Ida Annah Ryan Explained

Ida Annah Ryan
Birth Date:4 November 1873
Birth Place:Waltham, Massachusetts
Death Place:Orlando, Florida
Alma Mater:Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Practice:Associated architectural firm[s]

Ida Annah Ryan (1873–1950) was a pioneering United States architect known for her work in Massachusetts and Florida. She was the first woman to receive a Master of Science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the first woman to receive a Master's degree in architecture anywhere in the United States. She was the eighth woman to be admitted to the American Institute of Architects.

Biography

Ryan was born on November 4, 1873, in Waltham, Massachusetts, one of five children of Albert Morse Ryan and Carrie S. Jameson. Albert Morse Ryan was a Waltham city employee and historian who also ran a milk business.[1] She graduated from the Waltham High School. During her Waltham High School years, Ryan was first attracted to the study of architectural design.

Studies at Massachusetts Normal Art School

In 1892 Ida A. Ryan began attending classes at Massachusetts Normal Art School (now Massachusetts College of Art and Design), which was founded in 1873 with the intention to support the Massachusetts Drawing Act of 1870 by providing drawing teachers for the public schools as well as training professional artists, designers, and architects. In 1894 she received her diploma in Elementary Drawing and Constructive Art and Design (which encompasses Descriptive Geometry, Machine Drawing- Construction and Architectural Design).[2]

Architecture Studies at MIT

Ida A. Ryan entered architecture studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), which offered the first collegiate architectural studies program in the United States. There she studied with the noted architecture professor Constant-Désiré Despradelle. In 1905, Ryan received the Rotch Prize of two hundred dollars for the regular student making the best record during their four years of studies.[3]

At the end of her term at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Ryan's junior design received the first of the first four prizes. Thereafter, she was invited to compete with only senior and fifth class men in the Junior Beaux Arts contest, in which she won second prize for a grand plan, elevation, and section of a public market.[4]

In 1904, Ryan showed a project for "A Proposed City Hall" at the Boston Architectural Club's annual exhibition.[5] In 1905, Ryan drafted a plan for a New England model town for her final master's degree project.[6] In 1907, Ryan showed five examples of her work at the Boston Architectural Club Exhibition: Camp at Litchfield, NH, Cottage Made From a Stable, Sewage Pump House at Crescent Park, Cottage at Violet Hill, Waltham, and Inexpensive Two-Family House at Waltham Highlands.[7] The two-family house is a large Spanish Revival stucco structure with double height bay windows, hip roof, overhanging eaves and a double height triple-arched entry porch that is a precursor of Ryan's work at 1114 Massachusetts Avenue, St. Cloud Florida; located at 228-240 Hammond Street the double-house is still in good condition more than a hundred years later.

Ryan became the first woman to earn a master of science degree from MIT and also the first woman in the United States to receive a master's degree in architecture. In 1907, Ryan was awarded a traveling scholarship of $1200, the highest prize that the Architectural Department could confer on one of its graduates. This enabled her to spend a year in Europe engaged in the study of architecture. Ryan spent the greater part of the time in Spain and Italy, making her headquarters in Naples.[8]

While at MIT Ryan was a member of Cleophan a club for women students that also included Matilda A. Fraser and Harriet F. Locke (see below).[9]

Architectural Practice in Waltham, Massachusetts

Ryan launched the first women's architectural practice in the United States in Waltham, showing a particular concern for the design of modest housing. In 1909,[10] Ryan added fellow MIT graduate and women's rights activist Florence Luscomb to her practice, making this one of the first all-women's architectural practices in the United States.[11] In February 1913, Miss Ryan was appointed the superintendent of buildings and grounds and buildings inspector for the city of Waltham, by Mayor Duane.[12]

Typical of her work during this time is the house that Ryan designed for her nephew as a wedding present in 1914, located at 19 Boynton Street, Waltham.[13] The -storey smooth stucco residence turns its gable-end to the street. A small, 1-storey covered porch at the entrance is distinguished by an arched roof reminiscent of the work of George Washington Maher in the Chicago suburbs. Windows are placed singly, in pairs, or, as in the gable, in threes, while sill heights vary according to the interior needs. Ryan would continue the use of many of these distinctive elements in her work in Florida. During her Waltham practice, Ryan also designed the spacious, well-appointed home of industrialist B. C. Ames (1917).[14] Many of the most attractive Waltham homes of that era were said to have been designed by Ryan.[15] Also of note is the apartment building at 19 Hammond Street, Waltham; a Ryan remodeling of a barn once owned by David Smith. Her address was, for a time, at this building.[16]

While associated with fellow MIT graduate Harriet F. Locke (1870–1919),[17] Ryan was responsible for the design of Memorial Hospital, Nashua, New Hampshire, circa 1915, a 3-story stuccoed symmetrical building with recessed porches, of a simplified Grecian design, closely anticipating the Amherst Apartments in Orlando. The intertwined "cross and x" used for the porch railings would appear later in the Veteran's Memorial Library windows and ventilation grills. The hospital featured a roof parapet that prefigures Ryan and Roberts' work in Florida, as well.[18]

Ryan was active in the women's suffrage movement, a member of the Waltham Equal Suffrage League and the Political Equality Association of Massachusetts. Her recreational activities included camping and traveling.[19] When the United States entered World War I, Ryan gave her services without charge in designing and decorating the Army and Navy Canteen on Boston Common.[20] Ryan offered her services to the government in Washington, D.C., and was the first woman employed in the War Department (in the gun carriage section).[15]

Ryan began an association with the Central Florida area while still in practice in Massachusetts, designing there the Unity Chapel of Orlando (built in 1913, remodeled by Ryan and Roberts circa 1920). Throughout this time, Ryan's many attempts to join the Massachusetts chapter of the American Institute of Architects were rebuffed solely because she was a woman.

