Linda Reeder Linda Reeder

Colter, Credit, and Collaboration

Mary Elizabeth Jane Colter worked as an artist, decorator, and architect for the Fred Harvey hospitality company from 1902 until her retirement in 1948. On January 9, 1958, the day after Colter died, newspapers from Connecticut to California carried her obituary. The Los Angeles Times described her as a “nationally known architect, designer and decorator.” The Santa Fe New Mexican called Colter an “internationally known architect, designer and decorator.”

So how is Colter is so little-known now compared to how well-known she was in 1958? Colter is not entirely unknown today; she is best-known in the Southwest where her work had the greatest influence, and two books have been written about her work (Grattan, 1992 and Berke, 2002). But I know very few architects or architectural historians who learned about Colter in school or are familiar with her work.

Read More
Linda Reeder Linda Reeder

Mother Joseph: First Architect of the Pacific Northwest

Mother Joseph (born Esther Pariseau) participated in designing and building two orphanages, eleven hospitals, seven academies, and five Indian schools in the Pacific Northwest between 1856 and 1902. One example of her work is Providence Hospital in Seattle, pictured above around 1891.

Esther Pariseau was born in Quebec in 1823 where her parents taught her carpentry, academic subjects and the domestic arts. She joined the Sisters of Charity of Providence in Montreal in 1843 and took the name Joseph after her father. The diocese sent her with four other missionaries to the Pacific Northwest Territories in 1856.

Read More
Linda Reeder Linda Reeder

In Architecture, Women’s Earnings have Lagged Men’s for 130+ Years

As design and construction for the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago got underway in 1891, a competition was launched to find a woman to design the Women’s Building. The winner would be compensated $1,000 as compared to the $10,000 awarded to the men appointed to design other Exposition buildings. In addition to earning a fraction of the pay, the female architect was expected to provide more services than her better-paid male colleagues.

While many things have improved for female architects since 1891, pay is still inequitable. Full-time female employees were paid on average just 77.6% of what their male architectural colleagues earned in 2019. The best way to change this inequity in compensation? Pay transparency.

Read More
Linda Reeder Linda Reeder

Introducing Mary Colter

Mary Elizabeth Jane Colter (1869-1958) worked as an architect and decorator for the Fred Harvey hospitality company that in turn worked for the Santa Fe Railway. Colter is not widely known yet her work influenced decades of Fred Harvey and National Park Service architecture. She designed the viewing tower in Grand Canyon National Park shown above.

I created The Architectress newsletter to explore the history of women practicing architecture and allied professions in the US. In addition to an Accolade and an Outrage, each issue will feature Mary Colter, for she is the architect and decorator who brought me to this project.

Read More