Tower Tumult in Bartlesville

© Mark Hertzberg (2024)

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The future of Frank Lloyd Wright’s landmark Price Tower in Bartlesville, Oklahoma is uncertain. The Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy has initiated legal proceedings against Cynthia Blanchard, the owner of the building, over her sale of Wright artifacts from the building, including one of the office chairs Wright designed, to a mid-century design dealer in Dallas. The Building Conservancy has an easement on the property, which, it says, prohibits the sale of any of the artifacts.

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Wright designed the tower in 1952 as a combination office and apartment building, and it opened in 1956. The exterior and two-story pinwheel floor plan are derived from Wright’s unrealized design for the St. Mark’s-in-the-Bowery apartment buildings in New York City (1927-1929).*

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The Inn at Price Tower hotel opened in 2003. Blanchard said in a television interview that it was no longer profitable to operate the hotel and its Copper Bar and Restaurant. She announced the closure August 9. Hotel and restaurant employees were laid off and tenants of the building were given notice to move out within 30 days. She said in an interview that the closure is not necessarily permanent, and that she hopes to find a buyer for the building which, she says, is no longer profitable for her to operate.

The photographs are from our stay at the hotel in April 2011. Scott Perkins, who was the Curator of Collections and Exhibitions and at the Price Tower Arts Center, was our host, graciously allowed me to photograph every nook and cranny of the building (he is now Fallingwater’s senior Director of Preservation and Collections).

Oklahoma Frank Lloyd Wright Price Tower 014.JPGThis photograph and the one below were taken looking up on the external staircase.

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Oklahoma Frank Lloyd Wright Price Tower 010.JPGPrice Tower reflected in a nearby building

Oklahoma Frank Lloyd Wright Price Tower 019.JPGThe living room of one of the original apartments

Oklahoma Frank Lloyd Wright Price Tower 018.JPGThe sitting room on the lower floor of one of the two-story hotel rooms

One can only hope that my sunset photo of Price Tower was not a harbinger of things to come.

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*While Price Tower was designed around Wright’s idea of a taproot tower, the late Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer told me that it is not a taproot tower because it is tied into the foundation of the adjoining two-story office building. He told me that the SC Johnson Research Tower in Racine is Wright’s only realized taproot tower.

Author’s note: Thank you to the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy for their attention to the tower, and to the Building Conservancy’s John Waters for his editing notes on this article.

Please scroll down for previous posts on this site.

Links:

Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy coverage:

https://savewright.org/endangered-price-tower-in-bartlesville-oklahoma/

Local television coverage:

https://www.newson6.com/story/66b6bcf3e64a7a286feca72e/price-tower-in-bartlesville-closes-due-to-financial-struggles-future-uncertain

A New Look at That Odd New House in Hyde Park

© Mark Hertzberg (2024)

In print, on a phone, on a tablet, on a television screen…it doesn’t matter what the medium, as modern media constantly bombards us with countless images. We are immune to most of them. Just a small handful of still photographs stop us in our tracks. We were reminded of that recently after the attempted assassination of former president Donald Trump. Such are the moments in history that we remember because of a still photograph. Is that the case in the World of Wright?

There are umpteen photographs of Frank Lloyd Wright’s completed buildings. What sticks in my mind today, however, is an arresting photograph of Wright’s Frederick C. Robie House. It is not another same-old, same-old photo of the house. Rather, it is one of Wright’s ship-like, Prairie-style house at 58th and Woodlawn in Chicago’s Hyde Park neighborhood under construction in the summer of 1909.

Robie Construction.jpgPhotograph courtesy of Eric M. O’Malley, from his private collection

This photograph stopped me in my tracks when I was reading the latest issue of “OA+D,” the Journal of Organic Architecture and Design. Each issue is devoted to a single topic, in this case the Robie House. Wright scholar Kathryn Smith gives readers a definitive account of the history and architectural significance of the house, “Space was no longer static, but dynamic. It was a revolutionary new idea, and one that would profoundly change 20th century architecture in the decades ahead.” Her article is richly illustrated with drawings from the Wasmuth portfolio, and historic and contemporary photographs. There are about 30 construction photos taken between April 1909 and April 1910, mostly by Harrison Bernard Barnard.

