American architect
Stephen Carpenter Earle (January 4, 1839 – December 12, 1913)[ 1] was an architect who designed a number of buildings in Massachusetts and Connecticut that were built in the late 19th century, with many in Worcester, Massachusetts . He trained in the office of Calvert Vaux in New York City. He worked for a time in partnership with James E. Fuller , under the firm "Earle & Fuller". In 1891, he formed a partnership with Vermont architect Clellan W. Fisher under the name "Earle & Fisher ".[ 2]
Earle's most noted work is the Richardsonian Romanesque Slater Memorial Museum on the campus of the Norwich Free Academy in Norwich, Connecticut , where he had a generous budget and a sympathetic patron.[ 3] In 2015, the Hartford Courant called the Slater Museum the "crown jewel among Norwich's cultural treasures" and "a masterpiece of Romanesque revival design."[ 4]
In December 1913, Earle died at Memorial Hospital in Worcester after becoming ill with pneumonia.[ 5] He is buried in the Quaker Cemetery , Leicester, Massachusetts.[ 6]
Selected works
He designed university buildings, commercial buildings, churches, and more. Among his university clients were Clark University , Worcester Polytechnic Institute , and Grinnell College .
Worcester, Massachusetts
Armsby Block , 144-148 Main St.
Bancroft Tower , Bancroft Tower Rd. (Earle & Fisher)
Boynton Hall, the first building at Worcester Polytechnic Institute (1868); Earle's son Ralph later became WPI's sixth president.[ 7]
Central Congregational Church, corner of Grove St. and Institute Rd. (1886)[ 8]
Hope Cemetery , 119 Webster St.
Jonas Clark Hall, Clark University campus (1887)[ 8]
John Legg House , 5 Claremont St.
One or more structures in Oxford-Crown Historic District , Roughly bounded by Chatham, Congress, Crown, Pleasant, Oxford Sts. and Oxford Pl.
Pilgrim Congregational Church , 909 Main St.
Providence Street Firehouse , 98 Providence St. (Earle & Fisher)
Salisbury Factory Building 2 , 49-51 Union St.
South Unitarian Church , 888 Main St. (Earle & Fisher)
St. Mark's Episcopal Church (Worcester, Massachusetts) , Freeland St., a Romanesque building built in 1888, listed on the NRHP[ 9]
St. Matthew's Episcopal Church (Worcester, Massachusetts) , 693 Southbridge St. (Earle & Fisher)
D. Wheeler Swift House , 22 Oak Ave.
Union Congregational Church , 5 Chestnut St. (Earle,Stephen & C. Fisher)
Walker-White House, a Queen Anne house at 47 Harvard Street in Worcester[ 10]
One or more structures in Washburn Square-Leicester Common Historic District , Main St., Washburn Sq., 3 Paxton St. Leicester MA (Earle & Fisher)
Whitcomb Mansion , 51 Harvard St.
Worcester Art Museum original building, 55 Salisbury St.
Worcester County Courthouse , 2 Main Street, 1878 addition to original structure
Worcester Five Cents Savings Bank , 316 Main St., built in 1891[ 10]
Other Massachusetts
Christ Church Cathedral , Springfield, Massachusetts, built in 1876[ 10]
Old Chapel , University of Massachusetts campus, Amherst, Massachusetts
Leicester Public Library, 1136 Main Street, Leicester, Massachusetts
Pilgrim Congregational Church, Columbia Rd, Dorchester, Massachusetts
Lyon Memorial Library (Monson Free Library), 2 High St., Monson, Massachusetts
One or more structures in Princeton Center Historic District , Jct. of Hubbardston and Mountain Rds., Princeton, Massachusetts
Old Chapel , at the University of Massachusetts Amherst , built in 1885[ 10]
Rock Castle School , Prospect St., Webster, Massachusetts , (Earle & Fuller)
Memorial Hall, Canton, Massachusetts
Sacred Heart R. C. Church, Gardner, Massachusetts , 1887-93[ 11]
Connecticut
Carroll Building , 9-15 Main St., and 14-20 Water St., Norwich, Connecticut , a building built in 1887, listed on the National Register of Historic Places [ 9]
Slater Library and Fanning Annex , 26 Main St., Griswold, Connecticut
Slater Memorial Museum , said to be perhaps his finest work.
Park Congregational Church
Rhode Island
Iowa
Nova Scotia, Canada
Trinity Anglican Church, Digby, Nova Scotia built in 1878. It was declared a National Historic Site in 1990. It replaced the original church built by Loyalist settlers on the site in 1788.[ 15]
Christ Church (Anglican), Windsor, Nova Scotia , constructed in 1882. Designed by Earle, it was built by a local contractor, Joseph Taylor. The building is a fine example of the carpenter gothic style architecture that influenced many church buildings from the mid-nineteenth century onwards in the Maritimes.[ 16]
Gallery
References
^ UMass people:Stephen C Earle
^ "An Architect Co-Partnership" . The Burlington Free Press and Times . June 30, 1891. p. 5 – via Newspapers.com .
^ Norwich Free Academy: Slater Memorial Museum: History .
^ "Daycation" . Hartford Courant . September 6, 2015. p. F5 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "Old Worcester Architect Dead" . Fitchburg Daily Sentinel . December 13, 1913. p. 12 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "Bankers at services". Boston Globe . December 15, 1913. p. 14.
^ "Boynton Hall" . Buildings & Facilities Locations . Worcester Polytechnic Institute. Retrieved August 2, 2020 .
^ a b Martinez, Ciera. "Stephen C. Earle's Romanesque Revival Architecture" . College of the Holy Cross . Retrieved August 2, 2020 .
^ a b "National Register Information System" . National Register of Historic Places . National Park Service . March 13, 2009.
^ a b c d "Buildings of Stephen C. Earle" . Historic Buildings of Massachusetts. January 5, 2014. Retrieved July 8, 2017 .
^ John J. McCoy, "Diocese of Springfield" in History of the Catholic Church in the New England States , vol. 2 (Boston: Hurd & Everts Company, 1899): 772-775.
^ Marshall, Philip C. "Hope Street Survey Descriptions" . Philip C. Marshall . Retrieved September 6, 2015 . Stephen C. Earle ... designed this elaborate, polychromed, 2-story Richardsonian Romesque public building.
^ Rhode Island Historical Preservation Commission (1990). Historic and architectural resources of Bristol, Rhode Island . Rhode Island Historical Preservation Commission. p. 22. OCLC 936128320 .
^ "Visit Grinnell" . The Des Moines Register . December 21, 2006. p. 14GR – via Newspapers.com .
^ "Trinity Anglican Church National Historic Site of Canada" . Parks Canada . Government of Canada. Retrieved May 8, 2024 .
^ "Welcome" . Christ Church . March 8, 2009. Retrieved July 7, 2021 .
Further reading
Diaries of Ruth Earle Southwick 1921–1925 , ISBN 9781512128819 . Ruth was the fourth of Stephen C. Earle's five children and his only daughter.
Stephen C. Earle, Architect: Shaping Worcester's Image , available through the Worcester Historical Museum
External links
International Artists Other