A History of Superior
Court Architecture
in Massachusetts
John
C. McConnell
Introduction
We
shape our buildings and they shape us.
-WINSTON CHURCHILL
In
America, notions of justice underpin our national identity so deeply
that they have practically become part of the "genetic code"
of American society-a sort of national protoplasm out of which arise
all sorts of appeals to our common notions about national life.
It was largely a perceived subversion of justice that catalyzed
our movement to self-government, and we have spent all the years
since the Declaration trying to define justice. But we are nonetheless
rooted in the notion of justice for all. In the great fundamental
and largely unconscious body of national emotion are found the manifestations
by which our Great National Ideas, such as justice, are popularized
and disseminated: in our sacred documents; our folktales, slogans,
and highfalutin credos. Found
there, too, are elements of a popular iconography-symbols and images
in the mind's eye©which represent these great ideas.
The
blindfolded woman with scales and sword certainly is one such icon,
but there are others, more subtle, which involve buildings -imaginary
courthouses or parts of them. It is these images of great columns,
staircases, polished corridors, statuary, and the like, that are
also the embodiment of justice for us. By remembering architectural
forms in association with ideas about justice (or, say, God or corporate
power) we create archetypes-physical forms that have meanings defined
by their associational value. The courthouse itself is an archetypal
form. The image of a courthouse in a shady square at the center
of town is practically a complete metaphor for a typical American
community, a potent icon that is central to our shared beliefs about
ourselves.
All this applies to us in New England, because we are Americans,
and yet seldom is New England considered typical of America. Generally,
the shiretowns of Massachusetts are not typical American towns,
but each shares something of a New England regional character-which
includes a tolerance for individuality. And it is this, above other
New England traits, that has blessed us with diversity in all things,
including architecture. Massachusetts is practically unique among
the states in having a body of Superior courthouses so diverse that
almost every major period in American architectural history is represented.
These buildings are truly a treat for those who wish to read in
them statements about our past and about our efforts to set in our
midst incarnations of ideas about justice. It is architecture that
embodies law, houses those who administer it, and serves as a metaphor
for its power and legitimacy.
Architecture,
as much as law, deals with institutions and the relationship of
individuals to them. Buildings can accommodate or thwart us. They
direct and confound us; protect, threaten, elevate, humble, bore,
amuse, or awe us. And they come laden with values that affect the
ways we conduct ourselves and our opinions about the conduct of
others. We also expect from architecture a kind of order that unifies
the parts of experience that work better together, and separates
those that work better in isolation; that defines our public and
private spaces adequately; and that draws true distinctions between
that which is special and important in our midst and that which
is ordinary.
This
book isolates the buildings where we have housed the administering
of justice, and thereby offers an opportunity to examine a succession
of changes in architectural conventions that
have occurred in the making of courthouses. Accordingly, we expect
in any given period to find evidence of certain standards that make
courthouses like each other and unlike other building types.
First,
they must speak to society about justice and the law. They should
say "We are a just society."
Second,
they are public governmental buildings in a democratic state, and
should evince the democratic notion of access for all. They should
say "We are a democratic people."
Third,
they should make the process of justice seem to be one of the highest
purposes of society, by being presented as monuments as buildings
of great social stature. They should say "I am a
monument to justice."
Fourth,
they should focus on a special theatrical space, the courtroom,
as the unequivocal center of the drama of deciding what is just.
Finally,
they should share with all other buildings of whatever function
the recognition of the individual human being, respecting both physical
size and spiritual uniqueness. They should say "We are a humane
culture."
The
Colonial Period
A
new civilization was being born less out of plans and purposes than
out of the unsettlement which the New World brought to the ways
of the old.
-DANIEL
BOORSTIN
Both
American architecture and American law share a common ancestry.
To a large extent the entire construct of the American legal system
is founded on English common law. It is our inherited tradition.
In New England, the same can be said of our architectural history.
We would not say today that either our law or architecture conspicuously
resembles its English counterpart,
but for the most part our early architecture was consciously English.
in fact, it was generally as English as it could be, under the circumstances.
Particularly in Massachusetts, our colonial
foundations were predominantly British: the British sovereigns were
our sovereigns; the language, currency, customs, laws, arts, and
God were ours as well. And, although to a lesser extent than the
first white Virginians, the first impulse of the English settlers
of Massachusetts Bay (after sheer survival) was to lessen the profound
sense of isolation in an incomprehensibly vast wilderness by making
as complete a facsimile as possible of the England they had just
left. To be sure, they intended to do England one better in New
England; otherwise, they would have remained at home. But the world
they fashioned for themselves remained, despite their
most English efforts, intractably American.
Both
the legal system and the architectural corpus generated by early
Americans were almost exclusively brought about by practitioners
who had no training in those fields-Puritan divines,
merchants, men of general education in the case of the law, and
carpenters, shipwrights, or "gentlemen practitioners"
in the case of architecture. They operated on their sometimes dim
memory of how things had been in England, and this memory was supplanted
by new American conditions of climate, geography, scale, the theocratic
Puritan polity, and their own opinions of how things ought to be.
America inflected their remembered traditions and rendered them
a
unique reincarnation of English culture.
The
New England building material was wood, and it has since become
The American Material. Centuries before the settlement of America,
however, the English countryside had been largely
deforested and wood had become a relatively scarce commodity. Nevertheless,
New England settlers had come from rural counties which still retained
a wood vernacular architecture developed in the Middle Ages, and
the carpenters among them knew that tradition well. Their first
permanent houses closely resembled the heavy-timber framed homes
with steeply pitched roofs they had left behind. These English medieval
buildings must have provided early colonials with a measure of comfort,
reassuring them that, though they were on the fringes of a remote
and hostile continent, they were yet part of civilized England.
If
the heavy frames of their early houses were, as was the practice
in England, infilled with twig basketry and mud (wattle and daub),
this practice did not last long. New England temperatures fluctuate
much more than they do in Britain, and the wattle and daub, expanding
and contracting with those changes in temperature, fell out. While
clapboard siding is not unknown in England, it became the ubiquitous
solution to the problem of providing an elastic membrane with which
to cover New England buildings. This lent a characteristic thinness
and unsubstantiality to these First Period houses-unpainted and
drawn together around the meetinghouse and common of every town
in the colony. The archetypal image of American building, the plain
and foursquare
wooden box with its tightly drawn wooden skin, dates from the earliest
settlement of New England.
Most
of the buildings of seventeenth-century New England were wooden-box
houses, and their diamond-paned casement windows, overhanging upper
stories, steeply pitched roofs, and tall pointed dormers were all
elements of an English medieval vernacular building tradition. The
universality and practicality of the wooden box in America was reinforced,
starting around 1690, when buildings in the seventy-year-old colony
began to exhibit marked stylistic change. Through this and all subsequent
periods the basic wooden box has proven itself the capable bearer
of any style devised, and Americans have been content to use the
wooden box for all purposes
and to think of style as an applique, "superadded," in
the words of John Ruskin, "to utility."
In
an effort to keep up with cultural developments in England, prosperous
merchants in Boston at the dawn of the eighteenth century began
putting up shops and houses, in brick as well as
wood, with overt stylistic elements as part of their design. These
elements were Classical-that is, they were architectural "words"
(columns, cornices, balustrades, pediments) from an architectural
"language" first developed in ancient Greece and Rome,
the Classical cultures of antiquity. These Classical traditions
had been revived first during the Renaissance in Italy around 1400,
whence they spread across the European continent, coming last to
England around 1600 under the aegis of the great architect Inigo
Jones (1573-1652). Meanwhile in Italy, the principles of structural
clarity and pure harmonics of correct proportions characteristic
of Renaissance architecture were being transformed, partly as the
architectural embodiment of the Counter-Reformation, into the
sensual delight of exuberantly curvaceous solids and voids of a
new Classicism, the Baroque. This, in turn, reached England around
16 So. it can be argued that the best English Baroque work was that
of Sir Christopher Wren (1632-1723), the architect of St. Paul's
Cathedral and some fifty-one London city churches, all rebuilt after
the destruction of that city by fire in 1666. The great Wren
was so lionized at home and in the colonies that to this day countless
American buildings are ascribed to him, although there is no documentation
(and very little likelihood) of his ever having
designed a colonial building.
It
was the influence of Wren and his followers (notably James Gibbs)
in England that was most profoundly felt in the colonies, transmitted
by men arriving with firsthand knowledge of London's
new buildings, as well as numerous architectural publications of
up to-the-minute designs. These books depicted an architecture commonly
known as "Georgian," although this designation (as with
"Victorian") is not properly a style at all but rather
the name of an age corresponding to the reign of British monarchs.
Georgian architecture was an assortment of several styles using
a Classical
vocabulary, one of which has been called Wren/Baroque.
The
Old Plymouth Courthouse (pl. 60) is a provincial example of this
style, although its most salient characteristic is not stylistic
at all, but rather that it is obviously a simple wooden
box with a thin wooden skin stretched tightly around its framing
members. It is also virtually indistinguishable from houses of the
same era-it is quite literally a court "house." But unlike
typical
First Period houses, it is white; its doors and windows are symmetrically
disposed across its facades, it has no dormers, and its roof has
a shallow pitch. And its style-giving elements are all
derived from the Classical language of architecture: a cornice at
the eaves of the roof and in the triangular pedimented end gable;small
Classical entablatures at the heads of the first-floor
windows (double hung, now, rather than old-fashioned casements);and,
of course, the front door with its elaborate Classical surround,
which is the most characteristic feature of American
Wren/Baroque buildings.
As
had been typical of early colonial public structures, the Plymouth
Court shared this building with a market on the lower story and
town offices on the first floor. The courtroom was the
entire second floor, and traces of its original vaulted plaster
ceiling remain. The judge presided from a raised desk, with a lower
clerk's desk immediately in front, which was flanked by boxes for
the sheriff and court crier, Counsel faced the judge; behind them
sat the jury, and, behind the jury, the public.
The
utter simplicity and versatility of the wooden box accounts in part
for its durability as an American archetype. It is an easy matter
to graft elements of any style onto it, alter its
roof pitch and relationship to the street, and thereby produce a
"new" image dictated by prevailing taste and native ingenuity.
By 1749, a building such as this would have been commonplace, adding
its posture to the new pastel painted and Classical sense of tidiness
and order that came to characterize American towns.
The
reputed architect of the 1749 Plymouth Courthouse would have been
very concerned that the seat of British colonial law convey, within
the means available, the presence of British
culture, for his sympathies lay squarely with the Tories and the
Crown. He was judge Peter Oliver of Middleborough, and he presided
in his own building as Superior Court justice from 1756 until the
Revolution, when he left Boston with the British army for England,
where he died in 1791. He supported the incorporation of British
courtroom decorum-wigs, robes, and ceremony-into the practice of
American jurisprudence, and even took to riding his circuit in the
majesty of a coach-and-four emblazoned with his arms and attended
by postilions and scarlet-clad outriders, to be met and escorted
to the courthouse by town officials and citizens of note.
Beginning
around 1680, Boston's merchants started transforming the town from
wood to brick. Their twin desires to avoid a repetition of several
disastrous fires and to become more culturally aligned with their
English counterparts were requited by a sudden influx of artisans
and craftsmen from urban Britain who became New England's first
corps of trained builders. They imported
knowledge of mercantile middle-class English architecture and it
spread rapidly through New England. This new architecture was a
fusion of English Renaissance Classicism and stylistic elements
which the British had borrowed from the Netherlands-building in
brick with prominent double-pitched (gambrel) roofs, regular rows
of dormers, double-hung windows, balustrades, and narrow glazed
cupolas atop buildings of greater pretension. They imported at the
same time the predominant Netherlandish housing type of post-fire
London, the simple two- or three-story brick rowhouse separated
from the next house by a continuous firewall that extended above
the roof. This solid brick endwall became popular even for freestanding
houses, and was the excuse for imaginative architectural treatments-sundials,
sculpted chimneys, statuary, and stepped gable tops. Most of the
prominent merchants of Boston and other mercantile centers built
such houses for themselves. They were monumental and grand, as befitted
their social preeminence. And when they turned to the erection of
public buildings and faced the dilemma of creating an appropriate
architectural image for their sacred and secular institutions, they
simply resorted to making enlarged versions of their own suitably
grand houses. The substantive quality that separates the MacPhaedris©Warner
House (1716) in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, from Massachusetts
Hall at Harvard (1718) or from Boston's Old State House (1712) is
principally a matter of size. These buildings are no more than elongated
houses. Monuments were then made from domestic
architecture by enlarging them and adding a cupola.
In
May 1712, Samuel Sewall, early Boston diarist and later Chief justice
of the Superior Court of judicature, lay the cornerstone (after
having carved his initials in it) of a new building to house the
provincial legislature, the royal governor and his cabinet, town
government, the Superior Court of judicature, and the inferior Court
of Common Pleas of Suffolk County. Built and
perhaps designed by a William Payne on the site of the wooden Town
House destroyed by fire in 1711, this was the first Old State House.
When this new building also burned in December 1747, the brick walls
that remained standing were incorporated into a reconstruction the
following year, and it is this Old State House that stands today
(pl. 61). The building was not substantively
changed from its 1712 appearance: it retained the same dimensions
(36 by 112 feet), brick walls, basement, two stories, and an attic
punctuated by dormers, as well as the ornate Flemish stepped endwalls.
