History & Background of the Architectural Archives

 

Thomas Ustick Walter, Architect, United States Capitol, Perspective
Rendering of New Dome and Extension Wings, 1855, Walter Collection

 

For more than 200 years Philadelphia has been a notable center of architecture. From the colonial master builders Robert Smith and Samuel Rhoads, through William Strickland, Thomas Ustick Walter, Samuel Sloan, Frank Furness, and T. P. Chandler, Jr., in the nineteenth century, to Horace Trumbauer, Paul Philippe Cret, Louis I. Kahn and Robert Venturi in this century, Philadelphia architects have been acknowledged leaders in their profession. Their buildings and the force of their educational institutions, societies, and writings have influenced the course of American architecture.

The Athenĉum of Philadelphia is the principal repository for the records of this achievement prior to 1945 with 180,000 architectural drawings, 350,000+ photographs, and extensive manuscript holdings representing the work of approximately 1,000 American architects. The institution now focuses particularly on the history of American architecture and building technology, a topic with roots reaching deeply into the Athenĉum's history. The first architect to become a member of the Athenĉum (1820) was William Strickland (1788-1854). Presumably he encouraged the acquisition of contemporary architectural and engineer works. It is also appropriate that the first architectural drawing acquired by the Athenĉum was Strickland's own 1839 proposal for a new building to house the library on Washington Square.

 


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