Six-page typewritten document
Typewritten text (sheet 1):
I went in with my mother to shop I was just a little girl and going in with my mother to Mr. Irwin’s store. That bank was something for anyone to see attracted anybody’s attention that was not used to seeing it. I remember distinctly when that bank building was built – 1881. He was in business earlier down the street – about the middle of that block was Mr. Irwin’s store. . . A store right near him was called Weber’s Hat store. .remember them very well. Mr. Weber had hat dept for men and she had millinery for women. Right along with Kitzinger building. About next to Kitzinger’s. Saw my first safe in his store. . . Half way back store. .High desk with a grill or railing around it. .sort of in a cage with a railing – not real clear on this. It was so big to me. .putting money in it, etc. made me remember it. I worked for him in corner store . . . . in 1888 and 1889, about two years before I married. How long he had been there do not remember. xxxxThe store had two entrances, one went into the bank and oneinto the store. Bank was one corner of the main store. Bank was on the north corner of the building, small room about size of her dining room – had a vault – a back door which went into the store. Stanton- (woman) was bookkeeper in store and helped with bank. Mr. Alden and Mr. Irwin were only ones in bank at that time, Will G. Irwin was away at school, just a young fellow. (The Irwin Bank fixtures when later remodeled were bought from the Indiana National Bank when they remodeled their bank. George Vorwald went with Jos. I. up there to get them.) Finny Alden was name of ass’t. [illegible] and Mr. Cobb was a retired minister, elderly with long white whiskers, worked there also. I think he was a brotherinlaw to Mr. Irwin. First wife was Mr. Irwin’s sister. He gave Mr. Cobb job of collecting. sat on stool in store and about 11 went out and at 4. . seems to have been a collector, or some such . . . All employes. Louis Wieser was buyer and manager of the store at that time. We had no delivery trucks. .a man by name Frank Everson and old Mr. B[illegible] had a little wagon or dray and divided the delivery business between them. They’d come in each day. The store building was not big enough for all the business, so the building back of the store was incorporated in the store by cutting a door and this was the carpet room. People by the name of Spinner – a woman and 2 daughters – did all the carpet sewing for the store . . . lived on Jackson Store. [Between lines: only supply] They sold everyone their carpets in those days and they had to be sewn by hand, strip by strip. Ingrain carpet was popular. .turn dark side for winter and light for summer. . pattern so woven.
Typewritten (sheet 2):
Also sold best of every materials, puresilks, lovely woollens. Nothing was readymade all clothes had to be made and tailored. Traveling men came through with samples to stock to store. Mr. Irwin also bought wool from the farmers and stored it in the basement until enough had accumulated to ship to the mills. Big store carried lot of stuff. He did not deal in furs. Mr. Irwin paid no attention to the store. Knew what was going on, but was more interested in the bank and he had a little electric bell. One ring was for Edith and twice was for Margaret. If she wasn’t busy she went in to help wrap coins. They cut their own wrappers for this purpose. . none was available as today. Mr. Irwin was most economical man. . Never threw away an envelope. Opened with a paper opener and used it for figuring. Never used bought paper – always had a big stack he had saved in such a manner.
The only house she remembers is the one now, except it was only about half as large as it is now. Square brick house originally. (Frame house pictured is not remembered). Her brother was same age as Will Irwin and played together. (Danny)
Her father built her house. Donner house (Beatty) house he built for Mr. Beatty. Presbyterian church built in her memory. Old frame church corner of 3rd and Franklin (Rear is frame and is still used as part of Foundation for Youth building) . . . Went with her mother to this old church. Remembers incident happened there . . . communion service with single goblet. She has been a member of the Presbyterian church since 1882. Oldest member in membership?
Old framehouse small- where the Beatty house was. Best office corner had a nice 2 story house. Mr. Duffey lived there, he had a grocery, dealt also in poultry and eggs. His mother-inlaw had a small green house on the east end of the lot. (Mrs. Cooper [widow]). Mr. Barnaby came here and bought her out and started in business. Later he was on Fifth and Union. Griffith house was built by father of George Pence, (7th and Wash. [SW corner]) Her father and mother first lived in the small frame house on SE corner of Wash. And 7th, had two rooms there in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Pence who later built the Griffith house. I imagine father built it for them. Father and mother came from Clarke County. Margaret born 1868, had two children when they came and she was the third child born in Columbus, probably before 1860. . earlier probably. Father built Ruddick house (Nugent House); Gent house where Rost lived on Franklin. House on Hill at end of Third Street torn down for highway, built for xxx a Mr. Jones. Also the Thomas house (Hathaways); it was in a field and people thought Mr. Hayes was crazy to build way out there”.