But the carved scrolls atop the gables gave way to symbols of empire:
the lion and unicorn. Other changes dictated by taste were made.
The original Dutch gambrel roof became a simple pitched roof, shorn
of its balustrade, and the octagonal cupola was rebuilt as the slender
three-stage lantern we know today.
During
the period of its greatest role in American political history, the
Old State House did not appear as the chaste brick reconstruction
that currently stands at the head of State Street.
In 1773, in accord with established American acceptance of ersatz
construction, the whole exterior was painted to resemble masonry
with a stone-colored paint to which sand was added for stonelike
texture. (The New State House, which Charles Bulfinch designed as
a replacement for the Old, was similarly treated.) The history of
the Old State House is well documented, and our age might be astounded
at the variety of guises, some drastic and some bizarre, that has
disfigured the building through more than two and one-half centuries
of use as a courthouse, state house, and city hall; as shops, offices,
manufactories, and museums. Such was the state of
degradation in 1876, the very year the nation celebrated its centennial,
that it was almost demolished as a traffic impediment. The city
fathers were humiliated into its preservation only by a bid from
Chicago to purchase, dismantle, and reerect it on the shores of
Lake Michigan.
The
courts met in the court chamber at the west (uphill) end of the
second floor, and continued in this location until, after the Revolution,
they removed to the "new" courthouse in School
Street, designed by Thomas Dawes. This building was replaced in
1810 by Charles Bulfinch's Suffolk Courthouse, the nation's first
granite building, which was itself demolished for the construction
of old City Hall on the same site in 1861.
After
the Revolution
Boston
was the child of my father
and he did pretty much as he pleased
with it.
-FRANCIS
VAUGHAN BULFINCH
If
one has the impression from the preceding discussion that
Charles Bulfinch had some significant role in the architecture of
postrevolutionary New England, this is because, more than any other
single man, Bulfinch was responsible for transforming Boston from
a provincial and largely medieval town, ransacked by the British,
into a cosmopolitan and progressive city, adorned with scores of
architectural jewels that were the very picture of urbanity in the
English speaking world. And it was precisely this English world
that remained for New Englanders the object of attention and source
of wealth long after the political break of 1776.
There
was no cultural break in New England to parallel the
revolution in government. The wealthy merchants and civic leaders
of Newport, Boston, Salem, Newburyport, and Portsmouth continued
to
rely chiefly on trade with Britain for their wealth, and when they
invested that wealth in buildings for themselves and their
community, they built pictures of their cultural conservatism. As
a class, they came from Puritan stock and took as their social
peers their middle-class counterparts in Britain. The architecture
that they preferred was correspondingly a chaste and understated
version of contemporary British work. The models generally employed
were all from the architectural work of the Scot Robert Adam, who
as a young man had gone on the Grand Tour, visited Rome and
Pompeii, and was influenced by the exquisitely delicate mosaics
and
frescoes of Roman interiors. This decorative finesse he reworked
into a modem idiom of decorated Classical forms which he applied
to
a new spatial approach: rooms of differing shapes and sizes in a
single building. His buildings contained round, square, and oval
rooms; rooms with vaulted ceilings and rooms with swelling apsidal
ends. His columns were often attenuated and pencil like, his
decorative forms were finely wrought chains of wheat husks and
swags executed in plaster as if they were webs spun by spiders.
His
exteriors were frequently in brick and exhibit a smooth planar
quality into which window openings were cleanly cut.
When
the ships' captains and merchants of New England built
houses after the war, they did so in the style of Adam, known as
the Federal Style. But perhaps as a residue of Puritan taste, which
eschewed overt showiness, these homes were even more spare and
understated. Possibly the finest remaining example of these Federal
Style homes is the several blocks of Chestnut Street in Salem.
These rows of houses are simply beautifully proportioned square
brick facades, their roofs pitched so shallowly that they are not
visible, and their doors set under oval porticoes and crowned with
that hallmark of the Federal Style, the graceful oval fanlight.
For
Charles Bulfinch the Federal Style was both a point of
departure and a sort of stylistic manifesto of taste from which
he
never deviated. His stylistic uniformity notwithstanding, Bulfinch
left one of the most remarkable legacies of a complete
architectural worldview ever achieved. His accomplishments include
the United States Capitol, three state houses (in Massachusetts,
Connecticut, and Maine), twelve churches, six banks, four insurance
company buildings, three entire residential streets, and over
thirty-two houses, as well as the Boston Latin School, the
Massachusetts General Hospital, theaters, prisons, almshouses,
hospitals, markets, warehouses, wharves, arches, dormitories,
academic buildings, our first urban park (the Boston Common), urban
design (the Bulfinch Triangle of streets near North Station where
the Mill Pond had been), and, finally, and of special concern here,
four courthouses. Two of these (in Boston and Worcester no longer
exist, but the other two (in Cambridge and Newburyport) still do;
Newburyport is the oldest Superior Court building still in use as
such in the Commonwealth.
Bulfinch
was born in Boston of wealthy aristocratic parents in
1763. He was graduated from Harvard College in 1781, whereupon he
was sent for a two-year Grand Tour of Europe, as was the custom
among the sons of families of consequence. Modem London
particularly stunned and fascinated the young man, who had thought
of Boston as the height of sophistication. Following his return
(after spending time with Thomas Jefferson in France), he resolved
to pursue his gentlemanly interest in architecture by speculating
in development projects that would remake Boston into a modem
cultural capital on the British model. He lost all his money in
1794 through the failure of a development venture building a
splendid curving set of rowhouses on both sides of a
crescent-shaped park in the middle of what is now Franklin Street.
Although the venture forced him into bankruptcy, the Tontine
Crescent provided Boston with its first glimpse of monumental town
planning and gave America its first professional architect.
Bulfinch was forced to take up architecture as a means of
supporting himself, thereby beginning the practice of charging
clients for architectural services. His charitable fellow citizens,
in order to secure his future, elected him chairman of the
selectmen and concurrently chief of police, and these two
positions, which he held for nearly twenty years, allowed him to
pursue his great urban vision with not a small degree of assurance.
In
1805 Bulfinch was engaged in completely rebuilding and
enlarging Faneuil Hall. Sensitive to its extraordinary history,
he
carefully incorporated the earlier Wren/Baroque structure into his
enlarged version, keeping the public chambers above the
open-arcaded marketplace. When, in that same year, he was called
upon to furnish a design for a new courthouse in Newburyport, it
is
clear that Old Faneuil Hall was very much on his mind. The building
he provided, like the Boston landmark, had its principal rooms on
the upper story and an open arcade across the front (fig. 2). This
two-story brick structure was built on the banks of Frog Pond with
its front to the Mall. The center of its roof was adorned with a
pedimented gable containing a bull's-eye window and bearing a
figure of justice holding scales in her right hand. Typical of
Bulfinch's architecture, the spring-points and keystones of the
arches, as well as the string course and window lintels and sills,
were of white marble in crisp contrast to the red brick walls.
In
1853, an age characterized by different tastes, the whole
building was remodeled in a kind of Italianate mode (Pl. 40) with
a broad bracketed cornice. The pediment, statue, and arcade were
all removed and most of the window openings were given a more
stylish, slightly arched, brick lintel. In addition, the front door
was monumentalized with a heavy rusticated stone surround capped
by
a broad segmental pediment. Finally, adding insult to injury, the
whole building was coated with mastic cement to resemble stone.
This last dressing has been removed, but virtually all that remains
of Bulfinch's building is part of the brick endwalls and perhaps
the windows facing the pond. Recent renovation has returned some
of
the simple elegance of the building's original state: graceful door
casings (pl. 14) and window casings with inset shutters, the turned
spindle work of both the courtroom furniture and staircase
balusters, the pale wall colors, the chandeliers (Pl. 39).
Bulfinch's
other remaining courthouse in Cambridge was nearly
demolished in 1966, but was given a new life in the mid 1980s. It,
too, was so substantially altered and enlarged that little of the
Bulfinch Building (known by that name) remains on view. When
completed in 1816, it was described by the Columbian Sentinel as
"of brick, remarkably simple, but varied in the form of the
windows
and arches, and [producing] a pleasing effect from the harmony of
its proportions." This evaluation might, indeed, serve well
as an
apt description of the majority of Bulfinch's work. In 1848 the
building was enlarged by architect Ammi B. Young, in total sympathy
with the then out-of-fashion Bulfinch style (Pl. 49). That the
Greek Revivalist Young could add a massive Federal Style cupola
and
continue Bulfinch's use of blank arcades over the windows is a
remarkable example of the proper domination of stylistic unity over
personal expression.
In
architecture, this age had three giant figures. Bulfinch
was one. The second was a man who, if he were only known as an
architect, would be highly acclaimed. That he was also a lawyer
begins to describe the breadth of his interests. That he was also
an inventor, author, naturalist, agriculturalist, educator,
ambassador, philosopher, governor of Virginia, and the third
president of the United States; that he was all these things and
more leads many to see Thomas Jefferson as the most remarkable
American ever to exist. If for Bulfinch, Neoclassicism was an
approach for adapting the best of modem British architecture to
tastefully urbanize America, it was for Jefferson quite the
opposite. No anglophile, Jefferson saw in the revival of Classical
architecture a potential source for civic architecture that might
evince the certainties of civic virtue and blessings of active
citizenship in an infant republic that stood to learn much from
republican Rome. People needed among them models of Roman
architecture to bespeak the duties of republican
citizenship-Jefferson's Virginia State Capitol, for example, was
a
copy of a Roman temple. For Jefferson, architecture possessed a
metaphoric correspondence between forms and noble ideals made
possible through the associations that history attaches to
buildings, and they were useful because of this. His stewardship
and practice did much to promote architecture as the most necessary
of art forms in a land never fully convinced of the need for art
at
all.
If
it was Jefferson who first profoundly recognized the
potential of architecture to generate adequate metaphors by which
a new sociopolitical order might understand and reinforce itself,
it was Benjamin Henry Latrobe who was first able to see and
manifest the more abstract potential of Neoclassicism to embody
fundamental and primary forces intrinsic to a nascent American
spirit: simplicity, directness, practicality, honesty. Latrobe was
born in England in 1764, and he was trained as both an engineer
and
an architect. When he moved to the United States in 1796 he brought
with him training, experience, and talent profoundly in excess of
anything known here. In his unfortunately short career he built
buildings of extraordinary power and technical excellence. He used
Greek rather than Roman forms because they were more primitive and
direct, and, working chiefly in stone, he generated a revolutionary
new kind of Neoclassicism whose elementary geometric forms
appealed, not to the eye or the conscience, but to the intellect.
His was a self-revelatory kind of architecture that created order
through the rational manner in which his forms explained themselves
to the studious observer. His approach to things was transmitted
to
his chief pupil, Robert Mills, whose customshouse in Newburyport
and New Bedford stand in Massachusetts as examples of the unadorned
power inherent in monumental simplicity.
Fifty
years after the Declaration of independence, Thomas
Jefferson and John Adams were dead. They left behind a nation
facing growing sectarian disagreement, which had yet to declare
its
cultural "Declaration of independence." By the close of
the
Revolution there was a growing popular sentiment, at first
decidedly anti-British, to be at once free from European cultural
domination and to supersede it altogether through a kind of
American cultural self-genesis. A token of this feeling was the
vote in Congress in 1795, which failed by only two votes, to
substitute classical Greek for English as the official language.
This same sentiment led to a surprisingly broad popular interest
in
literature and art, as well as in social and political reform. it
led to an architecture, indeed to a culture, of which Charles
Bulfinch, ever linked to notions of propriety and tastes formed
in
his youth, was to remain on the periphery. What came to be was like
a new cultural land to which, like Moses, he had led, and into
which he was not to enter.
The
Greek Revival
The
three great staples of New England are ice and rocks and men.
-CHARLES
FRANCIS ADAMS, JR.
Perhaps
in part as an effort to sustain the ebullient
patriotic sentiments attending our revolutionary victory, which
were waning because of growing divisive sectionalism, Americans
were emotionally attracted to the cause of the Greek War of
Independence from Turkish domination, which began in 1821. This
struggle was seen as analogous to our own Revolution, and the
sentiment was amplified by the romantic aura surrounding the event,
which was propagated in part by Lord Byron's poetic foray into the
cause. It served our own national mythos to embrace the reªestablishment
of democracy on the very soil that had given birth to
it.
Europe
had already "discovered" ancient Greece, principally
under the aegis of her archaeologists. Archaeology had only
recently been invented, and the small numbers of men who had
unearthed Herculaneum, Spalato, and Pompeii, such as Robert Adam,
ranged further afield to ancient Greece. Their activity was only
possible because of the "invention" of history as a way
of looking
at the past during the Enlightenment. For the first time, history
was seen to be composed of discrete periods set apart from one
another by their own unique constellation of political, social,
and
cultural forces, and capable of being studied, reconstituted, and
analyzed. And used. This sent Europeans out in search of their
assumed historical antecedents, first to the Roman world, and
subsequently to Greece, mother of their culture and wellspring
noble political constructs.
By
following the course of the archaeologists and historians
who were delving steadily backward into antiquity, we Americans
also arrived at a time felt to be even more analogous to our own
situation than that of republican Rome: that of ancient Greece.
