Clarence Howard Johnston Sr. (August 26, 1859 – December 29, 1936) was an American architect who practiced in the US state of Minnesota during the late 1800s and early 1900s. Specializing in domestic, religious, and public architecture, he served as Minnesota State Architect from 1901 to 1931. He is considered one of the most prolific architects in the state's history.
Clarence Howard Johnston Sr. | |
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Born | |
Died | |
Nationality | American |
Occupation | Architect |
Awards | Minnesota State Architect (1901-1931) Fellow, American Institute of Architects President, AIA Minnesota |
Buildings | Summit Terrace, Glensheen Mansion, Minnesota State Prison, Walter Library, Northrop Auditorium |
Signature | |
Early life
editJohnston's parents, Alexander Johnston and Louise Johnston (née Buckhout), moved to Waseca County, Minnesota, in 1856, along with a few other families. They established a settlement named Okaman on the shores of Lake Elysian. Their first son, John Buckhout Johnston, was born in 1858, and became a prominent manufacturer and businessman. Clarence Johnston was born August 26, 1859. The family then moved to Wilton, which was then the county seat of Waseca County, and Alexander Johnston took over the publication of a local newspaper. In 1861 the family moved to Faribault. Their third child, Grace, was born March 2, 1862. They moved again, to Saint Paul, where their fourth child, Charles Albert, was born in 1864. After moving briefly to Hastings, the family returned to Saint Paul permanently in 1868. Alexander Johnston was then a reporter for the Daily Pioneer newspaper.[1]: 3–4
Education and apprenticeship
editJohnston started attending Saint Paul High School in 1872 and took on a job as a clerk at the law firm of Rogers and Rogers. His mother died May 8, 1874, at the age of 42. That same year, Johnston quit his clerical job and began work at the firm of Abraham M. Radcliffe as a draughtsman. Radcliffe's firm was a local training ground for aspiring architects at the time. In September 1876, Cass Gilbert joined Radcliffe's firm as an apprentice, and Gilbert and Johnston soon became close friends.[1]: 5–6
In the fall of 1878, Gilbert and Johnston enrolled at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). There they met James Knox Taylor, who had also grown up in Saint Paul and joined MIT as an architectural student a year earlier. Gilbert and Johnston, along with Taylor, had opted to take the special two-year course in architecture, rather than the full four-year degree-granting program. However, Johnston was forced to drop out after one term due to financial reasons.[1]: 7–9 He moved back to Saint Paul and worked briefly at the firm of Edward Bassford, where the firm was more conscious of costs to the client in the design and construction process. This influenced Johnston to view economic constraints as a challenge to be solved by inventiveness, instead of being a restriction on his artistry. During these years, Gilbert and Johnston kept in touch through a large number of letters.[1]: 10
In January 1880, Cass Gilbert departed to Europe for an architectural tour. Gilbert wrote back to Johnston urging him to make a similar trip, but Johnston was preoccupied with a job offer from Herter Brothers in New York. One of the projects on which he worked during his tenure at Herter Brothers was J.P. Morgan's brownstone house on Madison Avenue at 36th Street. In the summer of 1880, Cass Gilbert returned from Europe and settled in New York, working for the firm of McKim, Mead & White. Gilbert and Johnston, along with their MIT classmate Francis Bacon, shared rooms at 40 Irving Place. That same year Johnston, Gilbert, Bacon, Taylor, and William A. Bates founded the Sketch Club, which later became the Architectural League of New York. Accounts vary on which members were actually the founders of the club.[1]: 14–16
Career
editAfter finally traveling to Europe and the Asia Minor in February 1883, Johnston returned to the United States and established his own practice in Minnesota in 1886. He quickly gained a reputation as a respected domestic architect, designing countless homes and churches in Saint Paul, especially in the vicinity of Summit Avenue and Saint Paul's Hill District. In 1886 Johnston formed a partnership with William H. Willcox which lasted through 1890. In 1895 Johnston entered the competition to design the new Minnesota State Capitol, but lost to Cass Gilbert.
On May 22, 1901, the Minnesota State Board of Control, a body responsible for the construction and operation of all state-funded institutions, appointed Johnston as State Architect. As State Architect, Johnston prepared plans for the Minnesota State Prison, buildings at various state college campuses, hospitals, sanitoriums, and other public structures. Since state business was at the whims of the Minnesota Legislature and was not always consistent, he continued his private practice during this time. Retaining private commissions allowed him to operate his office continuously and receive a higher rate of return.[1]: 110–112 Johnston continued as State Architect until 1931, when the State Division of Construction was dissolved.