Typewritten text (sheet 3):
Show place at one time was Story house on NW cor. 5th and Franklin, built that. Present Sister’s house on SW cor. 8th and Chestnut; Donner’s lived there first. House on SE cor. 8th and Syc. was built for Judge Hord. His wife left him and went to Indianapolis and he moved to the big brick house on the NS of alley on the WS of Jackson Street between 4th and Third.
The round house used to be on the “city Square”, now First Christian Church. She watched the turn table in action. Remembers only tracks and “trash” being in square. Station was on Jackson in her earliest memory. (Granville Lee says the J.H.&I. station was on the SW corn of 4th and Lafayette, in the triangle between the track and the corner intersection, later occupied by Quick’s feed store). City hall location had a big Flouring Mill, Gaff Gent and Thomas, moved over the Jackson St. then to Indpls. Mr. Thomas remained here. Ben Thomas first wife was Gertie McCoy, doctor McCoy’s daughter.
1866 Perkinson and Brockman were partners. George Schinnorer was a cooper. Fehring carriage made beautiful carriages and Father Schwartzkopf made beautiful wagons – shop on Jackson Street, W/S across from Court House. Saloons were everything. Opera house was in same building. On second floor, first one in town. She inherited building and sold to Ed Schaefer. Frank Schwatzkopf usually operated the opera house. Georges Grocery was some place earlier before 3rd and Jackson. Frohman’s lived in same block all her memory The father was in the White house for years, an expert on woolens and had charge of the dress goods dep’t. White house about 87 years, in business. Jos. Hilger’s father had a tailor shop for men’s suits on alley where Singer Sewing is now (1962). Cummins book store was on thst side, also, where Frohman’s now is (1962). Winans was on 6th and Wash. (Grocery)r Post Office was in basement on corner of 5th and Washington-went down several steps – not really a cellar. Mo ed to SW cor. of 6th and Wash. And then in new building. First remembers Wash. Street. . Boards were down to walk on in some places, no pavements of any kind anywhere. Water trucks made daily rounds to “ay the dust”. Mr. Perkinson had the first sidewalks in town—brick around their house on 8th and xxxFranklin. Later brick sidewalks were laid “down town”, but Margaret remembers when their were none. They also xxxxxxxx “paved” some streets with brick, Fifth Street was the first, she thinks. First could have been cobblestones, rather than brick. Downtown still has some of the old stone walks which are really slick when wet.
Typewritten (sheet 4):
Streets were gravel roads and the big sprinkling wagons came along and others did their own sprinkling.
Old Christian Church and Old Methodist Church were – oth. Was on S/s of Jackson and 5th and the Christian on the N/S, very small brick churches. On the corner opposite each other. Catholic was where the S.R. and Co. now is . . . Bassett Building. 6th and Wash. Was Priest house and on alley was sisters. Took up whole half block with church in Center.
Long house was on S/W corn. Of 7th and Franklin. Brick house lived in by Burnett’s .grocer. . on S/E Corn. ,2 sons and one daughter. . Elmer. Tott, and …….
John Long, lived in brick house on S/S of alley between 6 and 7 on Franklin and Dave Long was Phil Long’s xxxxxxx father, ont eh SW cor . of 7and Franklin. He/John owned from alley to tocorner. A daughter married a Dr. Doty (Gertrude), moved to Mexico, both are buried in a mausoleum in Garland Brook.
JIIrwin built building on 5th between Fr. And Wash. Geo. Schinner lived in brick house about 2nd house E. of K of C house on Third Street, S/S, on corner. Fred Hardware Store, next to where Simmons now is. Simmons brought Schwartzkopf Hardware Store. Fiegenbaum along here, Mr. Lohman had a store about where Dell Bros. is now (1962). Mr. Max Dalmbert were partners at first. Max Dalmbert married Columbus girl, Lizzie Hayes, Dissolved partnership and Max opened store in Greensburg.
B. L. Hutchins[?] had music store, sang a lot, later with Reeves.
A. B. Reeves was Charles Reeves father. White house in her memory was always been in same place. 2nd and Wash. was Western Hotel. Remembers Isaac Brown-began newspaper, Father of Chalmers Brown. Chamers Brown was a friend of Buffalo Bill. Ray Brown was grandson of Isaac Brown. Isaac Brown lived where Frank Meyer lives now (1962)xx Crow story of Perkinson boys . . . and medicine spoon . .8 tsps ……
Mr. Perkinson in later years built court houses and big buildings. Built Huntington, W.Va. courthouse, Goshen Court House and many others.
Judge Kollmeyer married Mollie Schwartzkopf, Margaret’s sister-in-law.
Mrs. Jones lived in “hill” house and sister lived in present Volland house.
Nothing elaborate or big on Washington Street, mostly frame buildings in her childhood. About on Whitehouse alley, 1 ½ story house with pointed roof, Dr. Rice lived there, there their family doctor.
Typewritten text (sheet 5):
Dr.’s name is WRIGHT, not Rice. A Dr. Rice lived on N/E cor Wash. and 8th.
