Walter C. Root
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Walter C. Root (December 8, 1859 - June 26, 1925) was an American architect practicing in Kansas City, Missouri. He is best known for his major works in Missouri and Kansas, including Dyche Hall on the University of Kansas campus.


Early life and career

Walter Clarke Root was born on December 8, 1859 in Atlanta to Sidney Root, a merchant, and Mary (Clarke) Root. He had two siblings including his older brother, John Wellborn Root. During the American Civil War Sidney Root supported Confederate States of America#Secession, secession. Root's role in aiding the confederacy severely damaged his property interests, and after the war the family relocated to New York City, where Walter Clarke was educated. He attended the New York public schools and the City College of New York. In 1879 he moved to Chicago and joined his brother's office, Burnham & Root. In 1886 he was sent to Kansas City to supervise several of their large projects, including the Kansas City Board of Trade building, and when they were completed he opened his own office. After about eight years of independent practice Root formed the firm of Root & Siemens with architect George M. Siemens in 1896.
Men Who Are Making Kansas City: A Biographical Directory
', ed. George Creel and John Slavens (Kansas City: Hudson-Kimberly Publishing Company, 1902): 124.
They worked in partnership for almost thirty years. Includes photos. He designed many buildings including the Francis and Harriet Baker House, a historic site listed on the National Register of Historic Places. With With George M. Siemens, he designed Dyche Hall at University of Kansas, now the University of Kansas Natural History Museum and the Scarritt Building in Kansas City, Missouri.


Personal life and death

Root was married in 1891 to Lora Bullene, and they had three children. Root died suddenly in Kansas City on June 26, 1926.


Works

Works include: *Washington and Georgetown Railroad Car House (1891), 770 M St. SE, Washington, D.C., NRHP-listed *Cass County Courthouse (Harrisonville, Missouri), Cass County Courthouse (1895–97), in NRHP-listed Harrisonville Courthouse Square Historic District, in Harrisonville, Missouri This is the only courthouse designed by Root in Missouri Works credited to Root & Siemens include: *University of Kansas Natural History Museum (1901), Lawrence, Kansas (with George M. Siemens), NRHP-listed as Dyche Hall, University of Kansas *Francis and Harriet Baker House (1902), Atchison, Kansas, NRHP-listed *Scarritt Building and Arcade (1906–07), Kansas City, Missouri (with George M. Siemens), NRHP-listed *Unitarian Church of Urbana (1908), 1209 W. Oregon St., Urbana, Illinois, (perhaps in conjunction with C.F.Smith), NRHP-listed *Grace Episcopal Cathedral (Topeka, Kansas), Grace Episcopal Cathedral (1909-16), 701 SW 8th Ave, Topeka, KansasDavid Sachs, "Grace Episcopal Cathedral", [Topeka, Kansas], SAH Archipedia, eds. Gabrielle Esperdy and Karen Kingsley, Charlottesville: UVaP, 2012—, http://sah-archipedia.org/buildings/KS-01-177-0004. *R. Bryson Jones House (1910), 1045 W. 56th St., Kansas City, Missouri, NRHP-listed *George B. Peck Dry Goods Company Building (1914), 1044 Main St., Kansas City, Missouri, NRHP-listed *Chester B. Woodward House (1923), 1272 SW. Fillmore St., Topeka, Kansas, NRHP-listed


References

1859 births 1925 deaths People from Atlanta 19th-century American architects 20th-century American architects Architects from Missouri Architects from Georgia (U.S. state) {{US-architect-stub