Storming the Old Boys' Citadel
Two Pioneer Women Architects of Nineteenth Century North America
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ByCarla Blank (Author), Tania Martin (Author)
Ebook
“Women” and “architecture” were once mutually exclusive terms. In an 1891 address, Louise Blanchard Bethune declared, “it is hardly safe to assert” that a connection even exists between the two words. Some women didn’t agree.
Mother Joseph of the Sacred Heart (1823-1902) is credited with works built in the present states of Washington, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and British Columbia. Born Esther Pariseau in Saint-Elzéar, Québec, the “Mother with a hammer” was honored by the State of Washington as one of two people to represent it in the National Statuary Hall Collection in Washington, D.C.
Louise Blanchard Bethune (1856-1913) designed and built works in the Buffalo, New York area, including the Lafayette Hotel, which was one of the eleven most luxurious hotels in the United States when it opened in 1904.
Mother Joseph’s and Louise Bethune’s signature buildings, Providence Academy, Vancouver, Washington, and the Lafayette Hotel, Buffalo, New York, are both listed on the United States’ National Register of Historic Places. Both buildings are cases of historic preservation and adaptive reuse.
Bridging disciplines from women’s studies, architecture and architectural history to the fascinating past of the Pacific Northwest and Upstate New York, Storming the Old Boys’ Citadel sheds new light on North America’s common built environment and those who made it.
In this book, based on years of research and keen story-telling skills, Carla Blank and Tania Martin also breathe new life into the lives and works of two remarkable nineteenth-century women.
Table of contents
| Storming the Old Boys' Citadel | 1 |
|---|---|
| List of IllIll ustrations and MapMapMaps | 7 |
| Contents | 9 |
| Foreword | 11 |
| Carla Blank on Louise Bethune and Storming the Old Boys’ Citadel | 12 |
| Tania Martin on Mother Josep hand Storming the Old Boys’ Citadel | 12 |
| Who Deserves to be Called North America’s “First” Woman Architect? | 14 |
| Beaux-Arts Rules | 15 |
| What’s Inside this Book? | 15 |
| Introduction | 19 |
| The Citadel to be Stormed | 19 |
| An Architect’s Training and Education | 26 |
| Women’s Battles and Experiences | 30 |
| Alternative Career Choices | 37 |
| PART I | 41 |
| The Sister with a Hammer | 41 |
| An Architect Named Joseph | 44 |
| An “Enterprising Nun” | 47 |
| A Heartful Vocation | 52 |
| Holy Trinity of Settlement | 57 |
| Providence Faubourg | 59 |
| Move to Higher Ground | 66 |
| Providence House Vancouver | 67 |
| A Brickworks is Born in Vancouver | 70 |
| From House of Providence to Providence Academy | 73 |
| Providence Academy for Sale | 81 |
| Salvation of the Building | 84 |
| Mother Joseph Goes to DC, a Landmark is Designated | 95 |
| Restoration of the Chapel | 98 |
| The Academy for Sale | 99 |
| Mother Joseph’s Signature Building | 101 |
| Holy Trinity of Development | 114 |
| A Bridge Across Time, and Interstate 5 | 117 |
| PART II | 123 |
| Saving a Grand Old Lady | 123 |
| Jennie Louise Blanchard Bethune (1856 – 1913) | 125 |
| The Sources of Buffalo’s Heyday | 126 |
| The Making of an Architect | 129 |
| How Buffalo Became an Architectural Museum | 137 |
| The Architectural Practice of Louise Blanchard Bethune | 140 |
| Pioneering Feats | 145 |
| Searching Bethune’s Buildings | 152 |
| The Business of a Dedicated Professional Woman | 154 |
| Private Life | 158 |
| The Closing Days | 159 |
| Bethune’s Signature Legacy: The Lafayette Hotel | 161 |
| The Lafayette’s Neighbors | 161 |
| “The Russians want to be French” says Nina L. Khruscheva. So do Americans! | 163 |
| A President is Gunned Down | 164 |
| Construction History: Putting the Pieces Together | 165 |
| The Hotel’s Gilded Grand Opening | 169 |
| Doubling the Footprint | 170 |
| Prelude of Changes to Come | 172 |
| The Founding Families | 172 |
| From A Residence of Presidents to a Crack House | 176 |
| Rescuing the Fallen Lady and Other Buffalo Architectural Gems | 179 |
| The Nineteenth-Century Luxury Hotelas a Model for Modern Living | 181 |
| The Lafayette Hotel’s 43-Million-Dollar Restoration | 186 |
| Creating a Place in the Historical Record | 197 |
| Conclusion | 201 |
| “Storytelling is part of the game.” —Tania Martin | 201 |
| “Women architects are not confined to modest projects.” —Carla Blank | 205 |
| Investing in making a future for women architects | 209 |
| Bibliograpaphy | 211 |
| Related to Individual Architects | 211 |
| Mother Joseph of the Sacred Heart | 211 |
| Louise Blanchard Bethune | 219 |
| Other Women Architects | 222 |
| General References on Architecture, Historic Preservation | 224 |
| General References on the Gilded Age and Nineteenth to Twenty-First-Century-Related Subjects: | 226 |
| General References on Women’s History | 226 |
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Author biographies
About Carla Blank
Carla Blank is the author of Live On Stage! and Rediscovering America: The Making of Multicultural America, 1900–2000. Her articles have appeared in El Pais, The San Francisco Chronicle, The Wall Street Journal, Green Magazine, Hungry Mind Review, Counterpunch, and Konch. She lives in Oakland, California.
About Tania Martin
Tania Martin is a professor at the Université Laval School of Architecture where she has held the Canada Research Chair in Built Religious Heritage since 2005. Her essays have appeared in scholarly journals on architectural history and North American religious institutional structures. She lives in Québec City.
By the same author
View allBook details
- Publisher
- Baraka Books
- Categories
- Architectural structure & design, History of architecture
- Publication date
- December 2014
- Pages
- 234
- Chapters
- 71
- Language
- English
- ISBN EPUB
- 9781771860314
- ISBN Paper
- 9781771860130