The
Greek polity was understood as simpler and more direct; nobler and
truer than Rome. Republican Rome, after all, had rapidly
metamorphosed into Imperial Rome with its series of tyrannical
despots-hardly an appropriate model for a newly democratic nation.
The
touchstone of ancient Greece in 1800, as today, was its
buildings and sculpture, which is among any civilization's most
enduring legacies. These were just then coming to light and being
popularized by the exhibition of the Parthenon's sculptures in
Britain by Lord Elgin, and the publication of such monumental works
as Stuart and Revett's The Antiquities of Athens (London, 1762,
et
seq.). These first accurate measured drawings of the Parthenon and
other temples and monuments dotting the ancient Greek world were
stunningly beautiful representations of what Professor William
Pierson has called "the supreme visual embodiment of the oldest
democracy on earth.
The
citizens of Boston in the second decade of the new century
began to affect the "Greek manner" in all things: literature,
the
visual arts, hairstyles, clothing fashions; they even took to
naming sons and daughters after the heroes and heroines of Greek
mythology. (Thomas Bulfinch, son of the architect, published his
Age of Fable in Boston in 1855.) That this passion for things Greek
coincided with the astounding flowering of accomplishment in Boston
earned her the sobriquet "Athens of America." And if she
was that,
then Harvard College was her Academy. Harvard led the nation's
educational institutions by stressing that a broad knowledge of
the
classics-of Latin and Greek language, drama, philosophy, and
scientific literature was the sole avenue by which the well
educated might approach life. It was from this curriculum and the
"Greek Mania," as it came to be known, that Boston became
an early
home of the Greek Revival.
The
citizens of New England came to live in Greek houses,
worship in Greek churches, shop in Greek markets, and keep money
in
Greek banks; they frequented learned clubs called Athenaeums, which
were intellectual societies for the discussion of the classics and
which maintained private art galleries and great libraries. Their
shelves were kept filled by the pens of Emerson, Thoreau, Melville,
Hawthorne, Longfellow, and the like. This devotion to the mind was
simultaneously a devotion to reform; Boston led the nation in
advocating free education, expanded suffrage, humane treatment of
the insane, temperance, and trade-unionism, to name but a few of
the causes. Boston's Mayor Josiah Quincy (1823-1828), later
president of Harvard, had its streets cleaned (for the first time
in two centuries, some said), built its water and sewage
systems,and lectured the Suffolk Grand jury on prison reform. All
the while, from Boston's pulpits and publishing houses came
abolitionist campaign against slavery.
Small
wonder, then, that in the intellectual and creative
ferment of Boston in the 1820s and 1830s the Greek culture found
by
archaeologists should fall on such fertile ground half a world and
nineteen centuries away. In architecture, too, the devotion to
reform and ancient Greece took root and flowered to such an extent
that colonial and Federal New England was remade in a new, white,
and monumental way. Boston discovered true monumentality in
building when it began to build wholesale in granite.
The
Greek Revival in Boston has been called "the Granite
Style, and it was the marriage of Greek forms with Massachusetts
granite that finally and thoroughly accomplished a new way of
building and a break with past European styles. Construction in
granite doesn't readily allow for the gentility of ornament and
subtlety of nuance that characterized earlier forms of
architecture. All the powerful simplicity, honesty, and monumental
directness of Greek forms on the one hand, and of Americans'
estimation of themselves on the other, received for the first time
its consummate expression in the granite public buildings put up
first in Massachusetts, and then all along the eastern and gulf
coasts with granite from Massachusetts quarries.
It
is not, then, surprising that Solomon Willard, quixotic and
multifaceted entrepreneur of the first great granite quarries in
Quincy, should also turn out to be the architect of the first Greek
granite Superior Courthouse building in the Commonwealth. Willard
(1783-1861) was the son of a Pembroke carpenter and cabinetmaker,
and he came to Boston, at age twenty, skilled in his father's
trades. Essentially self taught, he mastered woodcarving,
stonecutting, sculpture, architecture, quarrying, and, finally,
scientific farming in his sixty-eight years. He is credited with
the design of ducted hot-air central heating, with the development
of the Quincy granite quarries, and with the singlehanded invention
of all the tools used in handling and transporting massive stone
blocks. He carved the fence posts at the Old Granary Burying
Ground, as well as the figureheads for scores of Boston's clipper
ships. But he is chiefly remembered as the architect of such works
as the Bunker Hill Monument, the Quincy Town Hall, and the new
Superior Courthouses for Suffolk and Norfolk counties, all built
in
granite.
The
Suffolk County Courthouse in Boston (fig. 3) no longer
stands, but it occupied a site on Court Street where the School
Committee Building now stands. Noted mostly for its severity, it
was described upon completion in 1836 as "a granite barn with
a
porch at either end. " It nevertheless made an unambiguous
statement about the directness and monumentality of justice in
Suffolk County, which was a reiteration of a theme Willard also
had
made in 1827 in Dedham with his Norfolk County Courthouse, which
happily still stands. Though altered several times, the building
retains something of its Greek Revival character (Pl. 41)
Willard's
building in Dedham replaced a 1796 wooden structure
(which had had a cupola by Bulfinch and a bell by Paul Revere) in
order to fulfill the Court of General Sessions' desire "to
take
into consideration, among other things, the subject of erecting
a
fireproof building for the safe-keeping of records." Willard
was
commissioned and the contractors Damon & Bates were hired to
construct a building "in the form of an ancient Greek temple
with
columns at both ends." At a final cost Of $30,000, the building
was
dedicated on July 4, 1825, with appropriate Masonic ceremonies and
a cornerstone containing, among other things, a silver plate with
the names of John Quincy Adams, president of the United States,
and
Levi Lincoln, governor of the Commonwealth; specimens of
Dedham-made marbleized paper; and a small beaver hat of local
manufacture.
Sounding
a cry that was to become an old saw to those who
inhabit and administer courthouses, the commissioners recognized
in
1860 that the courthouse needed more space, and determined to have
it, against vociferous local opposition, by extending Willard's
building rather than by constructing a new building across the
street. The courthouse was thus enlarged according to the plans
of
prominent Boston architect Gridley J. Fox Bryant (designer of Old
City Hall, among numerous other landmarks). Bryant extended the
north front, sensitively retaining Willard's Doric portico, which
today is the only visible remnant of the original building. He also
added flanking wings to the east and west. Less sensitively, Bryant
added a grandiose and totally incongruous dome to the whole
composition (domes are strictly Roman and alien to Greek
architecture), the whole thing done at the then-scandalous cost
Of
$75,000. Bryant designed in a time whose spirit was far different
from the naive optimism of the 1820s; his world was one desperately
anxious to reaffirm prevailing institutions in the face of the
fratricidal hatreds and institutional undermining of the Civil War.
In
1890 the county hired Wait & Cutter, architects of Boston,
and proceeded with a third major reconstitution of the building,
this time adding a major wing to the rear and renovating inside
and
out (pls. 42, 43, 44), replacing the old dome with an even more
grandiose one. It is this building, standing today, which was the
location of much of the courtroom proceedings in the 1921-27 trial
of Sacco and Vanetti. With the exception of the dome, the present
building exhibits a remarkable degree of stylistic integrity, owing
to the willingness of later architects to subsume their personal
tastes to those of Solomon Willard, building both in his style and
his material.
New
Bedford also built a Greek temple to house its Superior
Court after it was made a half shiretown of Bristol County in 1828.
New Bedford typifies towns whose first major period of growth
occurred after the turn of the nineteenth century (like Worcester
or Nantucket) during the heyday of the Greek Revival. In New
Bedford, the courthouse (fig. 4) was designed by Russell Warren
(1783-1860) from Rhode Island, who worked extensively in New
Bedford and was the principal Greek Revivalist in his home state
(with James C. Bucklin he designed the Providence Arcade of 1828).
The courthouse is simply one of many noteworthy Greek structures
in
the historic center of town-the Customs House by Robert Mills, the
Fishermen's A. Exchange, and the Old City Hall (now part of the
public library) also by Warren are but a few. The 183 1 Superior
Courthouse differs from Willard's in its use of a somewhat more
decorative Ionic order, its wooden columns topped by
double-scrolled capitals (Willard used the Doric order). It
embodies the graceful good proportions of that order as advanced
by
a multitude of architects' and builders pattern books published
in
this era, which contained detailed drawings for the accurate
construction of all the Greek orders. (The American Builder's
Companion, 1827, by Boston architect Asher Benjamin was one of the
most popular.) Among the standards of fame for early courthouses
appears to be whether or not Daniel Webster ever tried a case
therein. The famous orator pleaded a case in this New Bedford
Superior Courthouse in 1835, which was considered an event
important enough to close all the public schools for the day to
allow teachers and pupils alike to hear him.
And
yet this was not the event that made the building well
known, but rather the trial fifty years later of Lizzie Borden for
the murder of her parents with an axe. Behind the original
building, where architect Nat C. Smith's 1899 addition is now,
there were stables for visiting attorneys to use. During the weeks
of this sensational trial they were outfitted as telegraph stations
from which members of the fourth estate filed national dispatches
on the conduct of the members of the third.
The
design serves well to recall a major drawback to the
indiscriminate use of the Greek temple for all sorts of building
types, a situation that had rapidly evolved. judging from the
evidence, it was frequently felt that in its pure form the Greek
temple was somehow not satisfyingly monumental enough, and the old
prerevolutionary practice of adorning important buildings with
cupolas and belfries was continued. The addition of such
architectural doodads generally pleased traditionalists and
horrified purists. Ammi B. Young's Boston Customs House of 1837
was
much maligned for marrying a Roman dome to a Greek temple, but most
Greek Revival churches continued to carry steeples as their
predecessors had. The cupola atop the New Bedford Courthouse today
seems considerably more integrated with its setting than does the
1953 Probate Court addition to the building, which is a modem
version of old Georgian architecture.
The
original courthouse at Barnstable (fig. 5) shares with
that at New Bedford many things: it, too, has a belfry crowning
its
temple front, it carries a number of later additions, and its
massive columns are made of wood. And it, too, could boast of the
one-time presence of Daniel Webster. But, unlike New Bedford, the
Barnstable Courthouse is built of solid rough-faced Quincy granite
with pilasters at the corners of dressed granite. And, squarely
in
the American tradition of materials masquerading as other
materials, what appear to be four monolithic granite Doric columns
carrying their correctly detailed Doric entablature are actually
made of wood that has been painted with sanded paint to resemble
stone. The use of granite and the severity of style lend credence
to the generally accepted attribution of the design to Boston's
leading Greek Revival architect, Alexander Parris (1780-1852). Born
in Hebron, Maine, Parris had been a schoolteacher in Pembroke and
was trained as a carpenter. When he came to Boston, he became part
of a group of young men gathered around Charles Bulfinch, and he
served as Bulfinch's superintendent of construction for his great
granite Massachusetts General Hospital (1818-23) while Bulfinch
was
in Washington supervising completion of the Capitol. Parris's own
masterpieces in Boston include the Sears House (now the Somerset
Club) on Beacon Street (1816), St. Paul's Cathedral on Tremont
Street (1819) for which Solomon Willard carved the Ionic capitals,
and his masterwork of 1825, the Quincy Market-all Greek and all
granite.
The
imposing severity of the Barnstable Courthouse is in sharp
contrast to both the elegant tall Greek front door and the
surprisingly delicate courtroom (pl. 19), which is perhaps the most
beautiful in the Commonwealth. The judge's bench sits behind a row
of graceful balusters and in front of a screen of Ionic columns
and
pilasters. The room is surrounded by a lyrical frieze of Greek
anthemion palmettes and topped with a gently swelling arched
ceiling from which vantage point a Sacred Cod looks down.
Expansions
carried out in 1879, 1893, and 1906 (by Guy Lowell,
designer of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts) greatly enlarged the
structure without seriously compromising its original architectural
integrity. Once again, architectural sensitivity dictated all work
to be done consonant with the original. Subsequent additions in
1925 and 1972 are less happy-blond brick appendages with steel sash
windows, fortunately relegated to the rear of the complex. Through
a century and a half of alteration, the image of the chaste temple
in splendid isolation amid a green and benign landscape was never
molested, and it stands today as the quintessence of the Greek
Revival in New England (pl. 20).
Ammi
Burnham Young (1798-1874) has already been encountered as
the architect who enlarged Bulfinch's Cambridge Courthouse. A pupil
of Alexander Parris, Young was a prolific architect in his own
right and designed two of our courthouses besides Cambridge. He
was
born. in Lebanon, New Hampshire, and by age thirty©nine he
was at
the forefront of the Greek Revival with his State Capitol at
Montpelier, Vermont (1837) and his popular Boston Customs House
(1837-47) with which he achieved an echo of the structural truth
of
Greek temples (colonnades on all sides and not just the front),
thus transcending the merely scenographic act of applying a temple
front to an ordinary building. His Worcester Courthouse is Greek;
his Lowell Courthouse is not, and is discussed later. Still
relatively young at the height of the Greek Revival, Young's
architecture changed with the times, and when the Greek mania
passed, he proved himself equally adroit at other styles.
For
the principal facade of his Worcester Courthouse (1843),
he chose the ornate Corinthian order, with fluted columns and a
cluster of sprouting leaves for a capital. There were only two of
these in the original building (Corinthian columns are the most
expensive to carve!), and they were placed according to Greek
custom in antis, within a porch created in the front bearing wall.
