Charles Sumner Greene
Henry Mather Greene
The
brothers who were to win renown as the architectural firm of Greene and Greene,
were born in
Brighton
,
Ohio
-- Charles in 1868, Henry in 1870.
Their father, Thomas Sumner Greene, and mother, Lelia Mather Greene, came from
old
New England
families that included
Revolutionary War hero Nathanael Greene on the father’s side and Cotton
Mather on the mother’s.
A move
to
St. Louis
enabled the Greene’s to enroll at the innovative Manual Training High
School of Washington University, where they learned drawing, carpentry,
metalworking and similar trades. Architectural studies at MIT and
apprenticeships in
Boston
completed their formal training.
In
1893, the brothers followed their parents to the newly founded city of
Pasadena
,
Calif.
As Bruce Smith and Alexander Vertikoff note in their book, "Greene and
Greene: Masterworks," a survey of the brothers’ 25 finest
buildings, the Pasadena area "provided a perfect mixture of eastern
erudition and a freedom from social and class restraints that allowed the
Greene’s to take their architecture in directions inconceivable in the
traditional East.
California
also provided them with clients who could afford the workmanship and artistry
of their designs." In 1894, the Greenes (aged 25 and 23) opened an
architecture office in
Pasadena
.
"Clients willing, their commissions involved not just house designs but
also furniture, carpets, light, art glass, and landscaping."
Refined
and exceptionally well-crafted, their creations became known as "the
ultimate bungalows." A classic Greene and Greene house is "a seamless
fusion of simplicity and sophisticated detail with meticulous attention to
building materials and natural surroundings," write Smith and Vertikoff.
The years between 1903 and 1909 are generally recognized as the brothers’
most creative period. Most of it was centered in the
Pasadena
area. The Bandini House (1903) was
their first widely published design. Blacker House and Gamble House (the
latter regarded as Greene and Greene’s finest work.) were designed in
1907 and 1908, respectively. [Gamble House, at
4 Westmoreland Pl.
,
Pasadena
,
is open for public tours.]
Henry Greene’s son recalled how the brothers initially worked.
Charles, he said, "by nature was an artist and designer," whereas his
father "excelled in the construction and ‘getting things done’
categories." Smith and Vertikoff write that "Henry ran the office.
Charles met with clients and, often, from the upstairs studio in his home,
would create the designs and turn over his sketches to the draftsmen." By
the end of their careers, however, each brother "had excelled
architecturally in his own way."
In
1916, Charles withdrew from the practice, moving to
Carmel
,
Calif.
By 1922, the brothers had stopped using the name of Greene and Greene.
"Henry worked on alone; Charles did some architecture but more and more
devoted himself to his artistic and spiritual pursuits." For a time, their
work was virtually forgotten, but in 1952 the brothers were honored by the
American Institute of Architects "as formulators of a new and native
architecture." In a foreword to the Smith and Vertikoff book, Edward R.
Bosley writes: "The architecture and decorate arts of [the Greene’s]
occupy a sacrosanct but veiled niche within the American Arts and Crafts
movement."
Henry
Greene died in Altadena in 1954, Charles in
Carmel
in 1957.
For
further information check: The Greene and Greene Website or the Gamble House
Website
--
Contributed by Albert Greenstein, 1999
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