Francis W. Fitzpatrick
Francis Willford Fitzpatrick was an architect in Duluth, Minnesota, Washington, DC, Omaha, Nebraska, and Evanston, Illinois. He often abbreviated his name as F. W. Fitzpatrick in publications and correspondence. Fitzpatrick was an early advocate of fireproof buildings, and he was a frequent columnist in architectural trade publications on a variety of topics.
Early life
Fitzpatrick was born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, on April 9, 1863. His parents were John and Mary Fitzpatrick. He immigrated to the United States in 1883 and began working as a drafter in the office of Minneapolis architect Leroy Buffington, remaining until 1887. Then in 1888, Fitzpatrick worked at the offices of the brothers Fremont D. Orff and George W. Orff. He formed the Minnesota Decorating Company and successfully contracted for the interior painting and decorating of the 107-room Dacotah Hotel in Grand Forks, North Dakota in 1889.He joined the American Institute of Architects in 1889.
Traphagen and Fitzpatrick
After completing his work at the Dacotah Hotel, Fitzpatrick moved to Duluth, Minnesota and formed a partnership, Traphagen and Fitzpatrick, with Oliver G. Traphagen that lasted from 1890 to 1896. This was his most productive time as an architect.List of Traphagen and Fitzpatrick designs
- Phoenix Block, 1890
- Fitger Brewery Boiler House, 1890
- A W. Wieland Store, 1890
- Hoppmann Building, 1890
- Lester Park Hotel, 1890
- Philadelphia Terrace, 1890
- Chester Terrace, 1890
- Clinton & Kate Markell House, 1890
- Alonzo & Julia Whiteman House, 1890
- Costello Block, 1891
- Lyceum Theater, 1891
- First Presbyterian Church, 1891
- Incline Pavilion, 1891
- Duluth Shoe Co./Duluth Dry Goods Co., 1891
- Selleck Block, 1891
- Charlotte Wells Store, 1891
- Hardy Hall, 1891
- James Norton Rental Houses, 1891
- Alexander Miles Rental Houses, 1891
- Henry & Lizzie Blume House, 1891
- Torrey Building, 1892
- Boyle Brothers Saloon & Restaurant, 1892
- Duluth Street Railway Co. Barn, 1892
- Duluth Driving Park, 1892
- Myron & Mary Bunnell House, 1892
- William & Josephine Magie House, 1892
- Oliver & Amelia Traphagen House, 1892
- Munger Terrace, 1892
- Townsend & Mayme Hoopes House, 1892
- William & Amelia Sherwood House, 1892
- Charles & Maude Towne House, 1892
- Herald Building, 1893
- Mesaba Block, 1893
- Stone-Ordean Warehouse, 1893
- St. Louis Hotel, 1893
- Sagar Drug, 1893
- Hamilton & Martha Peyton House, 1893
- Charles & Louise Schiller House, 1893
- George & Jessica Spencer House, 1893
- Crane Ordway Building, 1894
- Elmer & Lizzie Matter House, 1894
- Board of Trade Building, 1895
- Tuohy Mercantile, 1895
- P.R. L. Hardenbergh & Co. Building, 1895
- Fitger's Brewery Settling Room, 1896
Chicago Federal Building
In 1896 Fitzpatrick accepted a position as assistant to the Supervising Architect at the United States Treasury. Prior to the Tarsney Act of 1893, federal buildings were designed by architects at the treasury. Fitzpatrick entered government service at a time when federal architects were becoming advisors and supervisors on federal building contracts with design work more in the hands of private architects. At the treasury, Fitzpatrick worked for Jeremiah O'Rourke and then for William Aiken. Fitzpatrick was assigned to the Chicago Federal Building project as an assistant to architect Henry Ives Cobb, and he moved to Chicago to become one of many supervisors of construction. Soon Fitzpatrick was the only supervisor of construction, and his relationship with Cobb deteriorated for reasons of procurement and process related to construction. Fitzpatrick resigned from the project in 1903 and returned to private practice two years before the building was completed.Private practice
Fitzpatrick became a consulting architect in 1903, and he specialized in fire prevention designs. He also worked with other architects to solve design problems. His favorite area of expertise may have been Architectural rendering, and he enjoyed submitting drawings for competition awards.By 1917, Fitzpatrick joined the Bankers Realty Investment Company in Omaha, Nebraska as head of the architectural department. The company designed and built residential and commercial structures capitalized by investors. While at Bankers, he designed the Hotel Yancey in Grand Island, Nebraska, the Blackstone Hotel in Omaha, and a hotel in Sioux City, Iowa. The job did not last long, and in 1919 Fitzpatrick moved to Evanston, Illinois and continued as a consulting architect.
Invention of the skyscraper
An editorial in the June 22, 1907, issue of The American Architect and Building News reported that three architects had claimed credit for inventing the skyscraper:- Leroy Buffington for the 1884 Minneapolis Tribune Building
- William Le Baron Jenney for the 1884 Home Insurance Building and
- Bradford Lee Gilbert for the 1889 Tower Building
The July 13, 1907, issue of The American Architect and Building News contained a letter from F. W. Fitzpatrick refuting the conclusions of the AIA titled, "The Origination of the Steel Skeleton Idea." In his letter, Fitzpatrick claimed that he himself had designed steel skeletons in support of church towers prior to 1883, and he had sketched the steel column and horizontal beam design for Buffington's 12-story Tribune building when he was working for Buffington in 1883.
Then in 1912, an article in The Washington Post credited Fitzpatrick with inventing the skyscraper. Claims about Fitzpatrick's role in early skyscraper design were not actively contested, but the opinion of the AIA may have been more accurate.
Ideas, opinions, and quotations
Fitzpatrick was a frequent contributor to various trade publications and newspapers. In his research, historic preservationist Ed Zimmer counted over 200 articles and letters to the editor by Fitzpatrick on architecture and other topics. Fitzpatrick's style was frequently grandiloquent and passionate, but his vision was often accurate.On the United States Capitol Building,
On progress,
On government,
A poem on China,
On Social Security,
On the handwriting of President Cleveland,
On corruption at City Hall,
On the use of concrete in construction,
On step-back construction in urban planning,
On plate glass,
On the Lincoln Memorial,
On the boring work of fellow architects,
On the invention of the skyscraper,