Old Building on 10 or 11 Street was Bates’ Conserv. of Music. 5th St.Whitmer Building was Dr. Roope’s hospital . .first hospital. Albemarle was remodeled by Dr. Banker and used as a hospital. Lived on S/W/ cor of 9th and Franklin. Originally was residence of Mr. Hogue, brother of Dr. Hogue who had the drug tore. Dr. Hogue’s was on the S/W Cor. 6th and Franklin.
She has no memory of Mr. Irwin’s telling her incidents of his earlier life. He sold store to Meyer and Fiegenbaum, dissolved partnership not too long afterward. Fiegnbaum opened store on W/S off Washington and Mr. Meyer built building with Mr. Rost as it now (1962) is. Fred Donner Jeweler was [illegible] Will /Donner’s father. Came herefrom Hope and Perkinson built the 8th and Chestnut house for him. Will bought Beatty home for his father and mother, after Mrs. Beatty died. Bought flouring mill for sons. Will and Pete Sohn were partners later on., then Pete Sohn bought him out. Wholeslae House on 5th and and Brown was begun by Mr. Campbell, Boyd[?] and Campbell, came from Hartford City.
Will Treadway built Gail hawes house and lived there and built across the street. Not at bank in her time. Seems to remember him as being in the shoe business. Mr. Bowlen was in shoe business. . . orphan boy ship story.
Griffith . . . Len Griffith was Virginia G. Frazee father. Jean Marr’s Grandfather was Griffith. He lived on S/W cor of 7th and Wash. Hez Griffith built house S of him for daughter, Mrs. Laughlin. .worked at First National long time.
Col. Keith, built house on N/E cor. 7th and Pearl. Real show place, not sure her father built it. J.D. Lyle was Alcy’s Snider father (?) McCormack lived where Bed. Art’s bldg. is and father of Ann McCormack Newsom’xxxxx. He built /brick part Court House and Mr. Perkinson had contract for interior work.
George Carrothers was an undertaker. Henry Lang lived in Hill’s house, Carrie Lang married Jim Sibley, Mrs. Sibley was Ray Brown’s aunt. Clarence Adams Durg Store where Goodman-Jester. George Finney published HERALD, paper Mike Locke had, across from court house, S/S Wash. St. Trade Palace, she remembers it. Between –about where Tovey’s shoe store is now. Crump house on n/w/ cor. 7th and Laf. Was Mr. Vogel built, owner of Trade Palace, (Samuels and Vogel).
Typewritten text (sheet 6):
Mr. Samuels was Jewish and also Vogel, (Mrs. Vogel was not ). Max Dalmbert was Jewish and and Emma Lehman’s fsather were cousins. He had store at Hope,, then with Lehman here. Theo. Otto on 4th and Wash., bought by/McKnight and Carpenter, later. John W. Suverkrup came to town and clerked at Otto’s, and lived with his uncle, Fred Fehring on Pearl between 8th and 9th, E/S of street.
Prather house – Ben Prather, grocery. Wife was Isham Keith’s sister.
Henry Peel’s Goldmine . . . . Were in Schwartzkopf building for years. Dealt in fine china, etc. [illegible] Drug – Hogue drug store moved on Wash. next to Winans’ Grocery, sold out to Q.G.Noblitt(?) then [illegible]ealy Anderson. Ho[illegible] Drug Store next to First National.
Eugene Huber furniture – in Bissell Hotel (Belv.) bought all her furniture of Huber when married. He lived on 3rd close to Brown St.
Duffy and Cooke – 7th and Wash. P.O. Location. . .residence.
Bonham Laundry, Lowe Brothers and Patty Hay
[illegible]er and Parker (Parker was Bateman’s uncle) Dr. Hauser built “Talley House” on Franklin.
UpdeGraff married Jessie Hauser and went to the business as a jewler. Later moved to Calif.
Stalhuth drugs –probably on Wash. near 6th.
McCormack [illegible] brother of Anna McNewsom.
Brunings Bazaar started by Herman’s Father.
12-page typewritten document with annotations on back page.
Typewritten text (sheet 1, recto):
Eliel Saarinen - Eero Saarinen - J. Robert F. Swanson
Architectural Offices Reunion
Cranbrook
August 11-13, 1995
The weekend was planned with both structured lectures and general discussion time. During each, a microphone was passed around for people to share anecdotes and stories. For convenience sake, Eliel and Eero Saarinen will be referred to by first names. lnitials are used for other participants. Please forgive disjointed portions that result from the casual nature of the event and/or the ineptitude of the note taker! The note taker would also appreciate learning of any errors that exist in this narrative.
