Frances Henley

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

PartnerNellie Evelyn Livermore (?–1952)
Frances E. Henley
Born1876
Died1955
Alma materRhode Island School of Design
PartnerNellie Evelyn Livermore (?–1952)
The Hope Building of the Wheeler School in Providence, Rhode Island, designed by Franklin J. Sawtelle and Frances E. Henley and completed by Henley alone in 1913.

Frances E. Henley (1876 – 1955) was an American architect. She was the first woman to study architecture at the Rhode Island School of Design and the first woman to independently practice architecture in Rhode Island.

Frances Evelyn Henley was born in 1876[1] in Crompton, Rhode Island to Charles A. and Mary E. Booth Henley. She grew up in Providence, Rhode Island.[2] Henley's parents wanted her to become a school teacher.[3] She disagreed and became the first woman to study at the Rhode Island School of Design for architecture.[2] In 1897 she graduated, with honors.[2]

Career

Eliza Greene Metcalf Radeke helped Henley secure employment as a drafter with Howard K. Hilton, though after a few years Henley quit her job with Hilton due to health problems. She pursued architecture as an independent consultant starting in 1904, making her the first female architect in Rhode Island to practice under her own name.[2][3] She shared office space with Franklin J. Sawtelle, with whom she collaborated on the design of the Wheeler School in Providence.[2][3] In 1912, after Sawtelle's death, she began working with architect Arthur L. Almy.[3] He died in 1924, and Henley took over his practice, under the agreement should would never marry.[2][3] Henley designed mainly private residences along the Atlantic coast.

Architectural works

Projects completed by Henley include:

Later life and legacy

Notes

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI