Philip H. Frohman | |
---|---|
Born | Philip Hubert Frohman November 16, 1887 New York City |
Died | October 30, 1972 (age 84) |
Nationality | American |
Occupation | Architect |
Parent(s) | Gustave Frohman Marie Hubert |
Family | Philip Gengembre Hubert (grandfather) Charles Frohman (uncle) Daniel Frohman (uncle) |
Philip Hubert Frohman FAIA (November 16, 1887 – October 30, 1972) was an architect who is most widely known for his work on the Washington National Cathedral, named, the "Cathedral Church of St. Peter and St. Paul" in Washington, D.C. He worked on the English Gothic style cathedral from 1921 until his death in 1972. [1]
Frohman was born in Hotel Chelsea, designed by his grandfather Philip Gengembre Hubert, in New York in 1887 [2] to Gustave Frohman, a theatrical producer, and the former Marie Hubert, an actress. [3] His mother was a French Catholic and his father Jewish. [4]
Frohman had a notable lineage in the related worlds of architecture and engineering. In 1849, his grandfather Philip Gengembre Hubert and his great-grandfather Charles Antoine Colomb Gengembre moved to America. While practicing architecture in New York, Hubert designed the Hotel Chelsea, later to become a well-known residence for actors, writers, musicians and other artists. Built in 1883, it had the distinction of being the tallest building in New York until 1899. Initially constructed as an apartment building, it still remains in operation today, as a hotel. [5] His great-grandfather, Charles Antoine Colomb Gengembre, both an architect and civil engineer, supervised the building of the first railway from Liverpool to Manchester. His great-great-grandfather was Philippe Joachim Joseph Gengembre, who served as Director of Works for King Louis Philippe of France in the early 19th century. Gengembre designed France's first steam warship and the first home in Paris to feature gas lighting. [2]
Frohman's interest in architecture was evident even in his early years. At the age of eleven, he enrolled in the Throop Polytechnic Institute in Pasadena, California, [6] where he attended grammar school [7] and secondary school. [8] (Throop later spun off its grammar and secondary schools into Polytechnic School, while Throop itself became the California Institute of Technology.) He designed his first house when he was fourteen. In 1907, he graduated and became the youngest person ever to pass the state architectural examination. [9] The following year, at the age of twenty-one, he opened his own office in Pasadena. In his early practice he focused on the design of both churches and houses. Early Frohman-designed churches include Trinity Episcopal Church in Orange, California in 1909, and other parish churches in Santa Barbara and Inglewood, California between 1909 and 1917. [10]
During World War I Frohman served in the ordnance construction section of the Army and was stationed in the Washington, D.C. area. Placed in charge of the architectural division at Aberdeen Proving Ground, he designed buildings there and at Rock Island Arsenal. It was at this time that he made the acquaintance of dean of the National Cathedral and, later, the Episcopal bishop of Washington. [11]
Over the course of his long career Frohman would be credited with the design of some fifty churches in the United States. [12]
The great majority of Frohman's life and work, however, would be dedicated to the construction of the Washington National Cathedral, [nb 1] on which he labored for more than fifty years. [20]
During a visit to Washington in 1914, Frohman visited the Bethlehem Chapel, which had been completed in 1912. [21] He described it as, “a more beautiful crypt than any I had ever seen abroad; the most satisfying example of church architecture in America.” [22] So taken was he by the cathedral that in signing the visitor register he included a small prayer in code. The prayer was that he might someday become the cathedral architect. [23] Following military service in World War I Frohman moved from Pasadena to Boston to continue his architectural practice. [24]
In 1919 Frohman began making preliminary sketches for revisions of Bodley's designs at the invitation of the Bishop of Washington, The Right Reverend Alfred Harding. During the next two years he formed a partnership with E. Donald Robb and Harry B. Little and in November 1921, the firm of Frohman, Robb and Little was officially designated Cathedral Architects. Robb died in 1942 and Little followed in 1944, after which Frohman served as the sole architect of the cathedral. [24]
