Altruism x 2 at the Bagley House

© Mark Hertzberg (2024)

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Altruism: Unselfish regard for or devotion to the welfare of others: charitable acts motivated purely by altruism – www.merriam-webster.com

Examples: Grace Bagley (1860-1944) and Safina Uberoi and Lukas Ruecker (Contemporary)

Safina t GB exhibit opening wide.jpegSafina Uberoi – photo courtesy of Safina Uberoi

IMG_5557.jpgLukas Ruecker at the Bagley House

Safina Uberoi, President of the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy board, and Lukas Ruecker became stewards of Wright’s Tonkens House in Cincinnati in 2015. In 2022 they added Wright’s Bagley House (1894) in Hinsdale, Illinois to their Wright portfolio when they bought – and likely saved – the house which faced demolition, possibly so another “McMansion” could be built. The house has had numerous owners and alterations but its bones are important as one of Wright’s first designs after he left Adler & Sullivan the year before.

Safina Lukas with Jeff Jeannette Goldstone.jpegLukas Ruecker, right, and Safina Uberoi with Jeff and Jeannette, Goldstone, the  previous owners of the Bagley House – photo courtesy of Safina Uberoi

Uberoi and Ruecker are working with restoration architect Douglas Gilbert to restore the Bagley House. The most visible change, as visitors approach the house, will be that the white aluminum siding will be taken off and stained shingle siding – some of it original – will once again envelop the house. The aluminum siding is thought to date to the 1940s or 1950s.

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IMG_5566.jpgSome of the original siding is under the aluminum siding.

IMG_5563.jpegBefore the aluminum siding was put onCourtesy Hinsdale Historical Society

The 1980s addition on the back of the house will be taken down, replaced by a new addition designed by architects George Suyama and Jay Deguchi. They are very familiar with Wright’s work; Suyama is a former Building Conservancy board member. Uberoi describes the new addition, “…which provides additional living space at the rear of the plot while touching the Bagley House respectfully at only one point and making no changes to the original building.”

Bagley House 007.jpgThe addition to the rear of the house will be taken off.

Jay Deguchi, George Suyama, Safina Uberoi at Bagely House.jpegSafina Uberoi with Jay Deguchi and George Suyama – Photo courtesy of Safina Uberoi

Gilbert elaborates on the overall program, “The plan is to restore the exterior to the original design by Wright, so the Bagley era.  For the interior, only the main floor living spaces will be restored to the original design, with back-of-house spaces altered to accommodate modern needs and the connections with the new wing. The second floor will be reworked for modern living.  The 1980s addition on the back goes away and the original rear porch rebuilt.  That porch will look out over a courtyard/terrace of the new wing.  The nice thing about the new wing design is that the two will barely touch each other and will instead have more of a dialogue with each other (as opposed to just shooting straight off the back like most additions do).”

Thanks to the rescue of the house, the distinguished career of Wright’s client, social reformer and suffragette Grace Bagley (1860-1944), is getting fresh attention. Both the house and Bagley’s career were highlighted at an event hosted by the Building Conservancy in December. Uberoi and Ruecker commissioned architectural historians Julia Bachrach and Jean Follett to research Bagley’s work on behalf of economically disadvantaged people in Chicago as part of the process of having the house declared an architectural landmark in Hinsdale. Their research was displayed on richly illustrated story panels for “Finding Grace,” a public exhibit in the house late last year. Bagley helped many Italian immigrant families – some living in a tenement in the Levee District her husband, Frederick, owned. She also helped ensure that juvenile offenders would no longer be imprisoned with adults criminals and volunteered at Jane Addams’s Hull House in Chicago.

IMG_5546.jpegThe “Finding Grace” exhibit at the Bagley House

The unanticipated consequences of Uberoi and Ruecker’s purchase of the house include another yet another discovery about Wright’s work through Bachrach and Follett’s research. Like the Bagley House, Wright’s Stephen A. Foster cottage in the West Pullman neighborhood on Chicago’s far south side (1900) was designed as a summer cottage for the client. The surprise that Bachrach and Follett discovered was that Mrs. Bagley and Mrs. Foster were sisters.