I found this one particularly striking. I was mesmerized. It reminded me of something Wright scholar Jonathan Lipman wrote to me when I was writing my book about Wright’s Thomas P. Hardy House, “One can get a sense of its impact in 1906 Racine by imagining if, instead, a swooping, curved titanium house by Frank Gehry were built on the site a century later.” What, indeed, did people in Hyde Park think when they saw this rising in their neighborhood?

With no television to distract them after dinner, did neighbors regularly stroll after supper, making it a point to pass by the odd house rising at 58th and Woodlawn? Were they struck, as I was by this photograph, or did they murmur in disapproval? Although Wright and Mamah Borthwick (Cheney) would not leave for Europe together until the fall of 1909, had word of their affair traveled from Oak Park to Hyde Park? Was this odd house then a confirmation of prejudices people might have had against a man who was upending social mores? Or were they progressive thinkers, perhaps people who taught at the nearby University of Chicago which opened in 1892, who were excited and intrigued by what they were seeing on that corner lot?

The house had been rising for several months when this photograph from Eric M. O’Malley’s private collection was taken in the summer of 1909. The superstructure of the house is almost complete. We have a sense of what the house will look like, but it is still a mystery in many respects. For example, we see only empty spaces where magnificent leaded glass windows will be installed. I think it is that sense of mystery, of the unknown, that excited me.

Robie was built 16 years after the World’s Columbian Exposition in nearby Jackson Park. Only Louis Sullivan’s Transportation Building had broken the fair’s landscape of one Classical Revival-style building after another. Wright’s Heller, Blossom and McArthur houses are nearby , but are not as startling as Robie would have been in 1909. Rockefeller Chapel nearby at the University of Chicago would not be built until 1928, and it would be a traditional Gothic design, reinforcing the startling design of Robie, perched on its corner lot. Startling and groundbreaking, indeed.

As I thought about this article for a month or more, the photograph of Robie brought to mind one more Wright construction photo. It is of the SC Johnson Research Tower in Racine. The Tower was designed in 1943/44, and built between November 1947 and November 1950. It is Wright’s only realized taproot tower.* This photograph reminded me of a child’s stacking toy when I ran across it in Johnson’s archives when I was writing my book at the Research Tower in 2009. What, then, did people living near 1525 Howe Street in Racine (two miles from my home) think when this began rising above their traditional houses?

LR Constr. toy.jpgPhotograph courtesy of SC Johnson Archives

Dozens of books have been published with photographs of Wright’s finished work. The late Sam Johnson, whose father H.F. Johnson Jr. commissioned the SC Johnson Administration Building, the Research Tower, and Wingspread, among others (unrealized), remarked to me “The world does not need another book about Frank Lloyd Wright.”** Perhaps it needs one comprised soley of photographs of his buildings under construction.

P.S. I think Eric O’Malley was also dazzled by the photograph…it appears twice in the magazine, the first time as a chapter title page.

Footnotes:

*The late Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer, who wrote the Foreword to my book about the Research Tower, told me that although Price Tower looks like a taproot tower, it is not one because it is tied into the foundation of the adjoining two-story office building. He said Racine was Wright’s only realized taproot tower.

**The context for Johnson’s remark was that I was pitching my idea for a book which became my “Wright in Racine” book (Pomegranate: 2004). The rest of his observation was, “…but it does need one about his work in Racine.” I was elated and treated myself to a Dove ice cream bar after leaving our meeting.

Link to OA+D store and Robie issue of the Journal:

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https://store.oadarchives.org/product/journal-oa-d-v12-n1

Please scroll down for previous articles on this blog

 

Windows on Main Street

© Mark Hertzberg (2024)

I have written before that I always challenge myself to see something new even on my umpteenth visit to a given Frank Lloyd Wright – designed building. I was blasé today as I took my friend Robert Hartmann on a tour of the Thomas P. Hardy House on Main Street in Racine, Wisconsin, as he prepared for Wright in Wisconsin’s forthcoming “Wright and Like” tour scheduled for September 7. Hartmann expects between 300 – 500 guests and wanted to figure out the best way for guests to wind through the compact house, and how many docents he would need.

The light was less than spectacular and there was nothing new to see. I had biked to the house so my only camera was my smartphone. I think phone cameras sometimes oversaturate colors, but that camera was all I had when I unexpectedly saw this in the second floor windows above the south stairs:

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So much for being blasé!

Here is a link for more information about the tour:

https://wrightinwisconsin.org/wright-and-2024

I served on Wright in Wisconsin’s board for 14 years. They are the only statewide Wright group, originally founded in cooperation with the state Department of Tourism to promote Wright tourism in Wisconsin.