Conference Introduction - Dr. Lillian Bauder, President, Cranbrook Educational Community
Cranbrook values place. “We believe we are informed by the built form.” Cranbrook is continuing a search for new form with several new buildings. She explained that Bob Swanson, son of J. Robert F. Swanson, designed deSalle Auditorium, location of the conference. (The grill work and light fixtures are very similar to First Christian Church screen and fixtures.)
Dr. Bauder read several letters from Saarinen staff expressing regret that they could not attend. Many anecdotes were recalled in the correspondence, including a discussion of many games of touch football. One letter described the wedding reception of a staff member. During the reception, staff(with Eero as ring-leader) got into the bedroom that was to be used by the couple for their wedding night and sawed the legs of the bed until they were nearly in two pieces. After the couple retired for the night, the group gathered outside the bedroom window to wait. The crash was followed by hoots and cheers and the wedding reception resumed with full force.
Susana Torre, Director, Cranbrook Academy of Art
Now is the moment to make sense out of the Saarinen history. The profession of architecture is now in a crisis of redefinition. Saarinen may help to clarify the confusion.
Mark Coir, Director, Cranbrook Archives
History of the Saarinen/Swanson Offices
Eliel started his practice in Finland in 1897. His firm had a studio on the grounds of his home that became a mecca for Scandinavian architects in the first decade of the 20th century. He began to look at urban planning.
WWI brought economic ruin to Eliel. Loja had done all of his models. He came to this country for the Tribune competition after Loja’s dream about Chicago. In the dream, a jewel was discovered in Chicago. Eliel was here 9-10 months and had no real success. He was preparing to return to Finland when he got the call from George Booth asking him to come to Cranbrook.
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Typewritten text (sheet 1, verso):
There was an architectural firm of Swanson and Booth (the son of George Booth). Swanson left and Eliel took over. The dining hall at Cranbrook was the first interior design Eliel did in the US. He designed the entire facility. This approach of designing the entire facility was unusual and would become a trademark of Eliel.
At some point(l missed the date), Eliel, Swanson and Eero joined together in a firm. In 1947, Eliel, Swanson and Eero split and the office projects were divided up. Swanson had married Eliel and Loja’s daughter, Pipsan (called Pixie). Swanson and Pipsan worked together. They did many interior designs and much institutional work. Pipsan was known for her talent with textiles.
Eero took over the General Motors project after Eliel's death. Dulles Airport was on a postage stamp.
Break
During the break, the group gathered around large tables filled with drawings, photos, and cartoons(mostly by Claude DeForest) that the group brought with them. Among the drawings was a pencil sketch of Irwin Union Bank by Charles Bassett.
The cartoons included:
- Eero’s All Night Drive-ln - No Vacancy (allusion to the many all-nighters that were common in the firm)
- A man with curved suitcases checking in at the TWA counter. A man with square suitcases was told “Go fly American!"
- Eero’s 1956 Christmas card of a bird's eye view of the entire studio working in their offices
- Going away party cartoon for Nobuo Hozumi (“Noby”) - “Noby's Souvenirs" stand included do-it-yourself London Embassy kits, lucky charm St. Louis Arches, Eero's pipes
- Going away party cartoon for Glen Paulsen - The eagle on top of the London Embassy flying away with the building
- Chicago Law School - An architect measuring the building against his thumb says to a guy with a hammer "Lower it about four feet"
- A pastry chef with an icing sleeve decorates the top of a building
- There were 8 sketches on one sheet of paper of an architect experimenting with a building. He adds parts to the roof, takes them away, measures it against his thumb. The next to the last sketch shows him looking in the phone book under "pyrotechnics." ln the last sketch, he blows up the building.
There were numerous sketches about the IBM building - some were obviously inside jokes that I didn’t understand. One featured several people sitting and staring with “thimk” written above their heads.
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Typewritten text (sheet 2, recto):
The photos were mostly small personal snap shots. There was one of Kevin Roche sitting on top of the rather large TWA terminal model in his sock feet.
“The Saarinen Years at the Cranbrook Academy of Art - Eliel Saarinen, Bob Swanson, and Eero Saarinen Partnerships” Mark Coir, moderator
The Saarinens and Swanson produced a body of work in many mediums. What were their strengths and how did they complement each other?
Edmund Bacon
You can’t box Eliel into a neat little description. EB was at Cranbrook from 1934- 36. GM asked Eliel to come to Flint, Ml to work on urban planning. Eliel wasn't interested and sent EB there instead. He spent 3 years in Flint doing traffic and land use surveys, among other things. He got called a "communist" by the City Council, but still won a Chamber of Commerce award.
The physical relationship between the master and students was marvelous. Eliel would come into the studio and sit with the drafting students. ln the evening there were invited to his house. The students sat around him in a particular configuration because of the padded benches in the room. EB has always created the same configuration in any house he has ever lived in because he considers the shape so sacred - he learned the most about life during those times. Eliel never gave a lecture or instructed the students. EB can’t figure out how he learned everything from him. Eliel didn’t teach him, but "illumed” him.
