Cass Gilbert Buildings

A Photo Tour Of Twin Cities Area Buildings
Designed By Pioneering Architect Cass Gilbert

By John Weeks


Introduction Cass Gilbert was a famous twin cities architect. While much of his career was spent designing houses and apartment buildings, he caught a major career break in landing the project to design the Minnesota State Capitol building. This brought fame to Gilbert, which allowed him to take on other world famous building projects including a building that would be the tallest skyscraper in the world. But as Gilbert's star rose, the Minnesota natives turned their back on him, forcing him to ultimately leave his twin cities home.

Note—click on each photo to see the full size image.


Cass Gilbert Park Cass Gilbert Park

Cass Gilbert lived from 1859 to 1934. Born in Ohio, he spent his youth and early career in St. Paul. His work in the city is honored with a park and overlook located a block north and east of the Minnesota State Capitol Building, which was his break-through project. Most of Gilbert's twin cities area work was completed between 1880 and 1900.


Cass Gilbert Cass Gilbert's Mother's Home, 471 Ashland, St. Paul

Gilbert's mother was well connected in St. Paul society, which allowed Gilbert to obtain commissions for homes that would otherwise not have been offered to him. This house has since been restored to its original exterior appearance, and is an excellent example of Gilbert's early work.


Cass Gilbert William H. Lightner House, 318 Summit Ave, St. Paul

Business was good in 1893 for St. Paul attorney William Lightner. He had outgrown his first Cass Gilbert house at 322-324 Summit, so he commissioned Gilbert to build a bigger and better home at 318 Summit Avenue. This house is located on Summit Avenue, which is a row of houses built during the gilded age by lumber and railroad executives. It was once occupied by Louis Hill, son of railroad baron James J. Hill. The house was purchased in 2006 by the Nicholson family for 1.4-million. They did a total restoration of the home, resulting in an exterior that looks much like it did 100 years ago.


Cass Gilbert Lightner-Young House, 322-324 Summit Ave, St. Paul

This side by side duplex was built in 1886. Attorney William H. Lightner occupied the 322 address, while 324 was occupied by his law partner George B. Young. Some consider the stonework and facade of this home to be the best looking of any building designed by Gilbert in Minnesota.


Cass Gilbert Edgar C. Long House, 332 Summit Ave, St. Paul

Built for lumber and railroad tycoon Edgar Long, this house is one of the most expensive and opulent designed by Cass Gilbert. Unfortunately, the exterior has been extensively changed since it was built in 1899, with much of the lavish detail being lost. It remains a very impressive building.


Cass Gilbert Dr. David W. McCourt House, 161 S. Cambridge, St. Paul

This 1887 home is built in a design called the urban shingle style. Gilbert worked many round, oval, and angle details in what is otherwise a very square house. The details are essential since this house sits on a triangular lot where all sides are highly visible from the street. The barn was designed in 1897 by Gilbert, which explains why it fits in so well.


Cass Gilbert 1044 Wilson Ave, St Paul

This is an early Cass Gilbert design. It was built in 1883, and is located in the Dayton's Bluff area of St. Paul (east of downtown just north of I-94). This is a rather ordinary Victorian design that fits in well with the rest of the neighborhood. The house itself is nearly unchanged since it was built, with the exception of a kitchen update.


Cass Gilbert 4320 Cottage Park Road, White Bear Lake

Rail service was extended to White Bear Lake in the late 1860's, and trolley service began in 1879. As a result of this access, a series of resorts built up along White Bear Lake. Wealthy Twin Cities residents built summer homes along the lakeshore between the resorts. Once such summer home, now converted to year around use, is the Cass Gilbert designed cottage at 4320 Cottage Park Road. It is recognized as the first cottage built on the lake in the urban shingle style. This home is located on the south end of White Bear Lake.


Banned From
Public View
Manitou Island Homes

Four Cass Gilbert homes are located on Manitou island, and island on the northwest side of White Bear Lake. This island is privately owned and outside traffic is not allowed. These homes include:

• Jasper B. Tarbox Home, 2517 Manitou Island (Shingle Style)
• James Skinner Home, 2540 Manitou Island (Shingle Style)
• Charles W. Bunn Home, 2550 Manitou Island (Queen Anne Style) • William B Dean Home, 2552 Manitou Island (Colonial Revival)


Cass Gilbert Cass Gilbert Home, 1 Heather Place, St. Paul

This is Cass Gilbert's own home. At the time, 1890, Gilbert was not wealthy, nor did he live an opulent lifestyle. He invested every dime he had and called in every possible favor to build this house. The house is large for the era, but not excessive. It is, however, located only a block from Summit Ave, home of the elite of St. Paul society.


Cass Gilbert The Gilbert Building, 413 Wacouta St, St. Paul

The Gilbert Building was one of the first Cass Gilbert office buildings. It was built in 1893 for the Boston And Northwest Realty Company, which used it as a warehouse for its real estate and brokerage businesses. The building was updated in the mid-1880s and it remains a very modern looking structure despite being 115 years old. It is a great example of both form and function, with little detail to distract from its mission as a warehouse, but enough detail to look classy. The building is now a multi-tenant office building.