Please scroll down for previous articles or blog posts.

Wright’s Birthday: Wright in the Abstract

Photos © Mark Hertzberg (2024)

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It is June 8, Frank Lloyd Wright’s 157th birthday. Social media sites devoted to Wright are abuzz every year with birthday tributes. Sometimes I have something to post on “the day,” but not always. (June 8, 1968 or 6.8.68, my high school graduation day, is more significant to me personally, but that’s another story). I had nothing in mind to post this year until I took my customary morning bike ride and passed his Thomas P. Hardy House and the SC Johnson Administration Building and Research Tower which are on my bike route in Racine. I thought back to the fall of 2022 when my alma mater, Lake Forest (Illinois) College, honored me with a 50th anniversary Homecoming dual photo exhibit. One gallery was devoted to my career as a photojournalist, the other to my Wright-related photography. As I pedaled down Main Street this morning I decided to share the latter with you. The thesis of the exhibit was to present “Wright in the Abstract,” rather than only in record shots or head-on photos of his work. My challenge was to cull a few dozen photos of several thousand. The photos are in chronological order, based on the year of the commission, not the year of completion.

Romeo and Juliet Windmill, Spring Green (originally 1896, rebuilt 1938 and 1992):

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Thomas P. Hardy House, Racine (1904-1905):

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Meyer May House, Grand Rapids (1908):

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Hollyhock House, Los Angeles (1917):

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Taliesin III, Spring Green (1925):

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Tour guests in Wright’s bedroom at Taliesin III:

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Hillside Drafting Room, Spring Green (1932):

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SC Johnson Administration Building (1936) and Research Tower (1943-1944):

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Herbert F. Johnson Jr. Home (Wingspread), Wind Point (1937):

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Florida Southern College, Lakeland (Beginning in 1938):

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SC Johnson Research Tower, Racine (1943-44):

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Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York (1943):

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Price Tower, Bartlesville (1952):

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Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church, Wauwatosa (1956):

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Lindholm Service Station, Cloquet, Minnesota (1957):

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Marin County, California, Civic Center (1957):

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I will close with a photo I took just a few weeks ago when I was given the opportunity to preview the newly-restored Hillside Theater (1952), which is being inaugurated this evening, literally just as I am putting this piece together:

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People have often asked me what attracts me to Wright’s work. As a photographer, I have a visual attraction to his work. That grew in part out of my newspaper photo assignments at the SC Johnson Administration Building. But beyond that, as I began to study his work, I was struck by the evolution of his designs from the 1890s until his death in 1959. Happy birthday, Frank Lloyd Wright, and thank you for your contributions to helping us reimagine the spaces in which we live, work, and worship.

Please scroll down in http://www.wrightinracine.com for previous posts

 

Happy 100th Roland Reisley Day!

© Mark Hertzberg (2024)

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The Wright World – particularly the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy – celebrates Roland Reisley’s 100th birthday Monday May 20. Reisley still lives in the house that Wright designed for Roland and his late wife, Ronny, in 1951 in “Usonia,” in Pleasantville, New York. He is the only original Wright client still living in his Wright home.

Roland Reisley 2017 017.jpgRoland and Ronny working with Wright on the design of their Wright home

Reisley Longstreth BC 2014 003.jpgRoland was honored as a founding member of the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy by Janet Halstead and Richard Longstreth at the 2014 conference in Phoenix.

Reisley BC 2014 008.jpgThe Reisley House was the topic of a discussion at the 2014 conference. Susan Jacobs Lockhart moderated.

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Reisley Levine BC 2014 005.jpgRoland and Neil Levine chat at the conference.

Reisley Kazor BC 2014 002.jpgRoland and Ginny Kazor at the Phoenix conference.

Roland Reisley 2017 010.jpgRoland greets conference attendees in his living room during the 2017 conference.

I happened to walk to the 2018 conference meetings at Monona Terrace in Madison from the hotel with Roland one morning. The hallways in Monona Terrace are lined with photographs by Pedro Guerrero, including this one of David Henken, Rolland, and Wright. He pointed the photo out to me and graciously posed for me next to it:

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Thank you, Roland, for your friendship, your grace, and your contributions to the Building Conservancy. You have often told people that Wright was not the ogre some people describe him as. You explain that he was very accommodating to you and to Ronny when he was designing your home. My family and I had the privilege of dinner at the house with you and Barbara Coates, thanks to your auctioning such an evening at the Building Conservancy’s annual silent auction.