This custom derives from the megaron, an archaic Greek house type.
As was typical, he placed the principal chambers on the upper
story, and, perhaps because he was stung by academic criticism of
his Customs House, he elected to keep the lovely dome covering the
courtrooms invisible from the exterior, hidden below the low
Grecian roofline. This ribbed half-dome (pl. 23), which so ennobles
the courtroom, is carried on a semicircle of freestanding Ionic
columns, making the judges' bench the focus of the entire space.
Young's
Quincy granite building is now the left-hand pavilion
of a much larger complex (pl, 21) but, except for the slightly
darker patina of age, is not obvious as having been a separate
structure. By the time the building was enlarged in 1898, Classical
Greek architecture was once more in fashion (pl. 10) after fifty
years in decline, so that the addition blends perfectly with the
original.
Salem
is quite unique in the architectural richness of its
courthouse complex, which is by itself a good short course in
American architectural history. Its courthouses of 1636, 1679
(scene of the witchcraft trials), 1718 (home of the provincial
legislature in exile from Boston prior to the Revolution), and 178
5 are no longer standing, but those of 1841, 1861, 1889, 1909, and
1981 are. The earliest of this group, queued up along Federal
Street (fig. 10), is a Greek Revival structure, virtually
indistinguishable in most major regards from Young's Worcester
Courthouse. It too is of granite with twin Corinthian columns in
antis, and it was completed two years earlier than the one in
Worcester. It was designed by Richard Bond (1797-1861) of Boston,
an architect of some local repute whose Gore Hall Library at
Harvard (1838) was as flamboyantly Gothic as his Salem Courthouse
was Greek. None of the 1841 interiors remain, and the building now
houses the civil division of the court.
Having
been championed in New England, the Greek Revival moved
on. It spread first to other metropolitan centers of the East and
to rural New England, where it was disseminated mostly through the
ever-popular builder's guides which accompanied settlers everywhere
they went beyond the pale of the architectural profession. The
"national style" gave to New England folk villages the
appearance
of the nest of cozy white homes and red barns popularized by
Currier and Ives and actually created by carpenters designing with
their planes and saws an inventive wood version of citified
high-style Greek work. The Greek Revival even became as simple as
building a house with its gable end to the street in imitation of
a pediment, and applying white paint. In towns of some means the
erection of a public building might still call for a material more
durable than wood, as it did in 1858 in Edgartown when Dukes
built its courthouse. About it little is known. Its architect was
Harold Sleeper, and its style is carpenter Greek. It sits snugly
on
Main Street (fig. 6) amidst lush foliage (one of its towering pair
of elms was lost a few years ago), and is less monumental than the
Greek Revival Methodist Church next door. Edgartown even today is
still predominantly a Greek Revival town, which makes it all the
more odd that the courthouse is stylistically more conservative
than its neighbors. Its brick walls with simple stone lintels at
the windows, its simple cubic shape, flat roof, and Classical
entrance portico make it reminiscent of fifty-year-old Federal
Style architecture. But it is wrapped in a heavy wooden Greek
cornice and entablature supported across the front by four flat
pilaster strips intended to appear as columns. The large courtroom
on the second floor (Pl. 45) is as chaste and elegant as the
exterior, with its full cornice and entablature, coffer molding
and
ceiling rosette all done in molded plaster. The building
exemplifies the beauty possible from even naively done Greek work.
The
Greek Revival crossed the Appalachians with pioneers, some
of whom packed builder's pattern books in their wagons and
saddlebags. It went further west where the first log cabins were
replaced within a decade by astonishingly civilized Greek houses,
churches, schools, and courthouses. It was almost literally the
very vessel used to transmit American culture, through her
institutions, to the furthest edge of her frontier.
Apart
from the natural desire for stylistic change, the end of
the Greek Revival in the North was brought about in part by its
acceptance in the South. Southern "Greek Apologists" like
Calhoun
claimed legitimacy for the institution of human bondage by
trumpeting the fact that the ancient democratic Greek city-states
had been a slaveholding society. Made thus distasteful and passe
in
the North, the Greek Revival remained popular in the South. There
were few towns in the South, and the style was applied wholesale
to
the plantation manor houses being built in the "New South"-the
states of Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana. These states were
only then being cultivated by planters from the Old South along
the
seaboard, who moved swiftly west as their soil was depleted by the
practice of raising huge amounts of a single crop. These plantation
homes, set behind verandahs nestled in a screen of enormous white
columns at the end of a mile-long driveway, were, together with
buildings in the distant West, the last of the Greek Revival with
its promise of a simple egalitarian democracy in an idealistic
land. This was plainly counter to experience; the Greek Revival
ends with sectional conflict, loss of faith. The white temple
sailed away west on the grassy sea or faded into a humid dream
amidst the Spanish moss.
Romanticism
The
pleasure of the senses I can sympathize with and share, but the
substitution of sensuous ecstasy for intellectual activity is the
very devil.
-GEORGE
BERNARD SHAW
By
the 1850's buildings in different regions of the nation were
saying entirely different things with the same language, Greek
Classicism. This disparity within our national style was
symptomatic of a far deeper schism opening up in the federal union.
We had become, at least culturally, three nations: the raw and
restless West; the conservative agricultural South tied to an
economic system of a subjugated work force, a single crop, and
rapid land exhaustion; and the progressive North, rapidly becoming
urban and industrial. The litany of events and issues that led to
our Civil War is well known. Their cultural effects are less so,
and yet they changed our national character no less profoundly than
the war did.
Eli
Whitney perhaps influenced the course of American history
as deeply as any lawgiver, architect, writer, or revolutionary.
He
is both the inventor of the cotton gin (1794) and the father of
mass production through standardized parts. The former invention
simultaneously reduced drastically the cost of cotton and
exponentially boosted demand for textiles made from it. The
resultant wholesale dedication to cotton production in the South
and explosive development of the textile industry in the North
brought about the polarization of American society. In the North,
especially, the change was enormous. Early industry in Rhode Island
and Massachusetts, beginning in 1793 with Slater's Mill in
Pawtucket, was water-powered and therefore clean, quiet, and
limited in scale. Subsequent experiments by such men as Francis
Cabot Lowell and Kirk Boott in Waltham, Lowell, Lawrence, and other
places established the possibility of manufacture based on utopian
industrial communities in which the company provided good housing,
education, and even religious opportunity for its workers. They
were successful for a time and seemed to promise both commercial
viability and social rectitude integrated with a vision of tranquil
and domesticated nature. Too much success, perhaps, plus the rise
of a mill-owning elite and the supplanting of water power by steam
transformed industry from benign and exemplary to exploitive,
polluting, and as huge as it was profitable. In the political arena
this engendered corruption; in the social, it caused glaring class
division between rich and poor. It wrought a kind of spiritual
surrender to economic "necessity, " the failure of utopian
experiment, the burgeoning of both cities and their squalor, and,
finally, the despoiling of nature.
As
a people, we experienced, like orphaned adolescents, a
virtual "end of innocence. " By 18 5 o our cultural and
political
leaders had not known the Revolution, and what had seemed our
national optimism and sense of purpose were compromised as issues
of economy and livelihood formed the great shear plane along which
the forces holding us together came undone. The sense of loss was
profound. The conditions of northern cities and southern
plantations alike put the lie to Jefferson's treasured hope for
a
secure Arcadian nation of farmers which would be at one with the
splendid beauty and fecundity of the American land. We looked backfor
the first time in a new way©wistfully, with less confidence
in
ourselves, wishing things to be as simple and clear as they had
seemed in the past.
The
white temple took on new meaning: no longer useful for its
metaphoric political value or the intellectual appeal of its
abstraction, it had one more lesson to teach. This was visual
appeal: appeal to emotion rather than reason, through visual
stimulation, which is a defining characteristic of the broad
cultural movement known as Romanticism. The discovery that
architecture had the power to evoke distant times or places-times
of immense appeal because of their mystery or self-assuredness-led
to a new emotional way of making and thinking about buildings which
was abetted by unparalleled technological prowess for manufacturing
new building materials (terra cotta, cast iron, and plate glass,
for example). As a consequence, the forms of architecture sought
after were those that could make evocations of bygone times and
exotic places appropriate to the new and multifarious ways we
wished to see ourselves.
The
development of this polymorphous and democratic culture
demanded of architecture more diversity than the Classical
tradition was capable of giving. The architecture of markedly
preindustrial ages, such as medieval Europe or Renaissance Tuscany,
was preferred, and qualities antithetical to the Greek Revival came
to dominate: irregularity rather than symmetry, rough surfaces
rather than smooth, and color and randomness rather than whiteness
and order. Architecture was now needed which could provide a sort
of fantasy to prop up our sagging ideals. One now might live in
an
Italianate house, worship in a Gothic church, shop in a Moorish
department store, keep money in a Romanesque bank, stop by one's
Renaissance club before an evening in a Byzantine theater, and,
finally, pass to the Great Reward through Egyptian cemetery gates.
Buildings became pictures, frequently wedded to a complementary
landscape, of their inhabitants fantasies, and this ushered in a
period of revivals of styles prized for their associational
attributes and capacity to give visual delight through those
characteristics-roughness, color, the impression of spontaneity,
asymmetry-which, when taken together, formed a sort of unwritten
code known as the Picturesque.
The
two basic Picturesque architectural modes during the
Romantic period, which lasted in this country from around 1840
until the 1890s, were derived from the two great traditions in
architecture: the Gothic and the Classical. The Gothic Revival was
initially an ecclesiastical movement, concentrating its efforts
on
churches in accord with correct liturgical practice. But the sheer
beauty of Gothic forms, quite apart from their organic structural
clarity or association with proper Christianity, soon made them
popular for all sorts of buildings from houses to hospitals. And
the Classical tradition continued unabated from the Greek Revival,
but now looked to less ancient models, such as Renaissance Italy
and Germany, or Romanesque or Baroque France. If builders were
somewhat more interested in correct taste through associational
exemplar than in romantic picturesqueness, they generally built
in
various Renaissance Revival modes.
In
the decades following the Civil War, these remained the two
predominant architectural categories, but they changed along with
the country following that fratricidal nightmare. It was as if our
ability to believe in the transcendence and goodness of humankind
had passed with the end of the war. That, together with all the
grimness of the unchecked barbarousness of our industrial system,
the economic depression of 1872, and the blatant corruption of
Grant's administration in Washington and of government in general,
led to a nation that put its faith in the tangible, the durable,
and the obvious. Chief among possessions are buildings. In periods
of increased devotion to things material, architecture tends to
become more ornate and self©important. Classicism became dominated
by the French Second Empire Baroque, with its protruding and
receding wall planes, swelling mansard roofs, layers upon layers
of
expressed floors, and its profusion of ornament in the form of
doubled and tripled bunches of columns and sculpted human and
vegetable forms. Boston's Old City Hall is an understated example.
On
the Gothic side, architecture was heavily influenced by the
teaching of England's avatar of taste, John Ruskin. While
maintaining the inherent righteousness of Gothic architecture, he
was predominantly interested in the ornamental possibilities of
it,
particularly of a local example found in Venice and northern Italy.
Venetian, or Ruskinian Gothic, architecture, so embraced by
Victorian England, was characterized by bristling& exaggerated
silhouettes and constructional polychromy, which is the use of
naturally colored materials side-by-side for the purely visual
delight of their colors. This was a style in which ornament and
pattern predominated in accord with the Victorian horror vaccui,
making the unadorned surface a positive rarity. English and
American cities, blackened by an industrial pall, accepted these
vigorously colored and articulated buildings as an antidote. Some
of the very best remaining examples of Ruskinian Gothic buildings
in the country are in Massachusetts: Memorial Hall at Harvard, the
Pittsfield Athenaeum, and the new Old South Church at Copley Square
in Boston.
Throughout
the United States, designers of courthouses
generally eschewed Gothic styles, and Massachusetts possesses one
of the very few (at Fitchburg). All the rest of the courthouses
from this period derive from romantic variants of Classicism,
because for most of our history there has been an ineluctable bond
between government buildings and Classical architecture. The
earliest of these favored styles in Massachusetts was the
Bracketed, or "Italianate," derived from the farmhouses
of Tuscany
and the Italian Campagna and characterized by asymmetry, towers,
roundheaded windows (frequently grouped in pairs), and broadly
overhanging cornices supported on florid carved brackets. This
approach proved more suited to Picturesque Romantic tastes
partially because, unlike the Greek Revival, it was more flexible
by having no fixed vocabulary of formal pieces and no canonic set
of rules governing proper usage and proportion.
