its dedication on November 13, 1884.[37] The monument cost $40,000—provided by the United States government and the State of New Jersey. The granite and bronze monument is topped by a statue called both "Columbia Triumphant" and "Liberty Triumphant", along with five bas-relief sculptures depicting scenes from the battle along the base.

Professional affiliations

In 1859, he was elected as a member of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia.[38]

May 1, 1860, Littell was elected a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects (AIA).[39] [40] He served as secretary of AIA in 1862 and 1863, served on the committee on education, and was also an ex officio vice president of AIA following his service as chapter president.[41] [42] In 1876, he presented the paper, "Club Chambers and Apartment Houses" at the eight annual convention of AIA. His presentation was on "The Use and Abuse of Brick in Decoration" at the twelfth annual AIA convention on November 13, 1878.[43]

He was also a founding member of the New York Chapter of AIA in 1867 and served as the group's president for three terms, from 1879 to 1884 and from 1890 to his death in 1891.[44] [45] He donated books to the group's library, including a complete set of Canina. In 1889, he served on an chapter committee to select and purchase plaster reproductions of architectural details and works for the Metropolitan Museum, such as a model of the Parthenon.[46]

The American Association of Architects appointed Littell to serve on the Willard Architectural Commission, helping to select architectural items for the collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.[47] [48] Other members of the commission were Napoleon Le Brun and Alfred J. Bloor. New Yorker Levi Hale Willard left a bequest of $100,000 to the museum in 1893 to purchase "a collection of models, casts, photographs, engravings, and other objects illustrative of the art and science of architecture."

Personal life

Littell married but did not have any children. In 1891. Although he lived in New York City, he spent summers in Narragansett, Rhode Island. He was a member of the University Club of New York.[49]

Littell died at his home at 40 East 44th Street in New York City at the age of 53. His funeral service was held at the Church of the Annunciation in New York. He was buried at the Church of St. James the Less in Philadelphia.