Merle Westlake
He came to Cranbrook in 1948. Eliel would respond to the "kestions" that students would ask him: “l’m not going to tell you now. Think about it for two weeks and then we’ll talk.” MW was working on a model and asked what color to make it. Eliel replied “the color of the earth from 20,000 feet in the air in the springtime.” Eliel told him to make 40 samples of different blue/green shades. MW made the samples and spent two weeks discussing the correct choice with other students. Eliel walked in and immediately picked the color they had chosen.
If a guest was present, Eliel would walk straight to them and welcome them. Before he left the studio he would always say good-bye to the person. When Eliel went on vacation, he would tell each student good-bye. When he returned, he would say "hello" to each and ask to see a “bird's eye view” of their projects.
One day Eliel saw students sneaking in beer for a party. He clapped his hands and called the students together. He said, “Americans are crazy. You make your risers too high, your salad plates too small. You make your drinks too strong and then add ice to water them down. You say, ‘here’s to you,’ and then drink the beverage yourself. You eat a light meal in the middle of the day, a
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Typewritten text (sheet 2, verso):
heavy meal at night and then fall asleep. In the evening, we have an aperitif, a light meal, and "so on."
Edmund Bacon
Being at Cranbrook was an intense sensual experience. In 1934, we called him “Mr. Saarinen.” In 1939, Harry Weese said that the destruction of proper principles of architecture shifted and that students began to call him "Pappy." EB was working as a draftsman in Shanghai, China. EB wrote Eliel that "architecture functions as a flow of sensation over time, not as a series of discreet objects.” Eliel gave him a fellowship. Based upon the letter EB wrote, Eliel sent him to Flint, Ml.
Merle Westlake
Eliel only accepted 10 students/year. MW was asked to write a letter saying what he wanted to do. If it was acceptable, Eliel said he could study at Cranbrook. MW wanted to investigate the effect of strip mining in Ohio, but was forced out of the project by coal companies.
He didn’t have to show drawings to be accepted by Eliel. Eliel was more interested in what MW wanted to do, than in what he had done. MW decided that he didn’t want to work for Eero because there were too many stories of office politics. He kept putting Eero off, but finally had an interview. He wasn’t offered as much money as others in Eero’s office because he wasn’t married. MW later discovered that Eliel had asked Eero to hire MW to work on the Stevens College Chapel.
Eliel would only address one project each day in the studio. The architects would select problems with each project before Eliel's arrival. When he arrived in the studio, without knowing the selected issues, he would always seem to bring up the problem that was bothering them.
George Matsumoto
He started at Cranbrook in 1943. He was Japanese-American from San Francisco. As a result of WWII, Washington University in St. Louis was one of the few (maybe only) schools that would accept him because of his heritage. His father's assets had been frozen and he had no money. Cranbrook gave him a full scholarship when he was 23.
After his arrival at Cranbrook, GM assumed that Eliel would assign him a project. For 3-4 days he just sat at his desk or went swimming. On his way swimming one day, he ran into Eliel. GM decided he should make an appointment to see Eliel. Eliel asked him what he wanted to study. GM had no idea, but replied he wanted to work on schools since he knew there would be more children after the war. Eliel gave him several books to read. Eventually GM studied planning with Eliel. He later worked in EIieI’s office in planning.
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Typewritten text (sheet 3, recto):
GM remembers the competitions and parties. Eliel was very good at analyzing juries and what they would expect. Students entered competitions in teams. There was no construction going on during the WWII, so experience could be gained by entering the competitions.
About this time, Gropius raided the design staff.
GM said you had to be on guard when Eliel was critiquing other students’ work. Eliel would say that the student was in love with his problem. GM said he always felt defensive when Eliel criticized him, but that he felt Eliel always “hit the nail on the head" when looking at another student’s work!
GM remembered one evening when Frank Lloyd Wright was visiting. Wright had the students gathered around him and Eliel was at the back of the room. FLWs comments about Eliel grew more caustic. Eliel finally said “he’s always frank, but he's not always right." (Merle Westlake announced that Eliel said GM’s thesis was the best he had ever seen and that all the students should read it. GM. never knew this.)
Tony Moody
Eliel encouraged the students to collaborate on competitions. Every year a team won something. When students got to Cranbrook, they had no direction or guidance. They had to think for themselves. This was hard since many had just come out of the military. Eliel said he was more interested that the students learn about planning - when they arrived at Cranbrook they should already know how to design a building. Eliel would address the group as “fellow students.”
Freedom was big. This wasn’t typical of other graduate schools.
Edmund Bacon
Eliel would take a marble table and put a drop of water in the center. He would place his thumb on the water and droplets would go out from there. He said that this was what planning was about. Architecture is concerned with the rhythmic relationship between mass and space - it doesn’t stop at the lot line.
