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Hillside Home School I, also known as the Hillside Home Building, was a Shingle Style building that architect Frank Lloyd Wright designed in 1887 for his aunts, Ellen and Jane Lloyd Jones for their Hillside Home School in the town of Wyoming, Wisconsin (south of the village of
Spring Green Spring green is a color that was traditionally considered to be on the yellow side of green, but in modern computer systems based on the RGB color model is halfway between cyan and green on the color wheel. The modern spring green, when plott ...
). The building functioned as a dormitory and library. Wright had the building demolished in 1950.


History

In March 1887, 19-year-old Frank Lloyd Wright, having newly moved to Chicago to become an architect, received a letter from his aunt, Ellen ("Nell") C. Lloyd Jones, asking him to perhaps design a building for the school that she planned with her sister, Jane ("Jenny"). Biographer Meryle Secrest wrote about the letter from "Aunt Nell" to Wright in her biography on the architect:
The letter contains detailed instructions about floor plans.... She added that some of her friends were contributing their architectural notions. The nephew seems to have cut them all out fast. His resulting designs were evidently derived from those of oseph Lyman Silsbee is then-employer and one of his authorized biographies more or less acknowledges that this architect played the largest role. Wright dismissed his first attempt as "amateurish."
Nell Lloyd Jones asked her nephew to design this structure because she and Jenny were planning on beginning the Hillside Home School on land left to them by their father. This building, which became known as the "Home Building", was the first one designed specifically by Wright for the school, a coeducational day and boarding school which functioned until 1915. Silsbee had introduced the young Wright to the "Shingle Style mixture of Queen Anne and Colonial elements." In 1907, Spring Green's newspaper, the ''Weekly Home News'', ran an article focused on the Hillside Home School institution, then in its twentieth year. In the section about the Home Building, the article stated that it:
ntains the parlors, in one of which there is a beautiful carved fireplace which at once attracts the attention of the visitor…. This building also contains the dining rooms, living rooms and kitchens, which are all modern and well-equipped. Besides these are twenty-two rooms which are occupied by the girls and some of the teachers. They are all large, well ventilated and sunny. The architecture of this building is English.
The Home Building was the first of three structures that Wright would design for the Hillside Home School. In addition to the 1887 design, he was commissioned to design the Romeo and Juliet Windmill in 1896 and the Hillside Home School in 1901 (often referred to as
Hillside Home School II The Hillside Home School II was originally designed by architect Frank Lloyd Wright in 1901 for his aunts Jane and Ellen C. Lloyd Jones in the town of Wyoming, Wisconsin (south of the village of Spring Green). The Lloyd Jones sisters commissioned ...
to differentiate it from the 1887 structure). Wright did not have affection for any of the other structures from the Hillside Home School campus except for his own. He noted later in his autobiography that
It appeared that the individualities expressed by the glowing personalities of Aunt Nell and Aunt Jane ichad been all there was of the Hillside Home School except the idealistic buildings I had built for them…. The several other buildings were so ugly and worthless they were only waiting to be torn down.
The architect began to remove buildings from the Hillside Home School campus in the 1930s after he started his apprentice program, the
Taliesin Fellowship The School of Architecture is a private architecture school in Paradise Valley, Arizona. It was founded in 1986 as an accredited school by surviving members of the Taliesin Fellowship. The school offers a Master of Architecture program that focus ...
(now the School of Architecture at Taliesin). Wright ordered the destruction of the Home Building in 1950 to the surprise of some of his apprentices in the Taliesin Fellowship. Former apprentice, Curtis Besinger, noted later that:
right.. set a crew to work on the demolition of the old Home building. He wanted the site cleared and leveled before his return rom a trip he was taking with his family to England Mr. Wright's decision to remove that building came as a surprise. He had started the remodeling of this house… in the early years of the Fellowship, and had attempted to change the building… into one resembling the buildings he had designed for his aunts… The roof had been reconfigured and given red tile like that of other Hillside buildings…. But the site was clear when the Wrights returned.
This left only two of Wright's buildings on the former campus of the Hillside Home School: his 1901 Hillside Home School structure, and the Romeo and Juliet Windmill. The site of the Hillside Home School campus is part of Wright's Taliesin estate. It is owned by the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation.http://franklloydwright.org/


References

* Carla Lind, ''Lost Wright: Frank Lloyd Wright's Vanished Masterpieces'' (Pomegranate Communications, Inc., 1996), p. 18–19. . * Curtis Besinger, ''Working with Mr. Wright: What it was Like'' (Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge, New York, NY, 1995). . * Neil Levine, ''The Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright'' (Princeton University Press, 1997), p. 3 *Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer
''Frank Lloyd Wright Complete Works''
volume 1, 1885–1916 Taschen, 2009, p. 19. * Meryle Secrest, ''Frank Lloyd Wright: A Biography'' (University of Chicago Press, 1998). . * Storrer, William Allin. ''The Frank Lloyd Wright Companion''. University Of Chicago Press, 2006, (S.001) * Robert Twombly, ''Frank Lloyd Wright: His Life and His Architecture'', Wiley-Interscience; 6th edition, 1987, p. 19. .


External links


Taliesin Preservation, Inc.The Frank Lloyd Wright FoundationThe School of Architecture
– ''official website''.


References

{{Iowa County, Wisconsin , state=expanded Frank Lloyd Wright buildings Schools in Iowa County, Wisconsin