Select projects

!Date!Building!Location!Status!Ref
1884Battle of Monmouth MonumentFreehold, New Jersey
1885Cathedral Church of St. John parish house 10 Concord Avenue, Wilmington, Delawarechurch closed in 2012
1886Cathedral Church of St. John Sunday school building10 Concord Avenue, Wilmington, Delawarechurch closed in 2012
1874Christ Episcopal Church120 Church Street N.E., Blacksburg, Virginia
Church of St. JamesPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania
Church of St. James school buildingPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania
1864Church of the Incarnation205 & 209 Madison Avenue, Manhattan, New YorkNYC Individual Landmark, National Register Historic Places
1875Christ Episcopal ChurchBlacksburg, Virginia
1863House of Prayer Episcopal ChurchPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania
Jefferson Market and Court HouseNew York City, New York
Lawn-Tennis BuildingNew York City, New York
1871St. James Church and SchoolPhiladelphia, Pennsylvaniademolished[50]
1863St. James Memorial ChurchTitusville, Pennsylvania[51]
1877St. John the Baptist House and Novitiate231-233 East 17th Street, Manhattan, New Yorknow condominiums[52]
1872St. John's Episcopal ChurchCanandaigua, New York
1880St. John's Episcopal Church memorial tower and spireHagerstown, Maryland
1870St. John's Protestant Episcopal ChurchOgdensburg, New York
1871St. John's Protestant Episcopal ChurchSchoolOgdensburg, New York[53]
St. Paul's ChurchEnglewood, New Jersey[54]
1873St. Paul's Episcopal ChurchPoughkeepsie, New YorkNational Register of Historic Places
1881St. Stephen's Episcopal ChurchTerrace Street, Manayunk, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
1863St. Timothy's Episcopal Church5720 Ridge Avenue, Roxborough, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
1876St. Timothy's Episcopal Church parish building and naive expanded, clerestory tower5720 Ridge Avenue, Roxborough, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania[55]
1876Zion Church RectoryMadison Avenue
1872Zion Episcopal Church.Palmyra, New YorkPalmyra Village Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tatman. . Sandra L. . Littell, Emlen Trenchard (1838 - 1891) . 2022-08-13 . Philadelphia Architects and Buildings.
  2. March 14, 1891 . To the Brief Notice . The American Architect and Building News . 31 . 794 . 162 . Google Books.
  3. February 16, 1884 . A Group of American Architects . The American Architect and Building News . 15 . 421 . 75 . Google Books.
  4. News: March 5, 1891 . Littell . 5 . The World (New York, New York) . August 13, 2022 . Newspapers.com.
  5. Web site: Catalogue of the members of the fraternity of Delta Psi - 1912 . 2022-08-10 . www.familysearch.org . English.
  6. Web site: Tatman . Sandra L . Congdon & Littell (fl. 1859-1860) . 2022-08-13 . Philadelphia Architects and Buildings.
  7. December 24, 1859 . Congdon & Littell, Architects . The Living Age . 813 . 768 . Google Books.
  8. Book: Withey . Henry F . Biographical dictionary of American architects (deceased) . Withey . Elsie Rathburn . New Age Pub. Co. . 1956 . Los Angeles . 255 . en . Haight, Charles Coolidge.
  9. Web site: Charles C. Haight . 2022-08-13 . Bronx Architecture Lehman College Art Gallery.
  10. Book: Withey . Henry F . Biographical dictionary of American architects (deceased) . Withey . Elsie Rathburn . New Age Pub. Co. . 1956 . Los Angeles . 509 . en . Richardson, Henry Hobson.
  11. January 29, 1876 . The Illustrations . The American Architect and Building News . 1 . 40 . 2027/uc1.c032468952?urlappend=%3Bseq=90 . Hathi Trust.
  12. Web site: Tatman . Sandra L . Littell & Smyth (fl. 1885 - 1886) . 2022-08-13 . Philadelphia Architects and Buildings.
  13. April 20, 1878 . Modern Church Architecture . The American Architect and Building News . 3 . 121 . 139 . Internet Archive.
  14. Littell . Emlen T. . January 12, 1878 . The Church Architecture We Need . The American Architect and Building News . 3 . 107 . 10–12 . Internet Archive.
  15. Book: Withey . Henry F . Biographical dictionary of American architects (deceased) . Withey . Elsie Rathburn . New Age Pub. Co. . 1956 . Los Angeles . 374 . en . Littel, Emlyn T.. 2027/uc1.31822027353820?urlappend=%3Bseq=378 .
  16. Web site: Landmark Building . 2022-08-12 . Church of the Incarnation . en-US.
  17. Web site: 2018-06-21 . Church of the Incarnation and Rectory HDC . 2022-08-12 . NYC Historic Districts Council . en-US.
  18. Book: Catalogue of the Forty-Second Annual Exhibition of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts . Collins, Printer . 1865 . Philadelphia . 21 . en . Google Books.
  19. Web site: April 27, 2020 . City historian has new video about St. John's Church . 2022-08-13 . NNY360 . en.
  20. Book: Durant . Samuel W. . History of St. Lawrence County, New York . Pierce . Henry B. . L. H. Everts & Co. . 1878 . Philadelphia . 185 . December 1, 2022 . Google Books.
  21. John C. Manton, A Splendid Legacy: St. Timothy's, Roxborough, 1859-1984 (Parish history, 1984)
  22. Web site: Thomas . George E. . 2018-07-17 . St. John the Baptist Roman Catholic Church . 2022-08-13 . SAH Archipedia . Society of Architectural Historians . en.
  23. Web site: St. Timothy Church & Parish House . 2022-08-13 . Philadelphia Architects and Buildings.
  24. This Far by Faith: Tradition and Change in the Episcopal Diocese of Pennsylvania. State College: Penn State University Press, 2015.
