Clarence Blackall
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Clarence Howard Blackall (February 3, 1857 – March 5, 1942) was an American architect who is estimated to have designed 300 theatres.


Life and career

Blackall was born in
Brooklyn, New York Brooklyn () is a borough of New York City, coextensive with Kings County, in the U.S. state of New York. Kings County is the most populous county in the State of New York, and the second-most densely populated county in the United States, be ...
in 1857. He attended college at the
University of Illinois School of Architecture The University of Illinois School of Architecture is an academic unit within the College of Fine & Applied Arts at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. The school is organized around four Program Areas - Building Performance, Detail + F ...
, graduating with a B.S. in 1877, and received training at the
École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts The Beaux-Arts de Paris is a French ''grande école'' whose primary mission is to provide high-level arts education and training. This is classical and historical School of Fine Arts in France. The art school, which is part of the Paris Science ...
in Paris. He arrived in Boston, Massachusetts in 1882, where he was recognized for both his architectural innovations and his designs of significant Boston landmarks including the Colonial Theatre,
Wilbur Theatre The Wilbur Theatre is a historic performing arts theater at 244–250 Tremont Street in Boston, Massachusetts. The Wilbur Theatre originally opened in 1914, but underwent renovations in 2008. The Wilbur Theatre sits in the heart of Boston's histor ...
, Modern and Metropolitan (now the Wang Center for Performing Arts) theatres. Blackall was a senior member of the Boston architectural firm Blackall, Clapp and Whittemore, and in 1889 he helped establish the
Boston Architectural College Boston Architectural College, also known as The BAC, is New England's largest private college of spatial design. It offers first-professional bachelor's and master's degrees in architecture, interior architecture, landscape architecture, and n ...
as a club for local architects and as a training program for draftsman. He designed the 1894 Carter Winthrop Building, which was the first steel frame structure in the city of Boston. In addition to its innovative technology, the structure also used
terra cotta Terracotta, terra cotta, or terra-cotta (; ; ), in its material sense as an earthenware substrate, is a clay-based unglazed or glazed ceramic where the fired body is porous. In applied art, craft, construction, and architecture, terracotta ...
trim and featured a dramatic, deep, and overhanging
cornice In architecture, a cornice (from the Italian ''cornice'' meaning "ledge") is generally any horizontal decorative moulding that crowns a building or furniture element—for example, the cornice over a door or window, around the top edge of a ...
. Blackall is also credited with designing the
Copley Plaza Hotel The Fairmont Copley Plaza is a Forbes four-star, AAA four-diamond hotel in downtown Boston, Massachusetts managed by Fairmont Hotels and Resorts. It stands on Copley Square, part of an architectural ensemble that includes the John Hancock Tower, ...
, the
Foellinger Auditorium The Foellinger Auditorium, located at 709 S. Mathews Avenue in Urbana, Illinois on the campus of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, is a concert hall and the university's largest lecture hall. It is the southernmost building on the main ...
(1907) on the
University of Illinois The University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign (U of I, Illinois, University of Illinois, or UIUC) is a public land-grant research university in Illinois in the twin cities of Champaign and Urbana. It is the flagship institution of the University ...
campus, as well as the Little Building (1917) at
Emerson College Emerson College is a private college with its main campus in Boston, Massachusetts. It also maintains campuses in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California and Well, Limburg, Netherlands ( Kasteel Well). Founded in 1880 by Charles Wesley Emerson as a ...
on the site of the Pelham Hotel (1857), the "first apartment house in any city along the Atlantic seaboard of the United States" according to architectural historian Walter Muir Whitehill. Blackall also designed Lowell, Massachusetts' first steel frame building, the ten story Sun Building (1912-1914). Opened in 1908 and designed by Blackall, the Gaiety Theatre was one of the only theatres in New England that would allow African Americans to perform
vaudeville Vaudeville (; ) is a theatrical genre of variety entertainment born in France at the end of the 19th century. A vaudeville was originally a comedy without psychological or moral intentions, based on a comical situation: a dramatic composition ...
. It was also the first of Blackall's theatres to use a large steel
girder A girder () is a support beam used in construction. It is the main horizontal support of a structure which supports smaller beams. Girders often have an I-beam cross section composed of two load-bearing ''flanges'' separated by a stabilizing ' ...
to support the balcony, eliminating the need for
architectural column Architecture is the art and technique of designing and building, as distinguished from the skills associated with construction. It is both the process and the product of sketching, conceiving, planning, designing, and constructing buildings o ...
s. Blackall was also responsible for Nathan H. Gordon's Olympia Theatre design, which opened as a film and vaudeville theatre on May 6, 1912. Blackall died in Concord,
Massachusetts Massachusetts (Massachusett language, Massachusett: ''Muhsachuweesut assachusett writing systems, məhswatʃəwiːsət'' English: , ), officially the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, is the most populous U.S. state, state in the New England ...
on March 5, 1942.


