Draft:Clarence Erasmus Shepard

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Not to be confused with Charles E. Shepard (1868-1932), another Kansas City architect

Clarence Shepard and Clarence E. Shepard should link here

Clarence Erasmus Shepard (October 27, 1869-1949[1]) was an architect who worked with Frank Lloyd Wright during development of the Prairie School style, then practiced in Kansas City where he designed more than 600 homes, and was a painter in his later years. Shepard designed more than 600 homes in Kansas City, Enid, Tulsa and Oklahoma City.[2]

He was born in Cortland, New York on October 27, 1869.[1] In 1880, he moved to Kansas with his family in 1880.[3] In 1895 he went to University of California, Berkeley to study architecture.[3]

He painted during his life, e.g. had an exhibition of oil sketches at the Kansas City Art InstituteKansas City Art Institute in October 1922[4] and turned to painting more in his later years.[1] He is known for his landscape painting, architectural painting, and drawing.[3] He used oil paint.[5] Was he an impressionist?

He was a member of American Institute of Architects, Kansas City Art Institute, and Kansas City Society of Artists.[1]

"A former employee of Frank Lloyd Wright, Clarence E. Shepard specialized in residential architecture and was an artist and landscape engineer. He designed more than 600 houses in Kansas City, favoring the Prairie School style."[6]

An image of a Spanish Colonial architecture-style house credited to Shepard appeared in the July 1926 edition of Home & Garden.[7]

In 1917 The Western Architect reported that partnership of Shepard with Harbourne D. Belcher was dissolved; Shepard would continue to work from the Reliance Building.[8] In 1923 he moved his office to the Huntzinger Building, 114 W. Tenth St., Kansas City, Missouri.[9]

Wright Stuff article has passage about Shepard.[10]

Magazine article abstract, a magazine article by Doran L. Cart, available at Kansas City Public Library, abstract in full:

Photos, illustration, and biographical article about Clarence Erasmus Shepard, or Clarence Shepard (1869-1949), a Kansas City architect, artist, and landscape engineer. Native of New York growing up in Clay Center, Kansas and working with Frank Lloyd Wright before coming to Kansas City in 1905. Specialist in residential architecture with the Kendall Company, the J. C. Nichols Company, and his own business and uncle of Ernest Hemingway, with residence (his own) at 5440 State Line Road. Designer of the following houses: 810 Gleed Terrace (1922, 5405 Wornall Road (1920), 5005 Ward Parkway (1925), 1238 Huntington Road (1928), 3715 Harrison Boulevard (1813), the Peppard residence at 201 Concord Avenue (1915), the Hovey residence at 215 West 53rd Street (1915), and 5265 Sunset Drive (1927).[11]

Also, on page 4: "'Kansas City's residential districts should be its greatest source of pride,' stated Clarence Shepard."[11]

Works[edit]

possible works[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d "Clarence Erasmuus Shepard 1869-1949". Missouri Remembers.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Michele M. Risdal (February 20, 1995). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Mount Barbara / 169-4900-0326". National Park Service. Retrieved January 24, 2022. With accompanying 39 photos from 1993
  3. ^ a b c "Artist Biography & Facts: Clarence E. Shepard". AskArt.
  4. ^ "American Art Directory". 1923.
  5. ^ https://www.invaluable.com/artist/shepard-clarence-erasmus-0gugakv057/sold-at-auction-prices
  6. ^ "Clarence E. Shepard and the Prairie School Style--William Worley". 2014. At Kansas City Public Library in Kansas City, Missouri
  7. ^ "House & Garden". 1926.
  8. ^ "The Western Architect". 1917.
  9. ^ "The American Architect and the Architectural Review". 1923.
  10. ^ Martha Hagedorn-Krass (July 2004). "The Wright Stuff: Prairie Style Homes on the Prairie" (PDF). Kansas Preservation. 25 (4). Kansas State Historical Society: 7-10. Retrieved September 17, 2022. Kansas Preservation was newsletter of the Kansas State Historical Society during 1978 to 2005, per this. Full copy of July 2004 issue is available here).
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Doran L. Cart (July 1987). A Kansas City Architect: Clarence Erasmus Shepard. Vol. 11. Historic Kansas City Foundation Gazette. p. 4-5. Abstract is available here.
  12. ^ "Female Architect Left Her Stamp On This Countryside Block". Midtown KC Post. September 24, 2019. [In 1915] Next door, Willard Hovey's family took possession of a house designed by Shepard & Belcher.
This draft is in progress as of May 12, 2023.