Plymouth
County turned its 1749 building over to the Town of
Plymouth and built itself a new courthouse in 1820. Its contract
with a local designer/builder, John Bates, produced a building at
the dawn of the Creek Revival already at least a half century out
of style (fig. 7). It was this late-Georgian Palladian building
(Daniel Webster appeared here, too!), so characteristic of American
coastal architecture in the last quarter century before the
Revolution, that was incorporated into an expansion and renovation
in 1857, also done by Bates (who called himself an architect by
then) and built by mason Edmund Robbins of Plymouth. The 1820
building was expanded by two bays on each end. The central on-axis
entryway, its centrality reinforced by the pediment-crowned bay,
was eliminated and awkwardly replaced by the ambiguity of twin
entrances to either side. Stylistic elements of the earlier
building were repeated-cornice, Corinthian pilasters, quion blocks
at the comers-and, in fact, Georgian elements were added-the
balustrade above the cornice, the glazed cupola in place of the
old
belfry. These were married to purely Greek entry porticoes and some
more-or-less Italianate hood moldings, bracketed sills at the
roundheaded windows (Pl. 79), and the flared gable under which
justice in her niche remained. The whole was then painted chocolate
brown to resemble then-fashionable brownstone. The cupola and part
of the roof burned in 1881, and when it was rebuilt, the cupola
appeared as a stretched-out version of the original.
Today
the building stands, with additions from 1881 and 1962,
as our most architecturally curious courthouse. Its charming
appearance has been compromised by the gradual alteration of its
elm trees, plantings, and balustraded square in favor of a
bituminous parking lot -an object lesson in the importance of
proper landscape design for the spaces that must inevitably
accompany monumental buildings.
The
egregiously unkempt and compromised landscape surrounding the grandiose
courthouse at Lowell does not invite a visitor to go around to the
back of the complex to see the original courthouse
built in 1850 by Ammi B. Young, who by then was working in nonGreek
Revival styles. It is this mostly Romanesque building (fig. 8)
which of all the Superior Court buildings is most closely
associated with Daniel Webster. In 1897 it was moved back from
Gorham Street and masked by a new imposing structure to which it
was appended. Rectangular in plan, with pavilions at either end,
it
cost $ 100,000 and was made of bright red brick with white painted
decoration that, surprisingly, was made completely of cast iron.
All of its heavy round window hoods, their supporting colonnettes,
arch bands, and inserted panels of diamond diaperwork are made of
cast iron; so is the cupola with its clock faces and bright blue
top. This cupola still carries the Scales of justice that peek over
the top of the main building. The "Daniel Webster Courtroom"
(pls.
9, 69) occupies the central portion of the upper story. The outer
walls of this upper story terminate, not in a bracketed Italianate
cornice, but rather in both horizontal and raking machicolations,
a band of toothlike corbeled arches derived from defensive features
of medieval architecture.
The
Lawrence Courthouse of 1858 and that of Salem of 1861 were
both originally Italianate structures, and both are changed.
Lawrence placed its new courthouse beside Ammi B. Young's 1849 city
hall, the two buildings facing the common. The building has a
broadly overhanging cornice and cupola, and was designed by city
engineer James K. Barber so that its main entry and principal
facade were on Common Street. Situated thus, it sat in its own
small landscaped park. Only two years after its completion, it
burned and was rebuilt immediately. Subsequent renovation in 1900
so altered the building that, as it stands today, it belongs to
another era and will be discussed later.
The
Lawrence Courthouse of 1858 and that of Salem of 1861 were
both originally Italianate structures, and both are changed.
Lawrence placed its new courthouse beside Ammi B. Young's 1849 city
hall, the two buildings facing the common. The building has a
broadly overhanging cornice and cupola, and was designed by city
engineer James K. Barber so that its main entry and principal
facade were on Common Street. Situated thus, it sat in its own
small landscaped park. Only two years after its completion, it
burned and was rebuilt immediately. Subsequent renovation in 1900
so altered the building that, as it stands today, it belongs to
another era and will be discussed later.
A similar
fate befell Salem's 1861 courthouse, built by
architect Enoch Fuller and contractors Simeon Flint and Abraham
Towle immediately beside the 18 41 courthouse. Though stylistically
altered in 1889 (this alteration will be discussed later), enough
of its interior remains intact to give a sense of its original
style. It was a simple two©story block whose Federal Street
facade
was divided horizontally and vertically into thirds. It had three
bays, the center of which was brought slightly forward and crowned
by a pedimented dormer. Horizontally it was divided into base,
principal upper story with comer quoins and a great cornice, and
a
visible hipped roof crowned with a balustrade, so that, on the
whole, it resembled the villas of wealthy Renaissance Italians.
it
had, furthermore, very Italianate windows (pl. 5)-two rounded panes
gathered into one roundheaded opening with a circular light of
colored glass, all topped by heavy hooded moldings. These still
grace the remaining old courtroom.
Finally,
it should be recalled that Bulfinch's courthouse at
Newburyport was "brought up to date" in 1853, and its
hooded
windows and bracketed cornice typify what was thought of as
Italianate architecture.
Associating
the administration of the law with Gothic
architecture seems to have been difficult for the midcentury mind.
The Gothic had always had its most credible associations with areas
of faith and religion-it was, after all, an architectural system
developed by the great cathedral builders of the Middle Ages.
Nevertheless, in some cases the Romantic mind succeeded in
divorcing both the abstract sublimity and the visual delight of
its
forms from its ecclesiastical connotations. That done, those
emotions could be applied to other institutions. The law, however,
was a fairly discriminating Classical Club, and Gothic was seldom
admitted.
It
is, then, something of a surprise to find a Gothic
courthouse. But in 1869, when the Fitchburg Courthouse (Pl. 35~
was
built, the Gothic was becoming the architectural style par
excellence in Victorian America. Plans were secured from E. Boyden
& Sons of Worcester, and the building took its place on the
town
square alongside the public library, armory, and the similarly
Gothic Christ Church. The building was greater than eighty feet
square and its walls were laid up in rock-faced granite that had
been quarried locally and hauled to the site by oxen. In a
smooth-faced state, the same material is used for the trim work
set
in these walls, which are laid with characteristically beaded
joints in reddish colored mortar. The courthouse cost $125,000.
The
building teaches us that the Gothic is as vertical a style
as the Classical is horizontal, and to that one can ascribe its
associations with upward motion and dynamic aspiration. Gothic
windows are tall and narrow (Pl. 36); thin pointed dormers and iron
crestings integrate the building with the sky, and the roofs are
steeply pitched. A sense of the dynamism inherent in Victorian
Gothic architecture is carried from the massing to the smallest
detail-columns at.the entryway arch appear as active pistons
pushing upward against their load. Analogies between architectural
and machine parts are apt in this case, because this was an age
characterized by the apotheosis of the machine, which had come to
produce much of the articles used in daily life, from teaspoons
to
building parts.
For
whatever reason, the bold and assuredly Gothic promise of
the building is not fulfilled on the interior as successfully as
the exterior. Here the use of Gothic forms is more tentative and
thin, and the typically Ruskinian love of decorated surfaces is
not
in evidence, except in the golden oak furnishings and the Gothic
dado in the courtroom (Pls. 7, 37, 38). The replacement of the
original pointed windows with standard rectangular ones is
unfortunate. That the glory of this building is its exterior,
however, is not atypical of Victorian buildings in general, for
this was an object-fixated age. So much concern was spent in
elaborating the scenographic exterior of a building that often
little thought was expended on its innards.
Happily,
this building continues to sit in a well-tended
parklike setting. Thus situated, the building is fused with its
landscape, and the interdependence so valued by the Romantic mind
is therefore retained.
There
are parallels to be made between the 1861 Salem
Courthouse, described above, and the 1871 Berkshire County
Courthouse in Pittsfield (pl. 66), and yet, although they are
separated by only a decade, they are pronouncedly different in
style and character. In Pittsfield we encounter for the first time
a building appearing to be two decades ahead of its time. It is
true that some of its details belie its age, but its architect,
Louis Weisbein of Boston, conceived of it with such academically
correct Classical proportions that it anticipates the much later
infatuation with monumental Classicism.
Nevertheless,
it is a Renaissance Revival building, and still
within the Romantic movement. Its basis is the work of a leading
Renaissance Italian architect, Andrea Palladio (1508-1580), whose
churches, urban palazzi, and countryside villas probably form the
most influential and imitated corpus of buildings in the history
of
architecture. The deification of Palladio by subsequent generations
was in part the result of the repeated publication of his Four
Books on Architecture, an extended treatise on both theory and
practical matters illustrated with his own works. His influence
was
strongly felt in England and her colonies, and colonial Americans
built Palladian buildings after 1750 or so. The 1820 Plymouth
Courthouse is a good example (fig. 7). Thomas Jefferson was among
the first Americans to possess a copy of Palladio's book, and both
he and Bulfinch drew heavily on it for designs.
The
customary architectural formulas derived from Palladio's
villas stressed a vertical division of the facade into a tripartite
A-B-A rhythm, with the central B part generally set forward and
crowned with a pediment. Furthermore, there was a horizontal
division into thirds: a base story, usually rusticated masonry
(deeply recessed joints) or an arcade; the main floors above
gathered into one statement, usually accompanied by columns or
pilasters of the colossal order (more than a single story); and
a
cap formed by a Classical cornice and low hipped roof.
Pittsfield
originally had a short mansard roof with
roundheaded dormers, a Second Empire element that made the building
appear more of its age. This was replaced at the turn of the
century with a more Classical parapet wall, thereby relieving the
building of its only rather residential element. otherwise, it is
built according to Palladian precepts. Weisbein may have
encountered Palladio through the school of architecture at M.I.T.,
which was the nation's first, having been started in 1865. Although
the building also reflects the substantial Beaux-Arts French
over-elaboration taught at M.I.T., Weisbein may have used
Palladio's Villa Pisani, outside Padua, as a model. A flight of
monumental stairs leads to a recessed entry porch set in the
rusticated Sheffield light blue marble ground story, which is
surmounted by a grand main and third floors treated as one story
in
smoothly dressed white marble with colossal order pilasters and
a
Corinthian temple front in the central bay. only the pairs of
segmental arched windows in the ground story and the brackets
supporting the cornice are obvious elements of an earlier
architectural vocabulary.
The
courthouse was built by A. B. and D. C. Munyan of
Pittsfield for a Cost Of $200,000. Its erection was the result of
a protracted struggle that lasted from 1812 until 1868, between
forces divided on whether to move the county seat from Lenox to
Pittsfield. An enactment of the General Court was finally
promulgated on June 8, 1868, and construction started on October
26, demonstrating the speed at which architects move when they have
to.
On
the other hand, the speed at which building committees
usually move can be demonstrated by the fact that it took almost
a
decade for the construction of the Suffolk County Courthouse in
Boston (1886-1895). Even without its 1938 office tower, it is by
far the largest of our courthouses, and the last still within the
Romantic tradition. It is Classical-officially German
Renaissance-and to some romantic classicism would seem a
contradiction in terms. But it must be remembered that Classicism
in these instances was still used more for emotional associations
evoked in viewers than for more purely intellectual reasons, and
it
is this appeal to emotion that distinguishes the Romantic
sensibility in architecture, music, literature, and other forms
of
art, from other eras.
The
design was supposed to be the result of a two-stage
competition, but there was much grumbling when the second stage
was
cancelled and the commission awarded to former Boston City
Architect George A. Clough. Clough did his fair share of grumbling
later when the building committee scotched the 250-foot dome they
had encouraged him to study and restudy and for which they refused
to pay him. Clough unsuccessfully sued the county for what he
considered to be due recompense.
What
was accomplished finally, after expenditure of a
scandalous $2,530,000 and a protracted and rancorous period of
construction, stands today in Pemberton Square, described even when
just completed as "the most thoroughly concealed public building
within our knowledge" (pl. 62). One is forced by the proximity
of
the surrounding structures to view it at close range, and,the
predominant impression is of an attempt to awe by quantity. The
building is a mountain of Massachusetts granite, 450 by 190 feet;
it contains courthouse space, four open-air courtyards for
ventilation, and a Great Hall that serves as a public connector
through the building. This colossal space (pl. 2), even without
its
dome, rises from below a parade of allegorical figures sculpted
by
Domingo Mora through a series of balustraded balconies, colonnades,
and arcades to culminate in a vaulted ceiling, decorated with
frescoes, which is five stories above the ground. (The space is
so
unhappily lighted, however, that much of its grandeur is lost.)
By
1909 the building already was judged too small, and Clough
was rehired to enlarge it. His solution was to design two
additional stories in the form of an enormous mansard roof (pl.
63), interrupted by raised center and end pavilions. While this
change brought more integrity to the building's massing, it also
had the uncanny effect of casting it in an older style-Second
Empire Baroque. If the building was a bit retardataire when it was
new, the enlargement put it some forty years out of fashion.
As
impressive as it is, the Boston Courthouse is not a very
good piece of architecture. Its massing is confused, partly because
its articulated pavilions are too small to serve as visual anchors,
and, even more, because it is overly layered horizontally. The
principal cornice, usually the crowning feature of a Classical
building, is close to the center of the facade, and it is just one
of a myriad of horizontal bands that divide the building into a
wedding cake of horizontal layers. Each layer, moreover, is endowed
with a unique window treatment-in fact, there is scarcely a motif
encompassing more than a single story that might serve to unite
a
package of disparate parts. This could be composed of slices of
many different buildings that happened to fit together. It is, in
a word, ponderous.
At
issue here is a historical problem dealt with by a
succession of architects after 1850 or so: What should a tall
building look like? Tall buildings (over six stories) became
technically possible before there was an aesthetic solution to
them. Earliest responses produced the unsatisfying formula of
layered floors. This problem was not adequately solved until
Boston-born Louis Henri Sullivan and others working in Chicago in
the late eighties learned to express height in new poetic ways free
of layering. But the way had already been pointed out by Henry
Hobson Richardson, working in Boston, who, before his death in the
very year Clough began designing this courthouse, had achieved
international recognition for his new vision of American
architecture.