Foster House 001.jpgThe Stephen Foster Cottage

There is some similarity in the Bagley House design to Cecil Corwin’s Henry Mitchell House in Racine (also 1894) which Wright is thought to have helped Corwin design. [I have a special interest in the Mitchell House because I live in Racine and have researched some of its history]. Both houses are included in Tim Samuelson’s “Wright Before the Lloyd” exhibit at the Racine Heritage Museum which runs through the end of 2024. Both are Dutch Colonial.

Mitchell House 1895.jpgThe Mitchell House in 1895 – Courtesy Racine Heritage Museum

Both have a library at either end of the house. Mitchell’s is semi-circular, the octagonal one in Bagley brings to mind the octagonal office space in Wright’s Home and Studio.

Mitchell House 2001 002.JPGThe Mitchell House library

IMG_5552.jpgThe Bagley House library

The two commissions are listed just a few lines apart in the March 1894 Journal of the Inland Architect.

Mitchell Inland.jpg

I am an avid bicyclist. There is a maxim in the cycling community that if X equals the number of bicycles one owns, then the ideal number of bicycles to own is X + 1. Perhaps the same maxim is appropriate in the World of Frank Lloyd Wright for Safina Uberoi and Lukas Ruecker!

Finding Grace Exhibit and Travel Schedule:

https://sites.google.com/view/finding-grace?fbclid=IwAR0AIEau6Qlixvytn5s-ZIY93L1HGtFoJAkL1COFXEiH6Eq4Jr07KDjVl68

Architectural Digest story about Bagley and Foster house connections:

https://www.architecturaldigest.com/story/two-early-frank-lloyd-wright-homes-have-a-surprising-link-that-was-just-discovered

Julia Bachrach on the Bagley House:

https://www.jbachrach.com/blog/2022/9/29/the-bagley-house-one-of-frank-lloyd-wrights-earliest-independent-commissions

Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy:

www.savewright.org

Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy on Bagley House, Grace Bagley, 2024 exhibit information:

https://savewright.org/celebrating-preservation-at-the-bagley-house/

Racine Heritage Museum “Wright Before the Lloyd” Exhibit:

https://wrightinracine.wordpress.com/2023/05/04/wright-before-the-lloyd/

Mitchell House: Corwin / Wright’s Coda?

https://wrightinracine.wordpress.com/2021/07/08/mitchell-house-corwin-wrights-coda/

Scroll down for previous posts on this website

Mitchell House: Corwin/Wright’s Coda?

© Photos and text Mark Hertzberg (2021) unless otherwise noted

Mitchell House 1895.jpgThe Mitchell House in 1895, from the Racine Headlight, a railroad publication. Courtesy Racine Public Library. Note the second and third floor porch railings in this photograph and the 1908 one.

Perhaps no house linked to Frank Lloyd Wright has generated as much give-and-take about its provenance as the Henry G. and Lily Mitchell House at 905 Main Street in Racine, Wisconsin. Note that I wrote “linked to” and not “designed by.” 

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MitchellExtMain MH FLW FLLW.jpg

Paul Hendrickson devotes four pages to the Mitchell House in Plagued by Fire (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2019, pp. 75-78) in the context of his writing about Corwin and Wright’s close friendship and professional association:

“This is the greatest house Cecil Corwin will ever design…”

“Call it the Last Fine Building Moment of Cecil S. Corwin.” 

There is no documentation of Wright’s involvement – if any – in the design of the stately house, but there is much thought that Corwin likely designed the house in collaboration with Wright. A definitive answer to “Who Did What?” remains the proverbial “million dollar question” even after 20 years of sometimes contentious discussion. The lack of documentation means that the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation is unable to ascribe any of its design to Wright.

John Eifler, a well-known Wright restoration architect who grew up in Racine and practices in Chicago, in 2001 was one of the first to suggest Wright’s influence on the design. He told me in an interview in 2003 that “It was Corwin and Wright who did that job together. I imagine that it was Corwin who was responsible for presenting the thing to his client because he probably got the job through his Dad.” (The Mitchells were members of the First Presbyterian Church in Racine. Corwin’s father, the Rev. Eli Corwin, was the pastor of the church from 1880 -1888). “This collaborative thing that happens between architects happens a lot. It’s a collaboration, I think between two people, two young architects.”

