Ward Wellington Ward | |
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Exterior detail of the Chapman House in Syracuse, completed in 1913 |
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Born | July 26, 1875 Chicago, Illinois, United States |
Died | August 6, 1932 Willard, New York |
(aged 57)
Nationality | American |
Work | |
Practice | Ward Wellington Ward |
Design | Lemoyne Manor, his studio and home |
Ward Wellington Ward (1875–1932) was an American architect who worked mostly in Syracuse, New York. He designed more than 250 buildings, of which more than 120 were built and survive.[1] He was influenced by, and contributed to, the Arts and Crafts movement in architecture. Ward's work is in varying styles, but the houses most typically include crafts-like details such as decorative cutouts in shutters. His designs almost always include garages, gateways, and other small structures like gazebos.
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Ward was born in Chicago. His decision to live and work in Syracuse was influenced by the presence of Gustav Stickley in Syracuse, who promoted the "Craftsman"-style of architecture, furniture, and other decorative arts in his magazine, The Craftsman. Gustav Stickley's own home in Syracuse is regarded as being the first Arts and Crafts home. Ward's wife's family was also in the Syracuse area.
Ward worked with Horatio Nelson White in Syracuse for a short time.
Ward's homes in Syracuse are concentrated in upscale new neighborhood developments: Strathmore, Scottholm, Berkeley Park, and Sedgwick Farms.
He designed other buildings in Syracuse, too, and outside Syracuse he designed buildings including Mohegan Manor in Baldwinsville, New York, originally built for the International Order of Odd Fellows and now used as a restaurant.[2]
His work was part of an international movement, which used quality materials and "considered workmanship both an art and a craft." Ward discovered two master craftsmen early in his career; Henry Keck, who designed stained glass windows, and Henry Mercer, who made Moravian handcrafted tiles in Doylestown, Pennsylvania. Ward used the tiles to decorate the face of wood-burning fireplaces.[3]
He was married to Maude Moyer[4] who was the daughter of local carriage and automobile manufacturer, Harvey A. Moyer and Rosamond Wilcox. She was raised in Liverpool, New York.[5] The two met while she was a student at the Boston Conservatory of Music in Boston, Massachusetts and he was attending Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[4]
Ward remodeled a farmhouse for his father-in-law, Harvey A. Moyer on Old Liverpool Road called Moyerdale and designed a factory complex for the Moyer company on Wolf Street that is still in existence. In 1916, Ward designed and built his own home across the road from Moyerdale, on a 5-acre (20,000 m2) lot overlooking Onondaga Lake and named it LeMoyne Manor.[4]
The couple had one daughter, Peggy Ward Forgan who relocated after marriage to Peter Paul Forgan to Enumclaw, Washington.[6]
He died in 1932 and Maude Moyer Ward later sold LeMoyne Manor and moved to a house on her parent's Moyerdale property, now home to Breese Chevrolet. She died in 1961. The Ward home was converted to a restaurant and motel, however, still resembles the original structure.[4]
A headstone was placed on Ward's unmarked grave in Woodlawn Cemetery on Grant Boulevard in a public ceremony on October 20, 2002 by members of the Arts and Crafts Society of Central New York. He was credited with designing 100 homes in Syracuse and 50 in Rochester. He was buried in the Moyer family plot at the time of his death in 1932 in a lot unmarked by a stone.[7]
Twenty-six homes and two other buildings designed by Ward and located within the city of Syracuse were listed on the National Register of Historic Places on February 14, 1997 as a result of the Architecture of Ward Wellington Ward in Syracuse MPS, a Multiple Property Submission to the National Register. Listed properties are:[1]
Two other multi-unit buildings were also listed:
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