William Marcy Whidden (February 10, 1857 – July 27, 1929) was a founding member of Whidden & Lewis, a prominent architectural firm in Portland, Oregon, United States.
Contents |
William Whidden was born on February 10, 1857, in Boston, Massachusetts.[1] He was raised there and graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He worked at the firm McKim, Mead and White from at least 1882 until 1888; projects included the Tacoma and Portland Hotels per wiki MM&W page 1-2011; then travelled to Portland, Oregon, in 1883 to work on the Portland Hotel.[1] Whidden returned to Boston, but came back to Portland in 1887 to finish the hotel.[1] He married Alice McLoughlin, great-granddaughter of John McLoughlin, in 1884 and had two sons.[1]
In 1889, Ion Lewis and Whidden formed a professional architectural firm in Portland.[1] Their residential buildings were mostly in the Colonial Revival style, while their commercial buildings were primarily in the twentieth-century classical style. The commercial buildings often featured brick, along with terra cotta ornamentation. Many of their buildings are listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP).[2]