Eliel also spoke about the force of creation and the urge of the seed to become larger and greater. In order for growth, nutrients would have to go up through the plant.
Eliel had a concept of totality - that everything would go on and on.
Gunnar Birkerts
GB’s first day in Eero’s office had him totally flustered. The receptionist was the most beautiful woman he had ever seen. He saw the most beautiful renderings in color - unlike those he did in Europe - when he was taken into his first job meeting. He was asked if he had met “Pappy." He had no idea what this meant. John Dinkeloo said that he would let “Pappy" hold the drawings during the job meeting - he placed the urn holding Eliel’s ashes on the drawings.
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Typewritten text (sheet 3, verso):
Jim Smith
He built the models. He was with the office longer than anyone else, working for all 3 firms. Eliel would come through at 10:30 every morning. Though Eliel only stayed a short time in the office each day, he knew everything that was going on. Eliel would always have an answer to a problem, Eero had to try things before he could give an answer.
JS had a chance to work with Frank Lloyd Wright. Eliel told him that maybe it would be the right thing to do. Eliel said that if JS would stay, he would look after him. If JS had a problem about staying with the firm too long, he would provide him with an unlimited leave of absence. JS's voice cracked as he said, "l still believe I’m working for him."
Edmund Bacon
It is a great tragedy that architecture didn’t follow Eliel Saarinen when it had the choice.
There was general discussion about Eero’s ability to write backwards. He could also write with both hands at the same time. Since Leonardo da Vinci could write backwards, Loja said that she and the governess taught Eero the same skill.
Someone remembered watching Eero draw with both hands at the same time and creating a vanishing point on both the right and left of the paper. When he folded the paper, the two drawings and vanishing points matched exactly.
Doris Smith(Jim’s sister)
She worked with Eliel, Bob Swanson and Pipsan. DS did drawings of early glassware that Pipsan designed. Pipsan always wanted many choices to review.
Bob Swanson(son of Robert and Pipsan)
He worked with Saarinen and Swanson during his summers as a “gopher.” He also worked in the model shop where most of the design decisions were made. Eliel, Eero and Bob would come down to review the work.
Pipsan popularized blue as a strong color. He believed that his mother had the best sense of color of anyone he ever knew.
Jim Smith
He tried to figure out what the architects wanted and then conceived it in a model. He would have to figure out the best medium in which to build the model. He often said, “if you draw it, I’ll build it.” One architect said he couldn't draw what JS had built.
The TWA terminal was a 3/4 inch scale model. He had to bend cardboard to fit the design.
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Typewritten text (sheet 4, recto):
He rarely had a set of drawings from which to construct the model. Usually, the measurements were taken from the model for working drawings.
Suzie Saarinen(daughter of Eero and Lily)
Eliel wore pink shirts - the only man she ever knew at that time who dressed like that. Eero wore white shirts with black or gray jackets.
She remembers watching Eero go up and down the model of the St. Louis arch with a stop watch to see if there was a problem with walking on the steps. Eero made her climb in and out of the room with the elevator with a stop watch to judge the ease of access.
Gunnar Birkerts
Eero developed virtual reality with his models. GB believed that developing full-size models was an historic change in architecture. GB wonders if this change resulted from a trip Eero made to the GM Tech Center styling section. While there, Eero saw look-alike models. After this Eero did a lot of work with exact models.
Maurice Allen
The GM board was scheduled to look at a model of the building and master plan. The board moved the date up by several weeks. Eero told Joe Lacy to call Jim Smith back from a skiing vacation. After two telegrams with no response, Eero said to send one saying that JS would be fired if he didn't come back. JS wired back, "Base 54", 8" new powder, send check.”
“Eero Saarinen and Associates" Peter Papademetriou, NJ Institute of Technology
He talked about the many people who had worked with Eero and how many were not with the group today. His voice cracked as he mentioned Paul Kennon.
What brought people to Eero Saarinen’s office?
Glen Paulsen
Based upon a reference from one of GP’s friends, Eero called GP to set up an interview. They arranged to meet in the Oak Room at the Plaza on a Friday night. Eero said, “l’m older than I look in my pictures." When they met, Eero said, he had invited a friend to join them. Moments later, Philip Johnson arrived. On the following Monday morning, GP got a call from Eero asking GP to visit Bloomfield Hills for another interview. When GP explained he had no money, Eero said that the office would pay for his ticket. GP met in the conference room with J. Bar, Eero, Eliel and Joe Lacy. Eliel was so kind, unaffected and asked very sympathetic questions.
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Typewritten text (sheet 4, verso):
GP had never seen buildings with such a synthesis of architecture and landscape.
Eero would follow Eliel around the office at 11:00. Eliel would return to Cranbrook at 1:00 for lunch and a nap.
Social life was just the families of the staff. There weren’t many other people around.