His conclusions were bolstered this summer with the discovery of a 1908 photograph of the house. The photograph is in a photo album that also included 1908 photos of Wright’s nearby Hardy House [scroll down at the end of this article to see a post with those photos]. The album pages were acquired for the Organic Architecture + Design archives to ensure their preservation and accessibility for research. I will give more history about the sometimes contentious history of the house before I get to Eifler’s reaction to the 1908 photograph .

1908 Mitchell House OA+D toned.jpgCourtesy of, and copyright by, Organic Architecture + Design (2021). All rights reserved.

In terms of official records, the house was designed by Cecil Corwin in 1894. It was so stated in the April 15 Chicago Inter Ocean newspaper and in the March issue of the Journal of the Inland Architect. This was the year after Wright left Adler & Sullivan, so he no longer had any reason to hide his work. In fact, his Bagley House is listed in his name a few lines below the Mitchell House listing in the Inland Architect.

Mitchell Inland.jpg

In addition, Corwin’s proposal to remodel Herbert and Flora Miles’s house in Racine in 1899 shows a mini-Mitchell House grafted onto the existing house (the remodeling commission passed on to Wright in 1901 but was not realized).

Miles Existing? Wright.jpgCorwin’s 1899 proposal to remodel the Miles House. Copied by the author at the McCormick Library of Special Collections at Northwestern University.

The “Who Did What” intensified in 2002 when William Allin Storrer visited the house on July 12. He photographed it extensively and declared it to be by Wright in a story in the Racine Journal Times and in stories that ran in USA Today and on the Associated Press news wire. Storrer was quoted as saying “Maybe it (the design) is only 75 percent Wright’s, but it’s still Wright. If it’s 51 percent, it’s still Wright’s.” He included the house in a subsequent edition of his The Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright: A Complete Catalogue (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2017). 

Exterior Storrer.jpg

Storrer stairs.jpg

Storrer nook.jpg

Storrer once speculated that Wright may have designed the house as a gift to Corwin to thank him for letting Wright use his name on his “bootleg houses.” Those were houses that Wright surreptitiously designed while at Adler & Sullivan because his contract forbade him from taking on private commissions. 

As the discussion about the provenance of the house intensified, I asked Edgar Tafel about the house on April 7, 2003. Tafel, one of the original Taliesin Fellowship apprentices (1932 – 1941) told me, “On the very first trip to Racine (in 1936 for the SC Johnson Administration Building) we came down Main Street. In all the times I was there, we came down the Main Street, any number of times. He never mentioned anything about any house other than the Hardy House (four blocks south of the Mitchell House).

Fast forward to May and June 2021 after Eric O’Malley [of OA+D] emailed the 1908 photo to Eifler:

Eric sent the photograph to me as well, and when I saw the railings on the second and third floor, as well as the little bit of ornament adjacent to the dormer I became even more convinced of Wright’s involvement.  Most architects of the period would have interrupted the continuous rail with newel posts, or intermediate supports – I believe only FLW would have run the curved rail continuously.  I have also attached a stair photo from the Goodrich House in Oak Park (1896), with identically shaped balusters.” (Email to me June 17).

Goodrich House.jpgThe stairs in the Goodrich House, courtesy of John Eifler

For comparison, my 2002 photo of the stairs in the Mitchell House:

Mitchell Stairs.jpg

And, in a follow-up email on June 21: (interspersed with more of my 2002 photos of Mitchell and 2019 photo of the Blossom House, left, and McArthur House, and a vintage photo of Blossom and McArthur, courtesy of John Eifler):

“1. the Bagley House in Hinsdale and the McArthur House in Hyde Park both utilize Gambrel Roofs and date from the same period.

Blossom McArthur 5.5.19 001.jpg

2. The Front Porch is similar to that on the Blossom House from one or two years before.  The continuous railing on top of the porch matches Blossom, as do the shapes of the “pickets”.

3. The trim on the interior of the Mitchell House has many similarities with Blossom and Charnley – for example, the window and door heads all align with the picture rail, there is no trim where the wall meets the ceiling.

4. The Art Glass in the south facing study of Mitchell is similar to some of the art glass in the living room of the Charnley House and McArthur.

Library.jpg

Living Room.jpg

5. The wood used in the study is Santo Dominco Mahogany, a favorite of Wright (and Sullivan) and matches the Charnley Hs. Dining Room.”

