Sunday, September 15, 2013

Romanesque on the Plains: The Look of Sioux Falls


(Introductory note by James Fallows: Yesterday I discussed why the part of greater Sioux Falls that is visually least interesting, to put it politely — the expanse of fast food joints and big-box malls on the town’s periphery — is connected to a quite interesting part of the city’s economic history and current civic culture.


That’s connected to a theme I mentioned back in the first dispatch from this “East River” part of the Dakotas: Sioux Falls has made such a powerful and mostly positive impression on us largely because it so clearly represents a long-standing part of the essential American bargain. It is successful, and rough-edged — a contemporary City of Big Shoulders, with lots of its economic machinery displayed rather than tucked out of site. A century-plus ago, one aspect of its economic boom was its role as quickie-divorce center. A generation-plus ago, it put itself on the financial-services map when South Dakota eliminated usury laws and drew Citibank and other credit-card companies to set up headquarters in Sioux Falls. There will be more to say about that phase of the city’s history.


But in addition to the visible raw edges, like the huge slaughterhouse and the penitentiary that both sit right downtown, the city also has an extensive and remarkable architectural heritage. That is what John Tierney describes today, starting with the striking Richardson-style Romanesque buildings that define much of the look of downtown. The image at the top shows one of many buildings by the city’s most influential architect, Wallace L. Dow. It’s part of the state penitentiary.)



By John Tierney


It used to be that if you wanted to get a sense of what distant cities and towns looked like, you had to travel there yourself, view guidebooks and coffee-table photobooks, get hold of postcards, or endure friends’ slide shows and endless monologues. These days, it’s easy to learn the look of other places by turning to Google’s Street View, YouTube, and other Web resources.



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But it’s still helpful, if you’re trying to get a sense of a city’s architectural style and its most treasured structures, to have someone curate a selection of buildings and sites for you. So, in that spirit, for many of the cities that Jim and Deb will be visiting for the American Futures project, we’ll provide an amateur’s guide to notable buildings in town. Some of these will be Fallows photos; most will be from the Web.


Sioux Falls is a terrific city to begin this exercise because it contains many beautiful buildings, over 65 of them on the National Register of Historic Places. Carolyn Torma, an expert on South Dakota’s architectural treasures, explains in a 1989 article in the journal South Dakota History, that many of the grand buildings in Sioux Falls were designed in the late nineteenth century by Wallace L. Dow and Joseph Schwarz, architects who “celebrated the picturesque and the romantic,” working in “richly ornamented and colorful styles.” Torma explains:


Both employed in many of their buildings rusticated or rock-faced Sioux quartzite [a red/pink quartzite quarried in abundance in the Sioux Falls region], round-arched Romanesque [Richardsonian] details, and irregular floor plans. Further, the picturesque styles of the era – Romanesque, Stick, Shingle, Italianate, Queen Anne, and Gothic Revival, to name a few – made little attempt to reproduce faithfully their historical sources. Instead, designs were bold, almost freehand, interpretations.



Let’s look at some of the best of those Romanesque buildings with Sioux quartzite:



Old Minnehaha County Courthouse, Sioux Falls, SD


Architect: Wallace L. Dow


Style: Romanesque Revival


Date: 1893


More info: Converted into a museum in the 1970s.


Photo source: Wikimedia Commons




Federal Building and U.S. Courthouse, Sioux Falls, SD


Architect: Willoughby J. Edbrooke, with additions by James Knox


       Taylor (1911) and James A. Wetmore (1931)


Style: Romanesque Revival


Date: Constructed 1892-1895, 1911–1913, 1931


More info: Wikipedia


Photo source: Wikimedia Commons




Pettigrew and Tate Building, Sioux Falls, SD


Architect: Cross & Richard


Style: Romanesque Revival


Date: 1888-1889


Photo source: Wikimedia Commons




First Congregational Church, Sioux Falls, SD


Style: Romanesque Revival


Date:  1907-1909


More info: First Congregational United Church of Christ and GoHistoric.com


Photo source: Wikimedia Commons


 


So, clearly, architects working in Sioux Falls in the late 1800s and early 1900s were enamored of the Richardsonian Romanesque style. And they loved that quartzite!  


But there also is great diversity in the architectural landscape of Sioux Falls. Carolyn Torma’s instructive article, quoted earlier, tells us that in the period from 1913 to 1940, “several entirely new styles such as Prairie School, park-building Rustic, and Art Deco emerged.” She further notes, “By World War I, South Dakota architects had fully accepted the classical revival styles, . . .  including: Neo-Classicism, Renaissance Revival, Beaux Arts Classicism, Georgian, and Colonial Revival.” In the photos that follow, we’ll see examples of most of these styles in Sioux Falls.