Richardson
Architects
should not be made the convenience of contractors.
-HENRY
HOBSON RICHARDSON
That
the art of one man, even in his brief lifetime, should
come to captivate virtually an entire generation of architects and
provide Main Street America with so much uniform architecture, is
but one measure of the enormous accomplishment of Henry Hobson
Richardson (1838-1886). He was our first architectural giant, and
was regarded in Europe as a great architect and in America as a
great American. The author of Trinity Church, Boston, was revered
by his contemporaries in virtually every state, and they copied
his
style without ever fully grasping the more fundamental dimensions
of his work. And he was studied by ensuing generations who,
although they discarded his style, made buildings of power and
dignity because they understood his approach to things.
His
was an art of affirmation. He affirmed average American
institutions by recasting them in dignified new forms, generating
new prototypes for small town public libraries, train stations,
average houses, commercial and educational buildings, and
courthouses. He built two courthouses; the one in Springfield came
early in his career and the other, in Pittsburgh (which he
considered his finest building), came at the very end.
Richardson
was born on a plantation in Louisiana, was
graduated from Harvard in 1859, and was only the second American
to
enter the course of architecture at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in
Paris, where he arrived just as Union gunboats were blockading
southern ports. Being cut off from his family's financial support,
he worked his way through long years of school. He practiced
briefly in New York, and then, since almost all his commissions
were in Massachusetts, moved his office to Brookline in 1874. In
the dozen years that followed, he did work so fundamentally calm
and accessible that he could be said to have effectively closed
the
Victorian period in American architecture.
He
was, for all that, no modem. He was happy to build in the
eternal way, in stone. He never experimented with new technologies,
nor did he work in nonhistorical styles. His stylistic point of
departure was French Romanesque architecture from the Middle Ages,
but this physically huge man was drawn to it because it was a
massive, strong, and rational architecture that was still richly
ornamented. He did not find his style until the middle of his
career; his earlier buildings form a history of his search for a
style in harmony with his ideas of rational planning, monumental
dignity, and calm surfaces of subdued color the very antithesis
of
much Victorian American architecture.
His
Hampden County Courthouse in Springfield (1871) is
generally regarded as the first statement of both the stylistic
and
constructional ideas that were to dominate his mature work. The
building is solid, rising from the earth on a flared, or battered
base, and is in a single material, rock-faced Monson granite. This
is uniformly light gray in color, and a lighter version is used
for
the understated trim. (Remember that a common picturesque ideal
was
polychromy, the use of many materials for their varied color.) It
is a nearly symmetrical building, contrary to the tastes of the
times, and the second-floor balcony to the left is balanced by the
thin slot window to the right Richardson's concession to the
picturesque love of asymmetry. One enters the building through a
recessed porch behind three powerful arches-a huge arch at the
entry was to become Richardson's "signature. " Rising
above the
front facade is the building's dominant feature-a machicolated
medieval tower, perfectly Picturesque, showing that even for
Richardson a tower was an indispensable part of a monument.
Norcross Brothers of Worcester, who were to build most of
Richardson's buildings, were the contractors for this courthouse,
which cost $2 14,068 and was finally dedicated in 1874.
The
original building (fig. 9) gracefully fused the tower with
the main mass of the building by means of a steeply pitched hipped
roof and several tall medieval French dormers which rose from
behind a crenellated parapet. Quite unfortunately, alterations
between 1908 and 1912 by Richardson's own successor firm (Shepley,
Rutan, and Coolidge) were so severe and insensitive of the
building's integrity that Richardson's intent is lost. The roof
and
dormers were stripped away, the original graceful double staircase
was replaced by a straight-shot flight, and the tall second story
was divided into two floors that bisected the stately front windows
with a heavy horizontal band (pl. 56).
Eleven
months after he received the Springfield commission,
Richardson was notified that he had won a design competition for
the new Trinity Church in Boston. It was the construction of this
building that vaulted Richardson into national attention, and it
was the style and material of it that set the appearance of the
typical "Richardsonian" building. He himself frequently
repeated
thereafter the two-colored stone combination: pale pink for the
walls and brownstone for the trim and marquetry (geometric ornament
integral with the surface of the stone). Most of the public
buildings done for the rest of his career would prove to be
variants of this basic sedate color combination, and of this freely
adapted Romanesque style.
Richardson
died of Bright's disease at forty-nine, which must
certainly be considered mid-career. The work of his last few years
marked a clear transformation from his overtly historically based
style to something more abstractly related to qualities of the
material he used. His massive Marshall Field Wholesale Store (1885)
in Chicago, almost devoid of ornamentation, was a solid rectangle
filling an entire block whose single-color stone walls rose through
seven stories, articulated only by the diminishing sizes of the
stone blocks and the sheer poetry of the way openings were made
for
windows. And his Allegheny County Courthouse and jail (1883-1888)
in Pittsburgh, having similar qualities, pointed the way, in its
gargantuan simplicity and expressiveness, to a future body of work
that was not to be. The jail, particularly, is said by historian
James O'Gorman to rank "among the world's finest examples of
stereometric art." The expectations of this move to abstraction
went unrealized by either Richardson or his followers, but the
buildings of his middle career, being widely published, found
immediate favor. With astonishing rapidity, American architects
abandoned other styles and began emulating at least the appearance
of Richardson's buildings.
Massachusetts
built one courthouse a year in the five years
following Richardson's death in 18 8 6; four of these are overtly
Richardsonian in appearance and the other is in its massing, but
not in its style. They are but five of the tens of thousands of
buildings built in virtually every town in the country in the
twenty years following his death which are derived from his
personal accomplishments.
In
many ways, the Hampshire County Courthouse (Pl. 30) is more
Richardsonian than the "real thing" in neighboring Springfield.
Its
massing is nearly identical, and it happily still has its roof and
dormers. Architect Henry F. Kilbourn paid homage to Richardson by
casting this version of Springfield's courthouse in typical light
rockfaced granite with window surrounds, stringcourses, and
decorative stonework in brownstone. The triple-arched entry on
squat muscular columns, the calm surfaces and simple massing, the
breadth of proportion in the tower-all these were learned from
Richardson.
The
building was built between 1885 and 1887 by Bartlett
Brothers of Whately for a cost of just under $ 100,000. Of interest
here are the contemporary descriptions of the original interiors.
They reveal a woodworking program whereby each major space received
furniture and decorative woodwork of a different wood: dark cherry
for the registry of deeds, ash for the register of probate, and
so
forth. All offices also had glazed doors with titles cut into the
glass, and the building boasted good ventilation, central steam
heating, generous public washrooms, and newfangled electric
lighting.
The
Superior Courtroom (pl. 15) is the centerpiece of the
building. It is a grand theatrical space whose furniture, benches,
wainscot, and railings are all of carved golden oak (pl - 33), as
are the front hall and staircase that lead to it. In its coverage
of the dedication ceremonies (December 20, 1887), the Northampton
Courier reported that "about one-third of the room is behind
the
railing which holds the lawyers and their victims, " who had
the
honor of sitting under a large ceiling cove (PI - 32) adorned with
colorful frescoes and "dark Egyptian stencils" by F. D.
Cordis of
Holyoke. A bell cast by Paul Revere, which had hung in the
demolished courthouse of 1822, was now displayed in the 1887
building.
The
very next year (1888), Essex County decided to enlarge its
Salem Courthouse. Architects Holman K. Wheeler and W. W. Northend
of Lynn ended up spending $147,115.13 in the process of quadrupling
the size of the 1861 structure, and they thoroughly Richardsonized
it (fig. 10). Working in brick, in deference to the older
structure, they so altered its exterior as to leave little of its
original Italianate character. The balustrades, pediment, hooded
window moldings, and quoins were stripped away as so much
architectural claptrap, and Romanesque arches were substituted at
the windows (Pl. 75). Rough granite stringcourses and trim were
applied, and, most conspicuously, the original entry bay was masked
by a new Romanesque pavilion, the entire ground floor of which is
a ponderous entry arch standing on Richardsonian bundles of stout
columns.
The
addition itself, free of the constraints of renovation, is
much grander and more successful. Its rear parts resemble in
massing nothing so much as a medieval French castle, standing
cheek-by-jowl with the chaste 1841 Greek Revival temple. Bizarre
juxtapositions, one of the ironies and great delights of the
American Picturesque, here foreshadowed Disneyworld by nearly a
century. And, of course, the lack of a tower was rectified by
building one in Richardsonian proportions. On the whole, this is
good architecture, conceived, as Richardson would have it, not only
for the sake of its picturesque exterior, but as a composition of
spaces both functional and grand.
The
true glory of this building is its law library. The courtrooms have
their own grandeur (Pl. 74)-tall spaces with beautifully paneled
oak woodwork and furniture, and the splendid coffered and multi-domed
ceilings (pl. 76), but for the sheer power of monumental space,
nothing equals the library (pl. 12). The floor is a solid plane
of herringbone brick; portraits of noted jurors are everywhere,
and the sensuous use of oak throughout the building reaches a climax
in this space in the kingly furniture and paneled wings of bookshelving
which surround it on two levels. The second-level balcony, accessible
through a winding stair which forms a pinnacled turret on the exterior,
is surrounded with a delicate swelling wrought-iron railing and
is interrupted only by the truly enormous arch that opens onto an
inglenook. This last is an entire room whose sole function is to
contain an equally enormous fireplace, whose chimney is so large
and raised on bunches of columns that it allows a group to sit inside
on easy chairs! The ceiling is vaulted and carried on curved ribs
springing from brackets shaped like winged cherubs. But the force
of this monumental space is so great that the ceiling seems only
a thin membrane that is being restrained by straps as it swells
outward. The whole space, finally, is suffused with daylight from
a long crowning skylight.
Although
a similar spatial conception is not found in the Fall
River Courthouse (1889), there is a similar effect of strength from
the exterior (fig. 11). This building, too, has antecedents in
medieval fortresses and, like Salem, attempts to speak of the
unassailable strength and safety of the law. Here the material is
more late-Richardsonian pure granite with no overtly coloristic
touches (the lesson of calm surfaces was learned). But the
irregularly picturesque composition of volumes-pavilions, dormers,
porches, swelling turrets, chimneys, cupolas, and, of course, the
tower-is pure Victorian excess, and pure delight. This must be
considered, for all its Richardsonian style, still a High Romantic
building. The overscaled tower is placed right at the leading comer
where it monopolizes attention. It derives both its compositional
predominance and its general detailing-pyramidal roof rising from
four equal comer turrets connected by four-arched bands-directly
from Richardson's Pittsburgh Courthouse. It rises from a battered
base, and its windows, divided by stone mullions, as well as its
entryway of receding arches in short columns, are quotations from
Pittsburgh.
The
architect of the Fall River Courthouse was Robert H. Black
of New Bedford, and the contractors were the Darling Brothers of
Fall River. The cornerstone, which contained among its official
documents a mint set of 1889 U.S. coins, was laid with Masonic
ceremonies on August 8, 1899, and the building was completed in
1891 at a cost of $181,016. In 1931 an addition was made on the
north end to house the registry of deeds and the law library.
Although this annex is not wholly unconsonant with the
Richardsonian building, the matching stonework becomes brick just
around the corner.
And
the grandest of them all is the Taunton Courthouse, by
architect Frank Irving Cooper. Resembling a sort of junior state
capitol more than a county courthouse, this building is surely the
most monumental of its type in the Commonwealth (pl. 50). It, too,
bears more than a passing resemblance to Pittsburgh, but it was
based on the published scheme with which Richardson won the
Pittsburgh design competition, and not on the scheme that was
actually built. This unbuilt scheme had a central gabled bay and
a
tower rising from within the roof, neither of which ended up in
the
actual building. Taunton's cornerstone was laid on June 30, 1892,
long after both schemes were widely known, so it is an example of
a work consciously modeled after another architect's unrealized
work. Its rough granite, near symmetry, gabled center pavilion with
triple-arched central windows and arched entry, its French dormers
topped with bulbous finials, and its soaring turreted tower are
all
practically quotations from the master.
A major
departure, however, is that a grand copper dome
culminating in the Flame of Truth is substituted for Richardson's
pointed tower roof. This dome crowns a vast shaft of space inside
(pl. 51), which rises from the ground floor through the full height
of the tower. This is the centerpiece of a carefully orchestrated
sequence of spaces designed to instill in visitors, jurors, and
miscreants alike a sense of the majesty of the law. Visitors arrive
at the courtroom by an elaborate series of staircases (Pl. 3) which
begin in the rotunda under the dome (Pl. 4) and pass through and
into spaces richly endowed with carvings, mosaics, frescoes, and
Tiffany lamps. Prisoners, on the other hand, are brought from dark
subterranean holding cells (pl. 52) through back corridors (Pl.
53)
and up a narrow flight of stairs (pl. 54) to emerge into the
splendor of the courtroom (pl. 55) already at its center and
face-to-face with the judge, who is sitting between two immutably
stout columns and under a triple-arched opening.