Eifler elaborated in a followup email July 7: “It [an old photo of the Blossom House] shows a front porch on the Blossom House that is very similar to Mitchell – most notably it shows a railing on the second floor is continuous, with no intermediate supports, which is very unusual, and a continuous string of “pickets” or balusters, that are uniquely shaped with spheres, matching the 1896 Goodrich House in Oak Park by Wright.  Finally, the first floor of the porch is capped by a narrow projecting eave, or cornice (in classical terms) which projects out over the frieze – the proportions of which are unique, I think, to Wright.”

Blossom-McArthur1890s.JPG

Tim Samuelson, the City of Chicago’s Cultural Historian (and a dear friend of Paul Hendrickson’s…Plagued is dedicated to him), offers his thoughtful perspective, as well.

RHM Iannelli Planning Meeting 004.jpgTim Samuelson, left, David Jameson, and Eric O’Malley in 2018.

“As we all know from Wright’s autobiographical accounts, Cecil Corwin was a close and valued friend. We also know that they shared room 1501 in Adler & Sullivan’s Schiller Building to conduct their respective architectural practices. The room 1501 was very small – essentially 12′ x 12′.  It’s possible that they also occupied the connecting room 1502 which didn’t have corridor access, but even with that, it was pretty close quarters. (1502 could have been an used by the tenant of adjoining room1505 and had nothing to do with Wright and Corwin at all). (Floor plan courtesy of Tim Samuelson)

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“The Mitchell House indeed displays many elements characteristic of Wright’s work of the period. But at the same time, there are many aspects that do not.” (I am breaking up Samuelson’s comments with some of my 2001 and 2002 photos of the Mitchell House)

Peas Stairs detail.jpg

Reception room.jpg

Peas downstairs.jpg

Mitchell Peas Stairs .jpg

Mitchell mirror FLW FLLW mh.jpg

Mitchell closet FLW FLLW mh.jpg

Nook.jpg

“In my personal opinion, what you see is a matter of personal and professional osmosis between two architects sharing the same space.  Would they look over each other’s drafting boards and make comments and suggestions?  Sure!  Would Wright sometimes help Corwin with difficult design issues?  Of course!

“On the basis of Wright’s autobiographical writings, Corwin recognized and admired Wright’s unusual architectural gifts. Sharing the same space and personal camaraderie, Corwin would have learned from Wright and naturally tried to emulate aspects of his work.  And for a substantial commission on the main street of Corwin’s home town, he naturally would have welcomed comments and help from an admired colleague literally close at hand to create the best design possible.

“In such a closely shared environment between friends, it’s conversely possible that Corwin might have commented and critiqued Wright’s own work. We’ll never really know, but it’s a reasonable possibility.

“There’s always the temptation to skew perspectives to advocate the presence of a “lost” Wright work. But as a result, Cecil Corwin’s presence as a competent architect and a creative person gets lost. Sadly, it’s the story of his life.”

And,  Robert Hartmann, a friend of mine who is an architectural designer and Wright scholar in Racine, weighs in, as well: “The existence of the 1908 photo offers new evidence that the Mitchell house is a  unique one-off collaborative effort between Cecil Corwin and Frank Lloyd Wright. A dichotomy design with the more inventive parts of the house (the porch, and first floor interior detailing) either attributed to Wright or Wright’s influence on Corwin. Cecil Corwin never-the-less produced a masterful house that should be celebrated on its own merits and testifies to the close friendship between the two architects.”

Let us turn to Paul Hendrickson again, and we realize that Wright was concurrently designing his masterpiece Winslow House and Corwin was on the verge of moving to New York and to some measure of architectural obscurity. 

And so, there we have it. We will likely never know exactly who did what, but let us give Cecil Corwin his due for having designed a notable house, likely with help from his good friend Frank Lloyd Wright. 

This collaboration was not only a professional collaboration. It was also arguably the coda of their one-time close relationship (Hendrickson has a rich history of their relationship, elaborating on what Wright wrote in An Autobiography). 

The “Who Did What?” debate will continue with some discounting Wright’s possible involvement, absent documentation to the contrary (Tafel’s remarks keep reverberating in my mind), and others agreeing with the perspectives offered above.

Game on!

https://www.oadarchives.com

I appreciate the willingness of the Pettinger family, stewards of the Mitchell House, to allow me time to set up lights and photograph their home in 2001 and 2002.

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(Scroll down for earlier posts on this website, including the 1908 Hardy House photographs)