Salaries varied from $2.75-3.75/hour.
Harold Roth
Eero was mentioned very little at Yale from ‘55-'57. HR did not think that Eero was in favor with Vin Scully.
Peter van Dijk
He was at MIT grad school in architecture when he got “the call” and replied, “Earl who?"
Thomas Bosworth
There was a diverse approach to projects. When TB arrived, there were 120 people on staff.
Claude DeForest
He was in the MIT class with Peter van Dijk. CD sent drawings and cartoons to Eero along with some architectural renderings. When CD got the call with a job offer, Eero said he would like for CD to come to work - pause - “as a cartoonist.”
Balthazar Korab
BK was from the Beaux Arts tradition of drawing, not Yale, Harvard or MIT. BK believes that these years were the most creative time of the ofiice.
Suzie Saarinen
Eero was on "Meet the Press.” The reporter asked him if he could speak faster. Eero took out his pipe, tapped it, and replied, “No, but I could say less.”
Mark Jaroszewicz
MJ went with Eero to meet with the MIT president on the chapel. The president told Eero that MIT was forward thinking, so they didn't mind if Eero came up with a design that was forward thinking, maybe even controversial. Eero was smoking his pipe on the plane going back to Michigan. He asked MJ “How do we become legitimately controversial?” Eero asked, “What is the most sacred precept of architecture?" MJ replied, “Form follows function." Eero said, “We must come up with a form that proves you can shove any function into it."
8
Typewritten text (sheet 5, recto):
Eero had a totalness of commitment and design - proved architecture isn't just working drawings.
Jim Smith
When they lost the Air Force Academy competition, Eero began to have the feeling that working drawings were important. Before this, they had focused mostly on design. They contracted with other firms to do the working drawings.
All major decisions had gone back to Eero. John Dinkeloo had Eero re-structure the office with project managers.
The feeling was that you had to do the right thing for the client. He always understood the client’s needs. Design and site respond to needs; You had to look beyond the project to get the full picture.
There was a bad mistake(never explained what it was) with Concordia College in 1955. Eero decided that they had to stop running the office as a studio where people could do whatever they wanted.
Kevin Roche began to run design teams. In competitions, he would decide what to present and the methodology for project presentation. After this KR never did any more projects himself.
Eero worked so hard and was so self-critical. The board of John Deere liked the design, but he said that he had lost the thread. Eero took the model back and worked more.
Eero agreed to let Jack Goldman visit his family for Christmas dinner - a four hour trip, even though the office was pushing a deadline. Eero replied, “I guess I’ll have dinner with my family too.”
Wesley Janz
Eero would listen to a client and change his ideas. The ofiice would always try to understand the client.
General comments
During a meeting on Dulles, Najeem Halaby(with FAA?) said that architects don’t know how the inside of a building should function. Eero stood up and calmly explained that Halaby's idea of a hall of history would not work. After a lengthy explanation, Halaby replied, "ln other words, you’re saying I don’t know what I’m talking about.” Halaby dropped his suggestions.
GM Tech Center - One of the automotive designers thought his designers knew as much about how to build a structure as an architect. He presented a plan and
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Typewritten text (sheet 5, verso):
Eero took it back to the office and let the staff take it apart. When Eero returned with a new plan, he explained how they really hadn't changed anything, but had simply moved certain pieces of the building around. He kept saying this during the presentation, even though rather dramatic changes were made.
The office thought that Dulles would make a great ruin, perhaps the greatest of the 20th century.
John Dinkeloo worked with the construction industry to develop new materials for Eero to use.
Eero was on the jury to select the Sydney Opera House architect.
Eero said that in the design of a project, one should establish the idea from the site and apply the structure to it. Orchestrate the design as a fugue so it would have integrity, flow and rhythm through the building. "Playing the keyboard of the architecture.”
Music was often played in the office. Ties in with building on a theme and orchestrating the architecture on site.
Suzie Saarinen
Axial symmetry is comforting for someone with dyslexia. One of her sons is dyslexic, yet he designs astro-physics projects. SS, as a landscape architect, finds it much easier to deal with models in 3 dimension. SS wonders if Eero was dyslexic because of his dependency on models.
General discussion
After 1956, there was a change in the decision making process. Eero said he couldn’t make the same kinds of decisions he did in the past because the office was so busy. A designer was put in charge of a project. KR checked on the progress. After the restructuring, 3 people were in the office design meetings - Eero, KR and the project designer. The project designer, KR and Eero went to the presentation/work session with the client.
Cesar Pelli was in charge of TWA terminal. It was the first large model they used in the design process. They built it 1/2 size and put in a mirror.
Wesley Janz has been told by many that worked in the ofiice that a capabilities brochure was never published. Eero never solicited clients, they came to him.
