Stone, Carpenter & Willson was a
Providence, Rhode Island based
architectural firm in the late 19th and early 20th Centuries. It was named for the partners
Alfred Stone (1834–1908),[1]Charles E. Carpenter (1845–1923).[2] and Edmund R. Willson (1856–1906).[3] The firm was one of the state's most prominent.
It was established about 1885 when Willson became a full partner in the Providence architectural firm of
Stone & Carpenter.
Partner biographies
Alfred Stone was born in
East Machias, Maine, in 1834. He attended the
Washington Academy in that town. His family later moved to
Salem, Massachusetts. After graduating high school, he began his architectural training. He worked for
Towle & Foster,
Shepard S. Woodcock,[4]Washburn & Brown, and
Arthur Gilman. In 1859 he began working for Providence architect
Alpheus C. Morse. He studied there until the outbreak of the Civil War. He went to enlist, but a knee injury prevented him from doing so. He then worked for various business interests, also traveling in the British Isles. He opened an architural office in Providence in 1864. From 1866 to 1871 William H. Emmerton, another Salem man, was Stone's partner. Emmerton was killed in the
Great Revere Train Wreck of 1871. He practiced alone until 1873, when Charles E. Carpenter became partner. This association remained unchanged for a decade, when Willson was added. Stone died December 4, 1908, in
Peterborough, New Hampshire.[5]
C. E. Carpenter, 1897.
Charles Edmund Carpenter was born in
Pawtucket, Rhode Island, on May 1, 1845. He attended the public schools until the age of 17, when he enlisted in the
Union Army. He was discharged three months later, and returned to school. He began to work under Providence civil engineer William S. Haines, learning the business. He became interested in architecture, deciding to study it instead. He entered the office of Alfred Stone in 1867, and was made a partner in 1873. He retired from the firm's affairs in 1908, after the death of Stone. He died in 1923.[6]
Carpenter joined the
American Institute of Architects in 1875 as a fellow, and was a founding member of the Rhode Island chapter the same year.[7]
In 1894 he married Eudora C. Sheldon, sister of Walter G. Sheldon.[6]
Edmund Russell Willson was born on April 21, 1856,[8] in
West Roxbury, Massachusetts, now part of
Boston. He was the son of Edmund B. Willson, a pastor, and Martha Anne (Buttrick) Willson. In 1859 Willson removed his family to
Salem, where he took charge of the North Church, now the
First Church in Salem. Edmund R. Willson attended
Salem High School, graduating at the young age of 15 in 1871. He then entered
Harvard University. He was there four years, graduating in 1875. After his graduation, he found a position in the office of
Peabody & Stearns, Boston's leading architects. He also took an additional 9-month course in architecture at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. After a year he left Peabody & Stearns and moved to
Sturgis & Brigham. After a year and a half there he left Boston and relocated to
New York City, where he worked under
Charles Follen McKim in
McKim, Mead & Bigelow. McKim, recognizing Willson's talent and potential, convinced him to study abroad. He departed in May 1879, with a friend,
William E. Chamberlin. Not long after their arrival in
Paris, Willson and Chamberlin both gained admission to the
École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts, and both entered the atelier of
Joseph Auguste Émile Vaudremer.[9] He returned to the United States in December 1881. In early 1882 he secured a position in the Providence firm of Stone & Carpenter. He was soon given a position of high responsibility, taking the firm's designs in a new direction. Recognizing this, in 1883 Alfred Stone and Charles E. Carpenter decided to admit him as a junior partner. He was given a full partnership in about 1885, and the firm officially became Stone, Carpenter & Willson. He remained with them until his death. On December 14 of 1882 Willson married Anne Lemoine (Frost) Willson, whom he had known in Salem. He died September 9, 1906, in
Petersham, Massachusetts.[10] In 1884 Willson joined the American Institute of Architects, and became a Fellow in 1889 when the AIA merged with the
Western Association of Architects and all members became Fellows.[11]
In 1901, a fourth partner, Walter G. Sheldon, was added.[10] Sheldon had worked at the firm for at least a decade. Despite the new partner, Sheldon's was not added to the firm's name. After Willson's death, however, the firm was renamed
Stone, Carpenter & Sheldon, which it retained until its end in the 1920s. Other, later, partners included Sheldon's son, Gilbert Sheldon, and William C. Mustard.
^"Facilities Management". Facilities Management. Brown University. Retrieved 7 April 2019. Built in 1888, Wilbour Hall was designed by Stone, Carpenter & Willson.
^"Sketch for the Ladd Observatory". The American Architect and Building News. Vol. XXIX, no. 760. Boston: Ticknor. July 19, 1890. Retrieved 12 December 2019.