Here,
for the first time, an architect has taken advantage of
axial planning, dramatic use of light, changes in level, and the
persuasive force of archetypal forms to create a work of functional
art that embodies the majestic authority of justice. All this is
because of Richardson. By his example both the art and professional
dignity of architecture was obtained, and America saw new visions
of how all its institutions-from the most humble to the most
grand-might be housed anew with sufficient scale and breadth of
vision to match the challenges of a new century.
Academic
Eclecticism
The
scale is Roman and it will have to be sustained.
-CHARLES
FOLLEN MCKIM
There
is in architecture after 1890 a new sense of scale and
rectitude heretofore unseen. Continued urbanization and the growth
of government had produced by the last decade of the century an
America unprecedented in wealth, ebullience, and global influence.
This developing urban empire seemed to require an architecture
suited to its power, its wealth, its bigness. Our great cities were
thought the equals of Paris, London, or Rome. By careful study and
imitation of the major historical styles with which these cities
were adorned, New York might outstrip London; Chicago, Paris; or
Washington, Rome. American architects could embody, could indeed
promote, a New World challenging the glories of the Old.
Victorian
architecture came to be regarded as excessively
fussy and naive, drowned in a sea of misguided invention,
perversion of materials, and cloying picturesqueness. The "fault"
of the Victorians was thought to be a fundamental lack of
familiarity with the buildings they supposedly had tried to
emulate. Most earlier architects had experienced European buildings
neither in person nor in photographs, and a more scholarly
knowledge of great buildings was assumed to lead to an architecture
as grand and correct as the originals. The new schools of
architecture in the country, developed only in the last thirty-five
years of the century, were the perfect vehicles for transmitting
this scholarly knowledge of the Classical orders, rules of
composition and detailing, and, in short, "right" and
"wrong."
They, it was hoped, could save architects from a Vitruvian
purgatory to which most Victorians (Richardson and a few others
were excepted) had been consigned.
It
was an age of eclecticism in architecture, of stylistic
pluralism. Any style was admissible, as long as it was used for
the
appropriate building type (e.g., Gothic for a church, Roman
Classicism for a museum) and detailed according to rules of
propriety prescribed by academicians. Wealthy people and
institutions found this an architecture they could easily
understand and one that reinforced their identity as people of
culture. It suited the purposes of the powerful.
There
was even a debutante ball held for this academic
eclecticism in Chicago. The World's Columbian Exposition in 1893
was housed in the first totally planned architectural fantasy of
Imperial Rome in the country. Most of the buildings were designed
by eastern architects and were enormous, white, and uniformly
Classical. They were aligned on either side of a vast reflecting
pool and were adorned with statuary and ornament. And, to the
amazement of all, they were electrically floodlighted at night.
The
Classical impulse was most closely associated with the
development of city centers, and generated a movement known as the
"City Beautiful" whose purpose was to order and classicize
urban
America. The Columbian Exposition gave a first glimpse of an urban
space in which the designer, not profits and politics, controlled
all ordered buildings, streets, plantings, plazas, fountains, and
the like. Hardly a city did not feel the pressure to make itself
a
City Beautiful, tricked out with statuary and bursting with civic
pride. Architect Daniel ["Make no little plans"] Burnham
of
Chicago, who had coordinated planning of the Exposition, was
instrumental in new plans for many cities, including San Francisco,
Cleveland, Chicago, and, most important, the nation's capital. The
axial vastness of Major L'Enfant's 1791 Baroque scheme for
Washington had been seriously compromised by Picturesque
alterations (e.g., a train station in the middle of a Romantic
garden where the Mall now is). In 1901 the MacMillan Commission,
chaired by Burnham, began redesigning the city and succeeded in
making it the City Beautiful par excellence we know today, adorned
with a multitude of enormous white Classical buildings. Thereafter,
monumental Academic Classicism was almost required for governmental
buildings.
The
influence of McKim, Mead, and White, Architects of New
York, was to be unparalleled. Both Charles Follen McKim (1847©1909)
and Stanford White (1853-1906) had worked for Richardson as young
men. As is typical in architecture, the most talented do not stay
around to inherit their employer's firm, but rather cast out on
their own. Made restless by their own astonishing talent, they
teamed up and, with William Rutherford Mead, founded our first
large professional architectural firm. Their first major
commission, the Boston Public Library (1887), set in play a new
standard for Classicism which came to dominate the next
half-century of public buildings. Likewise, the work of Bostonian
Ralph Adams Cram (1863©1942) and his partner Bertram Grosvenor
Goodhue (1869-1924) was influential in Gothic circles, and their
All Saints Church in the Ashmont section of Dorchester was as
catalytic as the library. Sacred and secular, the influence of
these two protean Boston buildings was immense.
Courthouses
all became up-scale Classical monuments, usually
Roman by virtue of association with Roman law, but frequently
grandiose Greek as well. The city of Lowell's pushing its old
courthouse back to accommodate a new Roman vision is the essence
of
the movement. This occurred in 1898, when the ability of new
architects in proper Classicism was more assured. An earlier effort
at Brockton is interesting because, although it is more. naive as
a piece of City Beautiful Classicism, it is still pronouncedly
Richardsonian in its massing.
So
much of the Brockton Courthouse (fig. 12), designed in 1893
by J. Williams Beal, has been stripped away after having been
allowed to decay that it is difficult to see the City Beautiful
in
it at all. Nevertheless, its current Richardsonian appearance-its
sloping roughstone base, entry arch, solid and blocky proportions,
and low hipped roof-was once adorned with a sufficient quantity
of
classicizing elements to give a hint of its having its origins in
the early work of McKim, Mead, and White. It originally had a fine
cornice and Classical balustrade, and its roof hips terminated in
spirelike copper pinnacles, like the Boston Public Library. The
whole was topped by a delicate open cupola. The cupola, pinnacles,
balustrade, and cornice are gone now, the last replaced by an
awkward, thin, snap-on aluminum fascia. But other Classical
elements remain: brick quoins, Renaissance archways, a Palladian
window, the scallop shell niche heads, decorative roundels, and
the
bas-relief band at the top. The interior still abounds with
Classical details-the gorgeously carved wood overmantle and ribbed
plaster vaulted ceiling in the small courtroom (pl. 59), for
example. It is unfortunate that a great deal of this woodwork has
been painted over.
Lawrence,
too, participated in the City Beautiful movement when its Italianate
courthouse was enlarged and reworked in 1900 by local architect
George G. Adams (1850-1932), who also enlarged the neighboring city
hall twenty-three years later. The original courthouse, still visible
today as the rear portion of the present building, had stood in
its own small park which was filled by a new building, grandiosely
Classical and based loosely on the urban work of Palladio. Here,
again, the referent is Italian Renaissance palaces. A rusticated
masonry ground floor surmounted by two grand stories in smooth red
brick is topped by an attic balustrade. Onto this dignified exterior
is grafted a monumental pedimented portico flanked by pairs of colossal
order columns standing on plinth blocks. This dramatically reinforces
the main entry, which was shifted to Appleton Street so that the
building no longer fronted on the Common. The whole composition
was once again even further monumentalized by a crowning Classical
tower, now sadly removed.
More
of Roman scale is found inside. The center of the building is occupied
by a grand stairhall, roofed over by a domed skylight carried on
enormous arches and pendentives-whose origins
lie in the great baths of imperial Rome (pl. 5, 26, 27). The use
of large-scale Roman prototypes for public buildings in turn-of-the-century
America typifies the City Beautiful movement. The noble ideal that
urban streets and public places might be enriched by uniformly good
architecture-the beginning of urban design-first came to fruition
then. Herein lay the first general recognition that buildings acted
in concert to give character to cities, and that an architect's
responsibility transcends the individual building to encompass concern
for the quality of the city.
Completed
in 1898 at a cost Of $370,000, Lowell's courthouse is a much better
example of the City Beautiful under full steam. Here is a truly
monumental building, all in stone, correct in its
detailing, imposing in its scale (pls. 8, 68). In public buildings
the sine qua non of the period was a grand pedimented colonnade
across the front, frequently, as here, raised on an arcaded lower
story (recall Pittsfield). Here the Roman Ionic columns and cornice
are imposing, partly because they are properly designed, and ennoble
a properly detailed Renaissance palace, of which the
rusticated base, use of keystones, pedimented window surrounds,
and balustrade are all indications. Herein lies a new statement
about the law: it was associated through its architectural personality
with other new governmental buildings around the Commonwealth and
nation, as well as with that which is timeless and immutable about
things Roman, both legal and architectural. And besides, as Walter
Kilham observed, "all building committees like columns."
What's more, it became something of a necessity in cities to resort
to deliberately over-scaled Classical architecture in order to reassert
a building's importance in the hierarchy of large and
clamorous urban structures, commercial and cultural alike.
When
the courthouse complex in Salem took its next step down Federal
Street in 1909, its building committee obviously liked columns,
too, because they bought six of them (Ionic, carrying a monumental
pediment). The 1909 courthouse is similar to the one in Lowell in
many regards, and differs principally in style-Athenian rather than
Roman. There never was a Greek Empire, but if there had been, its
buildings would have looked like this. Perhaps architect Clarence
Blackall (1857-1942) of Boston, who also designed the Wilbur and
Colonial theatres, the Copley Plaza Hotel, and the Winthrop Building
in Boston (this last was the first use of a steel frame for a high-rise
structure in Boston, deferred to the 1841 Greek Revival courthouse
with which the row begins. But it sits in such overscaled grandeur
that it seems out of place on what would
otherwise be principally a narrow residential street.
The
Eclectics loved almost all styles, as long as they were done properly
and with taste (but they not always were). They worked in them all.
Particularly in New England, correct if overblown Georgian Revival
styles were deemed appropriate for certain building types, particularly
those with genuine colonial antecedents. Georgian Revival was popularized,
again by McKim, Mead, and White's use of it for new buildings at
Harvard and Radcliffe. By the 1930s there were Georgian gymnasia,
restrooms, banks, and gas stations. (There were also Spanish colonial,
Gothic,
Tudor, Renaissance, and Romanesque gas stations.) In 1932 the last
Eclectic Superior courthouse was built in Massachusetts, in Greenfield.
The Franklin County Courthouse (fig. 13), by architects
Frank King and Bernard Dirks, is ostensibly Classical in mien, and
because it is made of brick it appears somewhat Georgian. It, too,
has a colossal-order temple front at the entry and many Classical
details, but they are from a mixed bag of sources. The quoins are
Georgian, the end windows in the front facade are Adamesque/Federal,
the pediments at the doors and the double-cross mullions in the
upper windows are Roman, the columns are Tuscan topped with Greco-Egyptian
capitals, the little volutes along the parapet are Renaissance,
and so forth. Here is a kind of toy box of architectural parts.
All of this confusion has a certain grace and charm, although it
is not the detail one notices most about the building, but its form.
It is a box. Here is an edifice shaped by its method of construction-a
steel frame-with a flat roof, a thin
skin, and style giving pieces, not integral with the mass and structure
as, for example, at Lowell, but rather treated as applique. One
need only recall Old Plymouth to see Greenfield as proof of the
longevity of that basic American type, the decorated box.
The
interior is dignified by rich materials , marble among them, and
skilled workmanship. The judge sits in front of a sort of Chippendale
bookcase and the courtroom doorways carry full Renaissance pediments
on scrolled volutes.
The
flood of buildings since the Civil War dried to a trickle following
1929, and did not begin to revive until around 1950 as the country
rode out depression, war, and recession. By mid-century
the need to build was severe; America occupied antiquated buildings.
The factories that built the planes that won the war stood ready
to retool for making buildings sorely needed.
Modernism
Without
a peep they move in!-even
though the glass box appals them all.
-TOM
WOLFE
At
the turn of the century, elements of both European and American
society began to apply pressure for a "new art," reflective
of modem conditions, free of stylistic links to the
past, and expressive of that which made society unlike rather than
like its progenitors. Academic revivals, constantly defining the
present in terms of the past, grew trivial and spiritually
tiresome. Europe responded at first with Art Nouveau ("the
New Art"), derived in part from an abstraction of asymmetrical
curving forms found in organic nature. This was possible in the
general climate of ever-broadening rules for artistic syntax fomented
by the Impressionists in painting and music, which allowed increasing
deviation from historical precedent. The tendencies toward abstraction
in the late work of Richardson served for Louis Sullivan in Chicago
as a catalyst to promote a substantively original and polemical
sort of architecture, in turn part of the
fertile ground from which flowered the brilliant work of Frank Lloyd
Wright. This genealogy of original work was buried by the fervor
for historical styles that existed after the 1893 Chicago
Exposition, but it found enthusiastic support among the architectural
avant-garde in Holland and Germany.
Art
Nouveau went through a series of regional permutations in Europe
(e.g., the Vienna Secession, Expressionism in Germany, the work
of Charles Rennie Mackintosh in Scotland). The Chicago Tribune Tower
design competition (1922) elicited entries from around the world,
which were published, and although a retardataire Gothic skyscraper
was built, it was the modern European entries that proved to be
more influential. Even Raymond Hood, the winner, was
converted to modem design by the second-place entry of Finnish architect
Eliel Saarinen, whose tower was devoid of overtly historical ornament
and rose through a series of zigguratlike
stepbacks to an ornamented crown. When designers began to apply
the active geometricized ornamental patterns and crystalline forms
that dominated the 1925 Paris Exposition Internationale des Arts
Decoratifs et Industriels Modernes to stepped-back building forms,the
result was a new futuristic architecture called Art Deco. This was
an accessible modernism inspired by the wonders of the immediate
world: jazz, electricity, phonographs, cinema, flight, and speed.