  25. Purdon . Henry . 1863 . Report of the Rev. Henry Purdon, Rector of St. James' Memorial Church, Titusville, Crawford County . Journal of the Proceedings of the Seventy-Ninth Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church, in the Diocese of Pennsylvania Held in St. Andrews Church, Philadelphia . 79 . 174 . Google Books.
  26. Web site: Cathedral Church of St. John . 2022-08-13 . Philadelphia Architects and Buildings.
  27. Book: Shinn, George Wolfe . King's Handbook of Notable Episcopal Churches in the United States . 1889 . Moses King . 978-0-7905-8077-7 . 123 . en.
  28. Web site: Garcia . Angelica . February 28, 2017 . Christ Episcopal Church . 2022-08-13 . Clio . en.
  29. Web site: Armistead . Mary Bland . Davenport . Harry . Rakes . Barry A. . White . Clare . Pezzoni . Daniel . 1991 . National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: St. John's Episcopal Church . December 1, 2022 . Virginia Department of Historical Resources.
  30. June 12, 1880 . Hagerstown, MD. . The American Architect and Building News . 7 . 233 . 266 . 2027/uc1.e0000236737?urlappend=%3Bseq=714 . Internet Archive.
  31. April 24, 1880 . New York . The American Architect and Building News . 7 . 226 . 182 . Hathi Trust.
  32. February 23, 1894 . Stone St. . The American Architect and Building News . 15 . 426 . 96 . Google Books.
  33. May 14, 1881 . New York . The American Architect and Building News . 9 . 281 . 239 . 2027/uva.x001788848?urlappend=%3Bseq=439 . Hathi Trust.
  34. July 23, 1887 . Personal . Building . 7 . 4 . 32 . Google Books.
  35. Book: Salter, Edwin . A history of Monmouth and Ocean Counties: embracing a genealogical record of earliest settlers in Monmouth and Ocean Counties and their descendants; the Indians, their language, manners, and customs; important historical events: the Revolutionary War, Battle of Monmouth, the war of the rebellion . 1890 . Bayonne, N.J.: E. Gardner & Son . Lincoln Financial Foundation Collection.
  36. August 4, 1883 . Adopted Design of Monument for Monmouth Battle Field, New Jersey. . The American Architect and Building News . 14 . 397 . 54 . Google Books.
  37. Web site: Freehold, New Jersey Revolutionary War Sites Freehold Historic Sites . 2022-08-13 . www.revolutionarywarnewjersey.com.
  38. “Elections in 1859.” Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 11 (1859): 354–55. www.jstor.org/stable/4059277.
  39. Littell . E. T. . February 10, 1876 . Club Chambers and Apartment Houses . The American Architect and Building News . 1 . 59–60 . 2027/uc1.c032468952?urlappend=%3Bseq=125 . Hathi Trust.
  40. Book: Mason, George Champlin . Architects and Their Environment, 1850-1907: Together with Notes and Reminiscences of the Fathers of the Profession, Their Clients and Assistants . Rubblestone . 1907 . 71 . en.
  41. Web site: Officers and Conventions: The American Institute of Architects . August 13, 2022 . American Institute of Architects.
  42. Book: Kennion, John W. . The Architects' and Builders' Guide: An Elaborate Description of All the Public, Commercial, Philanthropic, Literary, & Ecclesiastical Buildings Already Constructed, and about to be Erected Next Spring in New York and Its Environs, with Their Cost Respectively, and the Names of the Architects and Builders . Fitzpatrick & Hunter . 1868 . xxiv . en.
  43. April 5, 1879 . Proceedings of the Twelfth Annual Convention of the American Architects, Held November 13, 1878 . The American Architect and Building News . 5 . 171 . 106–107 . Internet Archive.
  44. May 16, 1891 . New York Chapter, A.I.A. . The American Architect and Building News . 32 . 808 . 106 . Google Books.
  45. Book: Year Book New York Chapter of the American Institute of Architects 1913 . New York Chapter of AIA . 1913 . New York . 7 . en.
  46. February 16, 1889 . New York . The American Architect and Building News . 25 . 686 . 81 . Internet Archive.
  47. Book: Metropolitan Museum of Art: Tentative Lists of Objects Desirable for a Collection of Casts, Sculptural and Architectural, intended to Illustrate the History of Plastic Art . Special Committee on Casts . June 1891 . New York . 96 . en . Part II: Architectural Lists . Google Books.
  48. Book: Howe, Winifred E. . A History of the Metropolitan Museum of Art with a Chapter on the Early Institutions of Art in New York . The Metropolitan Museum of Art . 1913 . New York . 210 . en . Google Books.
  49. Book: Alexander, James Waddel . A History of the University Club of New York, 1865-1915 . University Club . 1915 . 377 . en.
  50. Web site: Thomas . George E. . 2018-07-13 . North of Rittenhouse Square . 2022-08-13 . SAH Archipedia . Society of Architectural Historians . en.
  51. Web site: St. James Church . 2022-08-13 . Philadelphia Architects and Buildings.
  52. Web site: Miller . Tom . 2013-11-06 . The St. John Baptist House -- Nos. 231-233 East 17th Street . 2022-08-12 . Daytonian in Manhattan.
  53. Book: Shinn, George Wolfe . King's Handbook of Notable Episcopal Churches in the United States . 1889 . Moses King . 978-0-7905-8077-7 . 134 . en.
  54. Book: Kennion, John W. . The Architects' and Builders' Guide: An Elaborate Description of All the Public, Commercial, Philanthropic, Literary, & Ecclesiastical Buildings Already Constructed, and about to be Erected Next Spring in New York and Its Environs, with Their Cost Respectively, and the Names of the Architects and Builders . Fitzpatrick & Hunter . 1868 . 6 . en.
  55. April 29, 1876 . Parish Building of St. Timothy's Church . American Architecture and Building News . 1 . 141.1 . 2027/uc1.c032468952?urlappend=%3Bseq=294 . Hathi Trust.