Johnston was also architect for the Board of Regents of the University of Minnesota and drew plans for all the new buildings constructed on campus during his tenure.
Johnston never officially retired, but backed off on his practice after the State Architect position dissolved in 1931. He died December 29, 1936.
Family and personal life
editJohnston married Mary "May" Thurston October 1, 1885. The couple had a total of five children.
Johnston's son, Clarence H. Johnston Jr, was also an architect. Taking charge of the Johnston firm upon his father's death, he went on to design Coffman Memorial Union and the old Bell Museum building at the University of Minnesota, among other projects.
Johnston was also the father of Jimmy Johnston, a noted amateur golfer.
State Architect projects
editThe Minnesota State Board of Control was initially in charge of nine institutions. Johnston designed buildings at these following institutions:[1]: 112
Historic institution name | Modern name | Location | Buildings designed by Johnston[1]: 182–194 |
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Hospital for the Insane | Minnesota Security Hospital | St. Peter | Main building additions and alterations, additional dormitories and wards |
Rochester Asylum for the Insane | Closed 1982 and demolished[2] | Rochester | Main building additions and alterations, dormitories and hospital buildings |
State Asylum for the Insane, Anoka | Anoka Metro Regional Treatment Center | Anoka | Main building additions and alterations, several cottages for men and women, new administration building in 1919 |
Hastings Asylum for the Insane | Minnesota Veterans Home, Hastings | Hastings | Main building additions and alterations, several cottage and dormitory buildings |
Training School for Boys | Minnesota Correctional Facility – Red Wing | Red Wing | Main building additions and alterations, auditorium/gymnasium, shop building, kitchen building, and cottages |
Minnesota State Reformatory | Minnesota Correctional Facility – St. Cloud | St. Cloud | South wing completion, new administration building, cell houses D, E, and F, hospital |
Minnesota State Prison | Minnesota Correctional Facility – Stillwater | Stillwater | Initial design of the new Bayport location authorized in 1905, administration building, four cellhouses, machinery factory/shops/foundry, warden and deputy warden's residences |
Minnesota School for the Feeble-Minded | Closed 1998,[2] subsumed by Minnesota Correctional Facility – Faribault | Faribault | Main building alterations and additions, many custodial buildings and cottages |
University of Minnesota | Minneapolis campus |
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University of Minnesota School of Agriculture | University of Minnesota, St. Paul campus | St. Paul campus |
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First State Normal School of Minnesota | Winona State University | Winona | Library, Morey Hall, Phelps Hall, Shepard Hall, College Hall |
Mankato Normal School | Minnesota State University, Mankato | Mankato | |
Third State Normal School | St. Cloud State University | St. Cloud | |
Moorhead Normal School | Minnesota State University Moorhead | Moorhead | |
Duluth Normal School | University of Minnesota Duluth | Duluth | |
Minnesota State Public School for Dependent and Neglected Children | Closed 1970, now preserved as a museum[2] | Owatonna | South wing, power plant, and some dormitory buildings |
State School for the Blind | Minnesota State Academy for the Blind | Faribault | |
State School for the Deaf | Minnesota State Academy for the Deaf | Faribault | |
Some buildings of the Minnesota State Fair | St. Paul | Cattle pavilion, grandstand repairs and reinforcing, warehouse |
While Johnston was State Architect, the Minnesota State Board of Control added the following institutions to its governance:[1]: 112
Historic institution name | Date added | Modern name | Location | Buildings designed by Johnston[1]: 182–194 |
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Minnesota State Sanatorium for Consumptives | 1905 | Ah-Gwah-Ching State Health Care Facility, razed in 2010 | Walker | |
Thirteen county sanatoriums | 1913 | Various counties | ||
State Hospital for Indigent, Crippled, and Deformed Children | 1907 | Renamed Gillette State Hospital for Crippled Children in 1925; now part of Gillette Children's Specialty Healthcare | Near Lake Phalen in St. Paul | Main complex, several service buildings, and Michael Dowling Hall (school) |