 



Jorden Hall, University of Sioux Falls, SD


Architect: Joseph Schwarz


Style: Gothic Revival


Date: 1908


More info: GoHistoric.com and Historic Campus Architecture Project


Photo source: Wikimedia Commons





All Saints School, Sioux Falls, SD


Architect: Wallace L. Dow


Style: High Victorian Gothic


Date: 1884


More info: Jennifer Dumke, W.L. Dow: The Architect Who Shaped Sioux Falls, pp. 39-40; 52-54.


Photo source: Wikimedia Commons




Carnegie Free Public Library, Sioux Falls 


Architect: Joseph Schwarz.


Style: Classical Revival, using pink Sioux Quartzite


Date: 1913


More info: Carolyn Torma, pp. 158-159; Susan Richards, pp. 2-9.


Photo Source: Wikimedia Commons




Orpheum Theatre, Sioux Falls, SD


Style: Elements of Prairie style and Neo-Classical Revival


Date: Original old building on right: 1913


More info: For history, see here and here.


Photo Source: City of Sioux Falls




Security Bank Building, Sioux Falls


Architect: E. Jackson Casse Company (Chicago)


Style: Neo-classical; first steel skeletal-frame building in Sioux Falls


Date: 1917


More info: Carolyn Torma, pp. 159-160.


Interesting non-architectural fact: John Dillinger, the Depression-era American bank robber, robbed the Security National Bank of $ 49,500 on March 6, 1934.


Photo source: Wikimedia Commons




Shriver-Johnson Department-store Building


Architect: Firm of Perkins and McWayne


Style: Classical Revival


Date: 1918


More info: Carolyn Torma, p. 170; and Greetings from Sioux Falls


Photo Source: Wikimedia Commons




Carpenter Hotel, Sioux Falls, SD


Date: 1912


More info: Now luxury apartments, with storefront businesses at ground level. See here and here.


Photo source: Wikimedia Commons




Grand Lodge and Library of the Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, Sioux Falls, SD (also known as the Sioux Falls Masonic Temple)


Architect: Hugill and Blatherwick


Style: Beaux Arts Classicism


Date: 1925


More info: Carolyn Torma, p. 166.


Photo source: Wikimedia Commons




South Dakota State Penitentiary Historic Buildings, Sioux Falls, SD


Architect: Wallace L. Dow


Style: Italianate, Second Empire


More info: Jennifer Dumke, W.L. Dow: The Architect Who Shaped Sioux Falls, p. 29.


Photo source: Wikimedia Commons. Historical photos, here.




St. Joseph Cathedral, Sioux Falls, SD


Architect: Emmanuel Masqueray


Style: Blend of Romanesque and French Renaissance


Date: 1918-1919


More info: Wikipedia and


Photo source: Wikimedia Commons




Central Fire Station, Sioux Falls


Architect: Joseph Schwarz


Style: Features a Mediterranean Villa Tower; Renaissance Revival Details


Date: 1913


More info: Carolyn Torma, p. 172.


Photo source: Wikimedia Commons




L.D. William Funeral Home, Sioux Falls, SD


Architect: Firm of Perkins and McWayne


Style: Mediterranean Villa, with Italian Renaissance Revival features


Date: 1923


More info: Carolyn Torma, p. 172.


Photo source: Wikimedia Commons




State Theatre, Sioux Falls, SD


Architects: Firm of Buechner and Orth


Style: Georgian, mixed with architectural details of the Renaissance Revival


Date: 1925


More info: Carolyn Torma, p. 168. Also, for a history of the State Theater and information about efforts to preserve it, see this issue of a newsletter from Preserve South Dakota, a historic-preservation organization.


Photo source: Wikimedia Commons




Administration Building, Augustana College, Sioux Falls, SD


Architect: Firm of Perkins and McWayne, Sioux Falls


Style: English Vernacular Revival (sometimes called Jacobethan)


Date: 1920


More info: Carolyn Torma, p.170


Photo source: Wikimedia Commons


_________________


Note to those interested in reading more about the architectural history of Sioux Falls, especially the period in the late 1880s and early 1900s when the visual identity of the city was being defined:


In addition to the useful articles cited above (Carolyn Torma and Alan Lathrop), there’s a new book coming on Tuesday, September 17, when the History Press of Charleston, SC, will be releasing Jennifer Dumke’s W.L. Dow: The Architect Who Shaped Sioux Falls. You can see parts of Dumke’s new volume through Google Books, here.


Some of Dow’s buildings that are shown above are the Old Minnehaha Courthouse, the South Dakota State Penitentiary, and the All Saints School.






    








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Romanesque on the Plains: The Look of Sioux Falls

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