Herbert Langford Warren (29 March 1857 – 27 June 1917) was an English architect who practiced in New England. He is noted for his involvement in the American Arts and Crafts movement, and as the founder of the School of Architecture at Harvard University.
Biography
Warren was born in Manchester, England. His father was Samuel Mills Warren, of colonial New England ancestry, and his mother was Sarah Anne Broadfield from Shropshire. His parents were Swedenborgians, and he followed them in that allegiance. He was educated in Manchester, except for two years (1869–1871) during which he attended the gymnasia of Gotha and Dresden, Germany. From 1871–1975 he attended Owens College Manchester, and then spent a year as draughtsman in the office of the Manchester architect William Dawes.[1][2][3][4]
The family moved to the United States in 1876. He studied for two years at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1877–1879) then worked in the office of the architect H. H. Richardson in Brookline until 1884. During this period he took courses with Charles Eliot Norton as a special student at Harvard. In 1884 he travelled to Europe, studying the architecture of England, Italy, and France. On his return to the United States he set up in architectural practice in Boston, and later had an office in Troy, New York. He married in 1887, to Catharine Clark Reed. He went into partnership with Lewis H. Bacon in 1894, an arrangement that lasted about a year.[5]: 103 The firm of Warren, Smith and Biscoe was set up in 1900 with Frank Patterson Smith and Maurice Biscoe. It became Warren & Smith in 1906 when Biscoe moved to Colorado.[1][2][3]
As well as practicing architecture, Warren was a teacher and administrator with Harvard University from 1893, becoming Professor of Architecture in 1903. Warren developed the program of teaching of architecture at Harvard, culminating in the establishment of the School of Architecture in 1912.[5]: 56–83 His approach to teaching emphasized architectural history, regarding this as just as important as technical training. He expressed the importance of this balance in an article on Architectural education at Harvard University:[7]: 78
The peculiar fascination of architecture lies in the fact that it is at once a fine art of the most exalted and ideal character and is at the same time in touch, as no other fine art is, with the most practical and exacting demands of everyday life.
Warren taught three-year-long courses in the history of European architecture, covering classical Greece, the Middle Ages, and the Renaissance. He emphasized that the purpose of this study was not to be able to imitate historical styles, but to understand the fundamental principles of design.[8] In a memoir written after Warren's death, John Taylor Boyd, one of his students, wrote: "In his teaching, the experience of a practicing architect made real and mellowed the research of the scholar."[9] Warren also taught architectural history at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and at the Cambridge School of Architectural and Landscape Design for Women.[5]: 83
Arts and Crafts movement
Warren made a major contribution to the Arts and Crafts movement, which informed both his teaching and practice.[1] A major exhibition devoted to handicrafts was held in Boston in April 1897, inspired by the English Arts and Crafts movement. The exhibition stimulated discussions on forming a society, with Warren in the chair. The Society of Arts and Crafts of Boston was founded in May 1897, with Charles Eliot Norton as president. The Society was based in Boston, but had the aim to become a National organization. The activities of the Society included exhibitions; education, including a library, lectures and drawing classes; a salesroom; and a Magazine, called Handicraft.[10][11][12][13] Warren became President of the Society in 1904 following disagreements over political direction. Under Warren's leadership the American Society would reject the socialism that was an important part of the English movement. An important part of the Society's activities was encouraging close relations between architects and designers on the one hand and craftsmen on the other. One craftsman who had worked closely with H. H. Richardson and continued to collaborate with Warren was the sculptor John Evans. A later development was the formation of the National League of Handicraft Societies in 1907, with Warren as President.[5]: 84–101
Political and social views
Warren was also involved in broader political and social issues, in particular the movement in support of the Allied cause in the years of U.S. neutrality in World War I. In April 1915 Warren sent a letter to The Nation entitled The English Tradition.[14] He argued that the basis of American society is fundamentally English. He wrote: "like our language, our literature, and our common law, our political and social thought, our whole spiritual and intellectual atmosphere are by inheritance and tradition fundamentally English."
This idea of Englishness informed not only his political thought, and his specific advocacy of involvement on the side of the Allies, but his aesthetic as well, in particular the choice of English and early Anglo-American models for his architectural designs. This did not prevent him from admiring many aspects of German culture, and he was actively involved in a project for a Germanic Museum at Harvard, which was completed after his death.[5]: 144–147
Warren was also an active supporter of the Boston-based Citizen's League, and the American Rights League which it later merged with, and was an author of the Address to the people of the allied nations (April 1916). Signed by 500 prominent Americans, and later known as the Address of the 500 this urged American support for the allies.[5]: 151–152 [15][16] He was also distressed by the destruction of many of the buildings in France that he had studied and drawn thirty years earlier.[3]
Warren's early buildings were in a Romanesque Revival style, the style favored by H. H. Richardson, with whom he had worked. Examples include the Page House in Boston, and the competition design (not implemented) for the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City. Later works were influenced more by English traditions, and mainly used Gothic Revival for churches, and Colonial Revival for houses and for his town and city halls. He was opposed to styles such as those inspired by the French Beaux-Arts tradition, considering that they lacked restraint.[5]: 2,149 While Warren's buildings were traditional in terms of style, as Meister has noted, the use of space in his houses had much in common with the stylistically more modern architects, particularly in the West and Midwest, with rooms interconnecting, and with internal spaces connecting with the outside.[5]: 123
—— (1899), "The Year's Architecture", Catalogue of the Architectural Exhibition, St. Botolph Club, 2 Newbury Street Boston, Boston Architectural Club and Boston Society of Architects, pp. 15–18
Warren provided the illustrations for the translation of Vitruvius' The Ten Books on Architecture by Morris Hickey Morgan (1914)[22]
References
^ abcdMeister, Maureen (2014). Arts and Crafts Architecture: History and Heritage in New England. Hanover, NH: University Press of New England. ISBN978-1-61168-662-3.
^ abcSturgis, R.Clipston (1917). "Herbert Langford Warren". Journal of the American Institute of Architects. 5 (7): 352–353.
^ abcdCoolidge, Charles A. (1933). "Herbert Langford Warren (1857-1917)". Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. 68 (13): 689–691. JSTOR20023017.
^ abVitruvius, Pollio (1914). The Ten Books on Architecture. Translated by Morgan, Morris Hicky. Illustrations provided by Herbert Langford Warren. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.