Works

*
Bowdoin Square Theatre The Bowdoin Square Theatre (est.1892) in Boston, Massachusetts, was a playhouse and cinema. It was located on Bowdoin Square in the West End, in a building designed by architect C.H. Blackall. Personnel included Charles F. Atkinson and Willia ...
, One Bowdoin Square, Boston MA; opened February 1892; demolished 1955 *
Castle Square Theatre The Castle Square Theatre (1894–1932) in Boston, Massachusetts, was located on Tremont Street in the South End, Boston, South End. The building existed until its demolition in 1933. Actors who worked in stock theater there included Edmund B ...
, 421 Tremont St., Boston MA; opened 1894; demolished December 1932-January 1933 *
Tremont Temple The Tremont Temple on 88 Tremont Street is a Baptist church in Boston, affiliated with the American Baptist Churches, USA. The existing multi-storey, Renaissance Revival structure was designed by architect Clarence Blackall of Boston, and opened ...
, 88 Tremont St., Boston MA; opened May 1896 * Colonial Theatre, 100-106 Boylston St., Boston MA; 1653 seats; opened 20 December 1900 * Park Theatre (later the State), 619-621 Washington St., Boston MA; 1184 seats; remodeled by Blackall in 1903; demolished in 1990 * Unique Theatre, 700 Washington St, Roxbury MA; opened in 1907 * Pastime Theatre, 581 Washington St., Boston MA; opened 1 February 1908; demolished circa 1914 * Gaiety Theatre (later the Publix), 661 Washington St., Boston MA; 1049 seats; opened 20 June 1908; demolished 2005 * Casino Theatre (a.k.a. Waldron's Casino), 44 Hanover St. at Scollay Square, Boston MA; 1300 seats; opened April 1909; demolished 1962 * Soldiers and Sailors Monument, Syracuse, New York, dedicated 1910Hardin, Evamaria, ''Syracuse Landmarks: An AIA Guide to Downtown and Historic Neighborhoods'', photographs by Jon Crispan, Syracuse University Press and Onondaga Historical Society p. 35 * National Theatre, 535 Tremont St., Boston MA; 3500 seats; opened 1911; demolished 1997 *
Plymouth Theatre Plymouth Theatre or Plymouth Theater may refer to: * Plymouth Theatre (Boston) * Plymouth Theatre (Worcester) * Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre, New York City, formerly the Plymouth Theatre * H Street Playhouse The H Street Playhouse was a black box ...
(later the Gary Cinema), 125 Eliot St. (later renamed Stuart St.), Boston MA; 1464 seats; opened 16 October 1911; demolished 1978 * Eagle Theatre, 2227 Washington St., Roxbury MA; opened 1912 * Gordon's Olympia Theatre (later the Pilgrim), 658 Washington St., Boston MA; 1892 seats; opened 6 May 1912; demolished 1996 * Modern Theatre, 523 Washington St., Boston MA; opened 1913 *
Cort Theatre The James Earl Jones Theatre, originally the Cort Theatre, is a Broadway theater at 138 West 48th Street, between Seventh Avenue and Sixth Avenue, in the Theater District of Midtown Manhattan in New York City, United States. It was built in ...
(later the Park Square, then the Selwyn), Park Square, Boston MA; 1200 seats; opened 1913; demolishedMorrison, p. 117 * Beacon Theatre (later the Beacon Hill), 47-53 Tremont St., Boston MA; 500 seats; opened 1913; demolished 1970 * Gordon's Scollay Square Olympia Theatre, 56 Scollay Square (4 Tremont Row), Boston MA; 2538 seats; opened 17 November 1913; demolished 1962Morrison, p.118 * Ye Wilbur Theatre, 250-252 Tremont St., Boston MA; 1227 seats; opened April 1914Morrison, p.119 * Broadway Theatre, 420 W. Broadway, South Boston MA; 1777 seats; opened 1920 * Criterion Theatre, 1122 Columbus Ave., Roxbury MA; 749 seats; opened 1921; demolished in the 1960s * Jamaica Theatre, 413 Centre St, Jamaica Plain MA; 1938 seats; opened 1922; demolished in the 1960s * Capitol Theatre, Tremont St., Boston MA; opened 1924 * Metropolitan Theatre (later the Music Hall, then the Wang), Tremont St., Boston MA; 4407 seats; opened 26 October 1925 * Sun Building, Kearney Square, Lowell MA; 1912-1914 * Phoenix Building, Union St., Rockland, MA; 1929


References

Notes Bibliography * Further reading * Blackall, C. H
"Some superfluous requirements of our theatre laws"
''American Architect'', v.107, no.2049 (March 31, 1915) * Blackall, C. H
Seed Time and Harvest: Memories of Life
unpublished autobiography, completed in 1940, deposited in the
Boston Public Library The Boston Public Library is a municipal public library system in Boston, Massachusetts, United States, founded in 1848. The Boston Public Library is also the Library for the Commonwealth (formerly ''library of last recourse'') of the Commonweal ...
in 1994.


External links

* Boston Public Library
Blackall, Clarence (1857-1942) Collection
{{DEFAULTSORT:Blackall, Clarence 1857 births 1942 deaths Architects from Boston American theatre architects 19th-century American people University of Illinois School of Architecture alumni