When, in the Thirties this became tempered and slickened by the
application of aerodynamic styling (originated by transportation
engineers), to designed objects, everything from towers to toasters
looked as if it were traveling at two hundred miles an hour.
During
the Thirties, even the government got into the act. While not abandoning
Classicism, it accepted certain new attitudes about pared-down and
smoothed-out styling, and in its attempt to stimulate a depression-ridden
economy through major building campaigns, it generated a new sort
of Depression Classicism. Characterized by a streamlining of traditional
Classical (and
patriotic) motifs, it was capable of producing monumental public
buildings that could still speak with authority. There is a courtroom
in the Brockton Courthouse in this style, whose space is
defined by thin fluted pilasters of no overt Classical order, ranged
around wall planes with wood panel and plaster infill between the
pilasters. All the woodwork, although derived from
Classical forms, is geometric and abstract, with such pieces as
the bookshelving behind the judge stepped back toward the top in
an Art Deco fashion.
This
judge's backdrop at Brockton is dominated by a form remarkably similar
to the entire shape of the "new" Suffolk Courthouse in
Boston, built in 1938 from plans by Desmond and Lord. Here is an
entire Moderne skyscraper (Thirties styling). This twenty-story
tower (pl. 62), appended to the end of the earlier Boston courthouse
is mostly unornamented on its white brick exterior, deriving its
presence from its setback form, making it a country cousin of the
era's monarchs: Manhattan's Chrysler and Empire State buildings.
However, unlike them, the Suffolk Courthouse was not the product
of an effervescent, wealthy, and self-confident age, but of a decade
of limited means and growing global conflict which sorely tried
the ability of a democratic government to maintain an even course.
A governmental
need to display, with limited means, traditional symbols of itself
is here everywhere apparent. The aesthetic is one of spaces defined
by thin planes and thin
ornament, derived from Classicism, intended to convey the presence
of governmental authority: fluted pilaster panels, bas-relief stars
and eagles, light fixtures like Roman fasces, and so forth. The
courtroom and conference room of the Supreme judicial Court, for
example, are dignified assemblies of these parts wrought thin and
flat in wood paneling, although from this it is
possible to get a sense, not only of modernity, but of the dwindling
availability of skilled craftsmen capable of executing more substantial
traditional work.
It
was, in fact, the replacement of craftsmen by machines that radically
reshaped architecture everywhere, and this was not simply a reluctant
acceptance of the inevitable, but a conscious embrace of the machine
because it seemed to make something as profound as a new social
order possible.
Modernism
(history will supply a better name) began in Germany and Holland
with a manifesto and a radical social program. Out of the
debris of World War I arose the new idea that architecture was a
latent political force that could actually create society and not
just reflect it. In the confused postwar German society, a union
of artists, designers, and architects was founded that, in 1919
at Weimar, set up an institute to teach these disciplines afresh.
The school was called the Bauhaus, and it taught that there was
but one way to rehouse the population of industrial Europe with
at least minimally acceptable standards of hygiene and comfort,
and that was
by transforming the very industry that had been an instrument of
oppression into the instrument of salvation. The penchant of the
machine for mass production was to be harnessed to the need for
new buildings so perfectly made that their inhabitants might finally
transcend the past altogether and, in a glorious new future, live
free from want, ignorance, and the tyranny of old politics.
The
teaching of history was banished. Gone were notions of style and
ornament and concern for the appearance of forms shaped by anything
other than necessity. From buildings to lightbulbs to
teakettles, all objects of human utility were remade in forms purported
to be derived strictly from their roles, from function. And this
functionalism produced objects of beguiling abstraction.
Preferred materials were industrial ones-concrete, steel, glass-and
these rendered walls and roofs into flat pure planes of white stucco
or sheer curtains of glass. Space, set free from bearing
walls by frame construction, became continuous flow rather than
a collection of rooms, and that continuity merged indoors with outdoors
separated only by plate glass. Delight in these buildings
was the product of an intellectual appreciation of the forces that
shaped them, more than a visual and emotional pleasure.
Early
Modern buildings share many characteristics that gave them a uniform
appearance, and, as the rest of the world adopted functionalist
architecture, it was codified into a set of rules,
accompanied by philosophical slogans ("form follows function";"less
is more"). It was at least partially successful; it did, for
example, provide improved workers' housing on a vast scale. But
in
its rejection of familiarity-ornament, archetypal forms, parts that
admitted the existence of human idiosyncrasy, or materials that
admitted the existence of climate-it threw out the baby with the
bathwater. With all the positive aspects of history discarded, we
were left with a fairly monotonous way of making buildings whereby
a boilerhouse might resemble a church, or a church, a boilerhouse.
Furthermore, mass-produced functionalist architecture was founded
on the ability to accommodate the masses, in housing or offices,for
example, and the individual became increasingly lost in the collective.
In
its pure form, this architectural language proved to be not rich
enough to satisfy our needs to speak through buildings, or to take
visual delight in them. Americans had difficulty with what
billed itself as a largely intellectualized and nonemotional art,
and from the beginning there were problems in using this architecture
to make both monumental public structures and urban
public space that people felt comfortable inhabiting. An architecture
invented for workers' housing was not necessarily applicable to
all other purposes.
One
reaction was to ignore it. There has always been a modest amount
of historical and picturesque work, some justified in part' on the
argument of contextualism; the context of a new building requires
an appropriate stylistic response. The county and town of
Nantucket, for example, building its combined municipal and courthouse
building as late as 1967, required (as it does of all new buildings
on the island) that it adhere to a code that
regulates architectural character. This rather plain building, by
associated architects Tallman, Drake, and Guay, defers to its context
by having a few decorative touches that transform the
ordinary two-story brick structure into one reminiscent of Federal
Style architecture not inappropriate to Nantucket. Its basic form,however,
is neither Federal nor particularly monumental-it actually bears
a greater resemblance to early brick textile mills than to
any other specific building type. It has a doorway graced by a fanlight
recalling early nineteenth-century residences and an obligatory,
if underscaled, cupola, which more than anything else
marks this building as a civic monument.
Modernist
architects diverged in a number of directions from the mainstream
trying to rectify a perceived lack of visual and experiential richness.
The most conservative response was to
animate buildings by making the structure, the part of a building
that holds the building up, into its ornament. This produces a self-revelatory
kind of architecture that signifies nothing more
meaningful to society than that the building is held up by this
or that means. It creates no sense of order qualitatively greater
than its own physical presence. Similarly self-revelatory in elevating
what must be in a building anyway to the position of appearing as
its reason to exist, is the High Tech approach, in which the plumbing
and mechanical engineering-the ductwork, diffusers, piping, and
valves-are exposed to view and painted in such
a way that it is supposed to ornament and justify the building.
Good examples in Massachusetts are the new Boston Five Cent savings
Bank (structural revelation) or the new Wellesley College Science
Center, which is an exaltation of the technology of exhaust. A more
germane example is the 1981 addition, by Phineas Alpers, on the
rear of the 1909 Salem Courthouse which equates county government
with cast-in-place concrete columns and beams.
A third
enrichment of dogmatic Modernism is abstract expression in architecture,
in which abstract forms and the visual forces between them are used
to express content and its value. Here
the possibility of monumental urban work is greater, as Kallmann
and McKinnell's Boston City Hall will attest. The fact that
abstract expressionist forms are subjectively received can permit
a number of interpretations, which allows Boston City Hall to be
seen as a great fortress protecting corrupt city officials from
an
outraged public, as well as the more intended noble incarnation
of
the proper relationship between a variety of civic offices and the
citizenry which legitimizes them.
A final
and more pervasive ramification of Modernism is the
formalist school in which buildings exist for the sake of making
shapes, sometimes smoothly geometric (the Kennedy Library, for
example), and sometimes articulated and boxlike. And it is here
that the story comes full circle: our most persevering
architectural type, the decorated box, has proven to be as modem
as
the latest age. But whereas previously one could apply overt
historical ornament to the box, Modernist architects could only
couch their ornament in terms of something that had to be there
anyway-structural and mechanical parts, window mullions,
sunscreens, exhaust louvers, and the like to achieve a decorative
effect of some visual interest.
Something
of the more coolly geometric sort occurred when
architects Drummey, Rosane and Anderson renovated the courthouse
in
Northampton in 1977. The Georgian Hall of Records (1931) of
architects Karl S. Putnam and Frank S. Stuart was expanded (pls.
31, 16), and an old hotel garage across the street was turned into
a new registry of deeds by reclothing it in concrete block and
tinted plate glass in a single plane. This planar exterior wall
seems to have no dimensional thickness at all, leaving the simple
geometric shape of the building defined by a smooth tight skin.
Hampden
County outgrew its Richardson courthouse in
Springfield and in 1973 created a court complex by building a new
$17 million Hall of justice beside the older building. Designed
by
Eduardo Catalano (who was also the architect of a downtown suburban
shopping center in the same city called Baystate West), the
building is an enormous concrete and tinted glass box, virtually
indistinguishable from a new high school, a clinic, or, more
specifically, the same architect's Stratton Student Center at
M.I.T. It contains twenty courtrooms described by Probate judge
Frank Plazcek as "austere but not cold," and its exterior
is
imposing, partly because of the scale of its blank concrete
surfaces and long glazed strips, and partly because the bulk of
the
building overhangs pedestrians approaching the building at ground
level. The facade is animated only by the exit stair towers, which
rise to a height greater than the rest of the facade. Altogether,
this is at best a banal building that makes little effort to say
something positive about the relationship between society and the
law.
The
1974 high-rise Cambridge Courthouse and County Building is
not good architecture either, but one admires its attempt to
articulate a variety of spaces and functions within. Even when one
is told that the Springfield building is a courthouse, one still
struggles to find an announcement of what lies inside. Knowing that
the Cambridge building is a courthouse at least allows one to try
assigning court©related functions to the variety of forms that
animate its surfaces (fig. 15). There are, for example, those blank
darker-colored boxes that project from two sides of the tower. One
might reasonably expect that they contain some specialized
function, or that something special is going on at the level marked
by a recessed red band, or in the uppermost four stories of the
tower, wrapped in a bricolage of concrete sticks and translucent
glazing. The tower rises from a wider podium of four stories, which
would appear to also contain special functions. This podium is half
of an unrealized base structure, with an open central courtyard,which
would have occupied the site of the Bulfinch courthouse
across the street, scheduled for demolition as part of this
project. (The old courthouse was preserved and renovated by Graham
Gund Associates, Inc., of Cambridge for a new life as Bulfinch
Square, a complex of offices, theaters, restaurants, and other
public functions.)
One
could rationally construct, in fact, a completely
incorrect reading of these forms by assuming that the courtrooms,
the most important public spaces in the building, would occupy the
special podium at the lower levels where public access is
facilitated; that the solid blank boxes higher up, with their
absence of windows and their somewhat brooding hooded openings
might logically contain jail cells; or, because the tops of tall
buildings are always special places, that the offices of persons
of
exalted rank would be there; or perhaps that a cafeteria for
employees occupied this space.
But
the building, designed by Edward J. Tedesco of Winchester,
is not explicit enough for us to "read" it with any certainty.
In
fact, the lowermost floors are occupied by the bureaucracies
attending the court clerks, county commissioners, the district
attorney, and the law library; while courtrooms, sandwiched in
between mechanical floors, occupy the windowless saddlebags
somewhere in the middle of the structure, and prisoners are placed
in windowless cells at the top of the buiding where the views are
best and as far from the sally port as possible. There are other
ambiguities here. There is an attempt to "decorate" the
facades
with concrete sun-baffles, but these are given equal treatment on
all four faces of the building even though the sun strikes them
at
different angles and intensities or, on the north, not at all. Half
of the sixteen courtrooms in the building are round (pl. 18) (their
space focusing on the defendant rather than on the judge or jury),
and lighted by oppressively glowing round ceilings, and yet there
is no hint of round spaces on the exterior. The lowermost story
of
the podium is treated as a visual foundation for the whole
structure by having far fewer windows, and yet it appears that the
monolithic concrete superstructure of the building is sitting on
a
loose pile of tiny sugarcubelike stone blocks. Surely here is a
perversion of materials and a confusion of decorative patterns as
heinous as anything Modernists might have accused earlier ages of
having perpetrated.
History
may prove the 1980s to be the beginning of another chapter dealing
with the re-establishment of discarded architectural traditions-conventions
generated for sound reasons
are likely to reassert their proper role in the general scheme of
things. We live in a decade that is rediscovering tradition in architecture,
and with it we seem poised to reinvest buildings with
more humane values than they have recently known. Ornament, for
example, of a historical sort, is slowly finding its way back to
the American city. It may once again help us to make sense of
institutional sameness by generating styles in architecture that
make buildings type-specific-one iteration for schools, another
for churches, and so forth it may help to please us through the
inclusion of archetypal parts charged with symbolic meanings we
can understand. And it may once again allow us to have the pleasure
of inhabiting buildings demonstrably made by humans, wherein there
is something carved, sculpted, painted, woven, smoothed, or fashioned
by the human hand, precious because unrepeatable.
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