Although adhering to Bodley and Vaughan's original plan in its essence, Frohman made substantial refinements to the initial blueprint. His impact on the overall structure has been described by one author on the cathedral: “Bodley and Vaughan’s preliminary plans envisioned a predominantly English Gothic structure; under Frohman’s guidance the style became more eclectic, a happy blending of Medieval Gothic from both England and the Continent . . . . Frohman’s cathedral combines architectural elements from both sides of the North Sea.” [25]
In particular, Frohman revised and augmented the original design for the crypt, adding ambulatories and an additional chapel. [20] Over the years he was intimately involved in virtually every aspect of the cathedral's furnishing and embellishment. [26] The most notable and visible of his revisions is his redesign of the west facade, the principal entrance to the cathedral. [27] , [28] It “is said to be the culmination of Frohman’s genius—his most plastic work and his most original design.” [29]
Frohman's successor described him as: "[an] architectural giant—a man who never compromised on less than perfection." [27] It was said that he did not hesitate to change drawings to modify structural details by as little as a sixteenth of an inch. [30] When the cathedral's construction progressed to the crossing and a crucial debate arose over whether to complete the nave or build the central tower next, Frohman's recommendation to proceed with the tower proved decisive. [31]
His focus on construction of the Washington National Cathedral notwithstanding, Frohman still found time to design a number of other churches, including two cathedrals. The Cathedral of the Incarnation in Baltimore and the Cathedral Church of St. Luke in Orlando, Florida are both Frohman designed, [32] although the latter would not be completed until 1987. [33] In addition, the Church of Our Saviour, Baltimore; Trinity College Chapel, Hartford; Christ Lutheran Church, Baltimore; Saint Paul's Cathedral, San Diego; Trinity Church, Washington, D.C.; St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Washington, D.C.; Trinity Church Morgantown, West Virginia and the Church of the Heavenly Rest, Abilene, Texas, have all been attributed to Frohman. [32] Frohman also designed the Roman Catholic Church of the Annunciation in Washington, located near the cathedral, of which he was a member. [3]
Frohman was the architect of Grace Church and rectory and its later enlargement (both have been razed), and a rancher's home in the prestigious "Snob Hollow" area (1917) (also razed in the late 1970s), all in Tucson, AZ.
Frohman received the distinction of Fellow of the American Institute of Architects (FAIA) from that organization. He was awarded the Medal Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice (For Church and Pope) by Pope John XXIII.
Frohman was a member of the Washington Archdiocesan Commission on Sacred Art, the National Cathedral Association, the Guild of Religious Architecture, the Liturgical Art Society, the American Guild of Church Architects and the American Ordnance Association. [11]
Although continuing to climb the scaffolding several times a week to inspect the ongoing work, [6] in March, 1971, at the age of 83 Frohman retired. In an unusual move for an architect, he was awarded a retirement stipend by the cathedral. [34]
Although one bishop in the early 1920s informed Frohman that he intended to build the Washington National Cathedral in five years, [35] Frohman himself observed: “Not often does an architect knowingly prepare designs for a building which he is sure he will not see completed in his own lifetime.” [36]
Frohman's prediction proved more accurate than the bishop's. Frohman died on October 30, 1972, following an accident on August 7 in which he was struck by a motorist near the cathedral's grounds. [37] The cathedral nave would not see completion until 1976. [38] Only in September 1990 would the west end he redesigned be dedicated, completing construction of all principal features of the church's interior and exterior structure, although minor embellishment is expected to continue for years. [39]
A Roman Catholic, Frohman's body was interred in the Chapel of St. Joseph of Arimathea on the crypt level of the National Cathedral by special dispensation of the Archdiocese of Washington. [3] He is also memorialized by a bay on the north aisle of the cathedral nave dedicated to him. The inscription on the bay wall reads, in part: “From the deep well of faith sprang devotion to perfection; A graceful witness in this Cathedral Church; To his steadfast spirit and; The prayer his genius sought to record in all his work.” [40]
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