Architectural Practice in Central Florida

As a result of this and of the building slump caused by the First World War, Ida A. Ryan moved to Central Florida and began an architecture practice based in Orlando, Florida. She became Orlando's first female architect. In 1918–1919, Frederick H. Trimble employed Ryan as designing architect in his firm.[21] She was finally admitted to AIA in 1921, only the eighth woman nationwide.[22]

Soon thereafter Ryan was joined by Isabel Roberts (1871–1955) who had been a designer-draftsman in the Oak Park Studio of Frank Lloyd Wright and the co-owner, with her mother Mary, of the Isabel Roberts House. Ida Annah Ryan and Isabel Roberts formed an architectural practice, "Ryan and Roberts" which was among no more than twelve firms active in Orlando in the 1920s. Their business is listed under the heading "Architects" as "Ryan and Roberts" in the 1926 and in the 1927 Orlando City Directories, at 240 S. Orange St. and the Kenilworth Terrace address. One of only 10 architectural firms listed in 1926, the others include Frank L. Bodine, Fred E. Field, David Hyer, Murry S. King, George E. Krug, Howard M. Reynolds, Frederick H. Trimble and Percy P. Turner. And one of 12 firms so listed in Orlando in 1927, which included Maurice E. Kressly.[23] Each of these architects is notable and together these firms were supportive colleagues in promoting excellence in the built environment, as one can learn by reading the links to each.

Among the works of "Ryan and Roberts" are:[24]

Ida A. Ryan worked with builder Samuel (Sam) Stoltz who created fantasy architecture with original murals in storybook settings in Orlando, Mount Plymouth, and Windermere, Florida. Ryan lived in Orlando until her death on February 17, 1950, after an illness of several years, during which she was cared for by Isabel Roberts. According to her wishes, Ryan was buried in her hometown of Waltham, Massachusetts.[28] [29]

See also

References

See also: Ryan, Ida Annah; MIT Museum biographical file contents: Images; biographical information; correspondence.

Notes and References

  1. Mannon, Melissa, "Waltham" (1998), pages 74 & 109
  2. Massachusetts Normal Art School Circular and Catalogue, 1894-1895.
  3. "Against all Odds: MIT's Pioneering Women of Landscape Architecture". by Eran Ben-Joseph, Holly D. Ben-Joseph, Anne C. Dodge, November 2006
  4. Women as Architects, by Joseph Dana Miller, in Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly, June 1900, Vol. L— NO. 2, Whole NO. 294. Page 200. A photograph of Ida Annah Ryan accompanies the article.
  5. Catalogue, Boston Architectural Club Exhibition from May 2nd to 14th, by Boston Architectural Club
  6. Layout for a Model New England Town, by Ida Annah Ryan
  7. Year Book, by Boston Architectural Club
  8. "The Tech" (MIT), Boston MA, October 7, 1907
  9. Technique, Volume 12, by Massachusetts Institute of Technology, p. 106
  10. The American Architect from the Colonial Era to the Present, by Cecil D. Elliott, p. 139
  11. Political Woman: Florence Luscomb and the Legacy of Radical Reform by Sharon Hartman Strom, page 67
  12. "The Tech" (MIT), Boston MA, February 12, 1913
  13. "Waltham", by Melissa Mannon, page 104
  14. Leadership by Design: Creating an Architecture of Trust, by Richard N. Swett, page 217
  15. Technology Review, Volume 21, by Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Association of Class Secretaries, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Alumni Association, MIT Alumni/ae Association, p. 537
  16. Waltham, by Melissa Mannon, page 55
  17. Technology Architectural Record, Volumes 1-2, by Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of Architecture, p. 32
  18. Web site: Archived copy . 2010-02-01 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110604041218/http://www.legendsofamerica.com/postcards-pictures-of/nh-1012-NashuaMemorialHospitalNashuaNewHampshire.jpg . 2011-06-04 . dead .
  19. Woman's Who's Who of America: A Biographical Dictionary, Volume 1, by John William Leonard, p. 709
  20. Technology Review, Volume 21, by Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Association of Class Secretaries, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Alumni Association, p. 537
  21. American Women: The Official Who's Who Among the Women of the Nation, Volume 1, edited by Durward Howes, p. 482
  22. Book: The First American Women Architects . Allaback, Sarah . 2008 . 237 . Urbana . . May 12, 2017 . 9780252033216 . 167518574 .
  23. Orlando City Directories, 1926–1931
  24. Photos of their work may be seen at: https://www.flickr.com/photos/11072784@N06/
  25. Information courtesy of Anita Parks; Volunteer Curator; St. Cloud Heritage Museum
  26. Facts Are Elusive As School Marks 75th Anniversary, by Barbara J. Saffir, Orlando Sentinel, November 5, 1997
  27. "West Orange Reverie" in Reflections, Historical Society of Central Florida, Fall 2009; p. 12
  28. News: Ida Annah Ryan (Funeral Notice) . . February 18, 1950 . 2 . November 12, 2018 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20181112182504/https://www.newspapers.com/clip/25326934/ida_annah_ryan_funeral_notice/ . November 12, 2018.
  29. Dalles, John, "The Pathbreaking Legacy of Ryan and Roberts", in "Reflections", the journal of the Historical Society of Central Florida, Summer 2009; pages 8 and 9.