Willmar Hospital Farm for Inebriates | 1907 | Willmar Regional Treatment Center, closed in 2007 | Willmar | |
Home School for Girls | 1907 | Minnesota Correctional Facility-Sauk Centre; closed in 1999[3] | Sauk Centre | |
Women's Reformatory | 1918 | Minnesota Correctional Facility – Shakopee | Shakopee | |
Minnesota Colony for Epileptics | 1924 | Cambridge State Hospital, closed 1999[2] | Cambridge | |
Ramsey County Preventorium | 1928 | Became Lake Owasso Children's Home in 1955; closed 1976[4] | North of St. Paul | |
Agricultural school added to Northwest Agricultural Experiment Station | 1905 | University of Minnesota Crookston | Crookston |
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Agricultural school added to Northeast Agricultural Experiment Station | 1905 | Now part of Itasca Community College | Grand Rapids | School of agriculture, Bergh Hall, and Donovan Hall |
West Central School of Agriculture | 1910 | University of Minnesota Morris | Morris |
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South Agricultural Experiment Station | 1912 | University of Minnesota Waseca (now defunct) | Waseca | Superintendent's residence |
Northeast Demonstration Farm and Experiment Station | 1912 | razed | Duluth | Institute Hall |
Bemidji State Normal School | 1918 | Bemidji State University | Bemidji | Deputy Hall, Sanford Hall, training school wing and heating plant |
Minnesota Historical Society building | 1916-1918 | Minnesota Judicial Center | St. Paul | |
Minnesota State Office Building | 1931-1932 | St. Paul |
For all the institutions above, Clarence H. Johnston Sr. either designed new buildings, designed improvements to existing buildings, or both.
Notable works
editUniversity of Minnesota, Minneapolis Campus
edit- Child Development and Folwell Hall, part of the University of Minnesota Old Campus Historic District
- Collaborator with Cass Gilbert on the Northrop Mall
- Northrop Auditorium
- Walter Library
- Williams Arena
University of Minnesota, Saint Paul Campus
edit- Haecker Hall (Dairy Husbandry)
- Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering Building
- Coffey Hall
- McNeal Hall
- Eastcliff, the residence of the President of the University of Minnesota
Other buildings
edit- Minnesota State Fair Grandstand
- Burbank–Livingston–Griggs House, 432 Summit Avenue, Saint Paul
- 976 Summit Ave., Saint Paul
- Pierce and Walter Butler House, 1345-1347 Summit Avenue, Saint Paul
- Henry Byllesby Row House, Saint Paul
- Saint Paul Academy, lower school building, formerly the Summit School for Girls
- Minnesota State Academy for the Deaf Administration Building, Faribault, Minnesota
- Glensheen Historic Estate, Duluth, Minnesota
- Duluth State Normal School buildings, now the University of Minnesota Duluth lower campus
- Several buildings of the University of Minnesota Morris, dating back to its foundation as West Central School of Agriculture and Experiment Station Historic District
- Saint Paul Central High School, 1912 building at Marshall Avenue and Lexington Parkway.
- Minnesota Humanities Center (Formerly Dowling Memorial Hall on the Gillette Children's Hospital Campus at Phalen Lake), 1924. Building at 987 Ivy Avenue East in Saint Paul, Minnesota
- Several buildings on the Saint Paul campus of Hamline University.
- City Hall Annex (Lowry Medical Arts Building).
- Trade and Commerce Building, 916 Hammond Avenue, Superior, Wisconsin.[5]
- Farrar-Howes Houses, 596-604 Summit Avenue, Saint Paul, Minnesota
- Holy Trinity Church, Veseli, Minnesota
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Paul Clifford Larson (1996). Minnesota Architect: The Life and Work of Clarence H. Johnston. Afton Historical Society Press. ISBN 978-0-9639338-8-1.
- ^ a b c d "The Evolution of Minnesota's State-Operated Services". Minnesota Department of Human Services.
- ^ "Minnesota Department of Corrections History: 1984-1999". Archived from the original on February 8, 2013. Retrieved December 22, 2012.
- ^ "Brief History of Minnesota's Mental Retardation Institutions" (PDF).
- ^ "Trade and Commerce Building". Wisconsin National Register of Historic Places. Wisconsin Historical Society. Archived from the original on January 26, 2020. Retrieved February 2, 2013.
- Lehmberg, Stanford E.; Pflaum, Ann M. (February 2001). University of Minnesota, 1945-2000. Univ of Minnesota Press. ISBN 978-0-8166-3255-8.
- Larry Millett (2010). AIA Guide to Downtown St. Paul. Minnesota Historical Society Press. ISBN 978-0-87351-721-8.