Large scale models were an efficient way to operate for a decision-maker like Eero. He could make decisions instantly about problems by seeing them rather than spending a couple of hours with drawings.
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Typewritten text (sheet 6, recto):
Eero said that the final design decision must be sifted through one man's mind, but that he wanted the contribution of everyone.
“An Evening of Remembrances”
Balthazar Korab(BK)
Eero was unique in a positive and negative way. The press couldn’t cubby-hole him so they ignored him.
General Discussion
Before the full committee arrived, a subcommittee reduced the number of finalists for the Sydney Opera House competition to a dozen architects. Selection was based upon adherence to the specs. After the morning session reviewing the work of those selected by the subcommittee, Eero came back early from lunch and went to look at the rejected designs. He took a rejected design back to the committee that was eventually selected as the winner.
While eating grapefruit, he discovered the way to solve a design problem with the MIT chapel.
BK - Eero "conglomerated” all ideas together.
The St. Louis arch started out as a flat rectangle. Supposedly Carl Milles or Marshall Fredericks influenced the final design. There was some discussion that Eero copied the arch design from a Fascist symbol. Frank Lloyd Wright even said, “Eero was a nice boy who used to ride on my knee. He went wrong when he copied that from an Italian."
The arch didn’t flood during the 1993 storms because of careful design calculations. Water came to within four feet of its base.
Wrap-up
Mark Coir will develop a data base of names and addresses of people who worked in the Saarinen office.
They hope to edit and transcribe the tapes and video so that they can be put into publishable form. They will seek financial contributions to achieve this.
Cranbrook wants to develop archival resources for Swanson and ESA. They would like to create a major exhibition on Eero.
Only 5 Saarinen buildings are on the National Register.
Susan Wilkerson(?) at the National Building Museum in Washington has a large collection of information on the Saarinens.
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Typewritten text (sheet 6, verso):
Joe Lacy’s daughter suggested thesis topics:
How does structural and design integrity continue to the present day?
What influence have the Saarinens had on other buildings?
The use of materials was ahead of its time
The use of nature by Eliel and how it influenced Eero
Cultural diversity of the staff
Gunnar Birkerts
(Throughout the discussions, GB pushed the group to explore why Eero was different. At this point, he went to the front of the group and began to speak) If Eero had lived, our architecture would be entirely different. Eero was searching - he was a true modernist. His goal was to invent. Eero said, "What’s done is done. We have a four-legged chair, a three-legged, a two-legged. So we will do a one-legged chair."
Eero was up against the dogma of Mies, Bauhaus, Gropius, Wright, Corbusier. He was also up against Eliel, although Eliel was never dogmatic.
GB came to the office because the work was fresh and unseen. He came with no introduction.
GB is angered by architecture critics who do not put Eero in the position where he should be. At Eero’s death, modernist architecture stopped. Eero would have solved the problems.
Eero pondered decisions, searching for answers that had never been found before. Eero worked to make buildings appropriate and worked with symbol and metaphor.
Eero’s expressionism got the juice out of the real problem and expressed it.
The real future of architecture is not looking for style. Style is a crutch. Eero was not looking for style - that is what took him so long for the design of buildings.
During chats with the architects...
Lewis Zurlo was sent to an empty theatre in Pontiac, Ml the first day in the office. Eero had rented this and told LZ to mock-up the stage design for the Vivian Beaumont Theatre with cardboard. LZ also built four back row seats at the same distance from the stage that the Beaumont would have. Eero brought Elia Kazan and Robert Whitehead by limo to see the mock-up. Kazan and Whitehead decided that the expression on Julie Harris’ face could be seen from the back row and approved the design.
Maury Allen said that all of Eero’s work was going very well except North Christian Church - he was just not happy with the design. MA had to explain to the congregation during a meeting that Eero was struggling with the project. A man said, "Young man, if we waited as long for the minister to preach the Word of God as we’re waiting for this church, we would never hear it."
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Typewritten text (sheet 7, recto):
All of the staff were essentially foreigners in Michigan. They depended on each other for social life since the office, at that time, was in the middle of nowhere. They entered a lot of competitions because there was nothing else to do.
Why the office moved to Connecticut...
The east coast was where the action was. Eero was working on CBS and Stanton and Bill Paley tried to intimidate Eero. Eero would have been happy to stay in MI. Aline Saarinen probably pushed it too. Eero’s death delayed the move because the staff’s children were to be in school at the first of September and they didn’t move until October.
Bob Ziegelman’s father was in the hospital when Eero was brought in. The press said that Eero was holding on, but Aline told Bob that Eero was only being kept alive by machine.
At the end of the conference, Suzie Saarinen walked to the front of the room. Her voice broke as she said, “l came to touch a piece of my father that l never knew. Thank you for making that possible.”
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Handwritten text (sheet7, verso):
Handwritten annotations mention Karl Milles and his sculptures at Cranbrook.
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