Cass Gilbert
Cass Gilbert
The Endicott Building, 143 East Fourth, St. Paul

The Endicott family of Boston owned a chain of drygood stores. They needed to build a new store in St. Paul, and they wanted a signature building to be built at a high profile location. It is amazing that young Cass Gilbert received this commission despite no previous experience building this kind of building. His link to the project was his mother, and her knowing Luther Cushing, manager of the Boston and Northwest Real Estate Company.

The Endicott Building sits on an L-shaped lot. It wraps around the 12 story Pioneer Building, and it shows frontage on two major St. Paul streets. The building itself would be 6 stories. It features a large vaulted opening, with a glass and marble walkway between the two street entrances. Thirty shops lined this walkway. The remainder of the building housed 320 offices and two banking rooms. The building was completed in 1890.

By all accounts, Cass Gilbert hit a home run with the Endicott Building. It gave him the reputation to compete for larger projects, and it earned the respect from his clients leading to many high profile referrals.


Cass Gilbert Bookstaver House, 548, 550, 552, 554 Portland Ave, St. Paul

This is a Cass Gilbert rowhouse built on Portland Ave in St. Paul. It was built as the Bookstaver House, but is currently known as Portland Terrace. It was built as 4 units, each 2 stories and 2,604 square feet. They vary between four and five bedrooms, but each had two baths. The project was completed in 1885 in the Romanesque Revival style. Some of the units have since been chopped up into apartments. The Cass Gilbert Society is located in the 550 unit.


Cass Gilbert Dayton Ave Presbyterian Church, 217 Mackubin Street, St. Paul

Cass Gilbert's mother was a founding member of the Dayton Avenue Presbyterian church, so it is no surprise that they selected Cass Gilbert to design their new church building in 1886. The building is built in the Richardson Romanesque style. The church wised to have a simple building. Gilbert was able to accommodate that, and the embellishments that he did add were in the quality of the materials. Gilbert designed an addition for the church in 1903, which was later built in 1912 adding an assembly hall and Sunday School. This ended up being the largest of the several churches that were designed by Gilbert.


Cass Gilbert Virginia Street Swedenborgian Church, St. Paul

Also known as the Virginia Street New Church, this Cass Gilbert design was completed in 1886. The church believed in a harmony between nature and man-made objects, so Gilbert worked hard to incorporate materials in the building that symbolized aspects of this faith. As an example, the stone foundation represents the enduring faith in Jesus.


Cass Gilbert
Cass Gilbert
Roselawn Cemetery, 803 Larpenteur Ave, Roseville, MN

Cass Gilbert designed two buildings for the Roselawn Cemetery in 1904. This includes the cemetery office building and the cemetery chapel. Both buildings are built of stone and feature massive wooden trusses and ornate oak woodwork. This shows Gilbert's work on two smaller buildings where he applied his talents on an up close and personal basis.


Cass Gilbert Cretin Hall at the University of St. Thomas

Cretin Hall was built for the St. Paul Seminary in 1894. It was funded by railroad tycoon James J. Hill. The building was renovated in 1989 and now serves as a male undergrad residence hall. The 4-1/2 story building is built in the Northern Italian style.


Cass Gilbert Grace Hall at the University of St. Thomas

Grace Hall was constructed in 1913 using the Cass Gilbert plans for Cretin Hall. It was acquired by the University of St. Thomas in 1987, and was reopened in 1989 as a residence hall.


Cass Gilbert Loras Hall at the University of St. Thomas

Loras Hall is nearly a twin to Cretin Hall, being built at the same time in 1894. It was built for the St. Paul Seminary. It was transferred to the St Thomas Academy during WWII, and to St. John Vianney in the 1970s. It was acquired by the College of St. Thomas in 1982 and is used as a residence hall.


Cass Gilbert University of St. Thomas Service Center

This building was built in 1894 as part of a major expansion of the St. Paul Seminary. It housed the campus heating plant and the gymnasium. A new gym was built in 1968, and the building was converted for full use of the campus plant services team. The building was acquired by the University of St. Thomas in 1987.


Cass Gilbert Minnesota State Capitol, 75 Constitution Ave, St. Paul

The state capitol project was Cass Gilbert's break-through project. He designed a building with a central dome modeled after the Saint Peter's Basilica in Rome. The unsupported marble dome is the second largest in the world after the Saint Peter's Basilica dome. Beyond the dome, Gilbert worked to avoid any other religious overtones in the design. Items such as a triumphal arch and palace block were designed out of the building, and sight were kept short. The project was started in 1896 and was largely finished in 1904.


Cass Gilbert
Epilog
A major controversy erupted when Cass Gilbert selected the white marble from Georgia to be used on the Minnesota State Capitol. Marble and stone was big business in Minnesota, and many natives, especially business leaders, expected Minnesota stone to be used on the project. Both sides refused to give in. Cass Gilbert got his white stone, and the business community abandoned Cass Gilbert. His business dried up, and he found himself having to move away from the twin cities to avoid going bankrupt.

That, however, is not the end of the Cass Gilbert story. Rather, it was just the start of his career as a nationally known architectural superstar. Unlike Frank Lloyd Wright, who dreamed up a lot of projects, Cass Gilbert's projects ended up being built. This included two more state capitols, the Woolworth Building in New York City, and the US Supreme Court Building in Washington, DC. The Woolworth Building was the tallest skyscraper in the world from 1913 to 1930.


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Authored by John A. Weeks III, Copyright © 2006, all rights reserved.
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