Barbara and Roland 001.jpgBarbara and Roland, 2011

Happy birthday, my friend…our friend!

On-line celebration with the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy:

https://savewright.org/happy-100th-birthday-roland-reisley/

Please scroll down for previous posts on the website including, most recently, photos of the newly restored Hillside Theater.

 

Raising the Curtain on Hillside Theater Restoration

© Mark Hertzberg (2024)

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The public celebration of the restoration of Hillside Theater at Taliesin will be June 8, Frank Lloyd Wright’s 157th birthday. The event is sponsored by the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation and Taliesin Preservation, following the multi-year, $867,000 project. Funding was made possible by a Save America’s Treasures grant from the National Park Service and matching funds raised from corporations and donors. According to Taliesin Preservation, “preservation was divided into three phases: elimination of water infiltration, rehabilitation of the basement, and restoration of the Hillside Theater.”

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I had the opportunity to photograph the theater in mid May. Let’s open the doors to the theater and take a look.

 

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Our first impression, of course, is of “compression…”

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…and then, “release…”

LR Frank Lloyd Wright Hillside Theater Restoration 009.jpgMr. and Mrs. Wright and their guests sat in the seats to the right.

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LR Frank Lloyd Wright Hillside Theater Restoration 030.jpgFrom Wright’s “An Autobiography:” When I was a small child I used to lie awake listening to the strains of the Sonata Pathetique—Father playing it on the Steinway square downstairs in the Baptist minister’s house at Weymouth. It takes me back to boyhood again when I hear it now.” [FLLW: Collected Writings, v. 4, p. 147.]

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LR Frank Lloyd Wright Hillside Theater Restoration 005.jpgThe Buddha statues will be put back in their original places flanking the stage.

Acknowledgements: Thank you to Taliesin Preservation for facilitating my access to the theater, and to Taliesin historian Keiran Murphy for her explanation of the wood panel with the score from “Pathetique.”

Links:

Taliesin Preservation on the theater restoration:

https://www.taliesinpreservation.org/hillside-theater-preservation/

Keiran Murphy’s website:

https://www.keiranmurphy.com

Please continue to scroll down for previous articles on http://www.wrightinracine.com

 

My Wright Eye – May 2024

Photos © Mark Hertzberg (2024)

I had a half hour wait before meeting 22 guests coming from coast-to-coast to Frank Lloyd Wright’s Thomas P. Hardy House on their weeklong Road Scholar tour (I am with the group as a Road Scholar guide for three days on these tours, as they travel through Racine, Milwaukee, Madison, and Spring Green). I have been in the house countless times, including leading 14 of these tours. While I try to see something new on every visit to a familiar Wright design, I did not think there was anything new to see in the house.  I had already played Wordle and my other daily games phone games. I had already looked at my emails. I plopped down in a chair in the living room and looked up. I looked up some more and then I knew what I had to do…I had to lie down on the floor and start taking pictures of the ceiling.

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Then I walked over to the stairs and looked up at the second floor:

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When I then went outside to greet the bus, I saw reflections of Wright’s leaded glass front hallway windows and their reflected images in a new way:

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Today, as our guests toured Wright’s American System-Built duplex at 2132/34 W. Burnham Street in Milwaukee, I looked down instead of up. The duplex is being restored with help from a Save Americas Treasures grant. These are the back stairs:

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On-line links:

Road Scholar’s “Architectural Masterworks of Frank Lloyd Wright tour:

https://www.roadscholar.org/find-an-adventure/22976/Architectural-Masterworks-of-Frank-Lloyd-Wright

Frank Lloyd Wright’s Burnham Block:

http://wrightinmilwaukee.com

Please continue to scroll down to view and read previous posts

“Furniture Done Wright” Now on Exhibit

© Mark Hertzberg (2024)

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Hiring Frank Lloyd Wright to design a building meant more than just a bricks and mortar job. The entire space – interior as well as exterior – had to be cohesive. His organic designs often included furniture and lighting fixtures he proposed for his clients. Examples of his interior designs are now on display in “Furniture Done Wright” in SC Johnson’s Wright Gallery: At Home with Frank Lloyd Wright in Fortaleza Hall on the company’s campus in Racine, Wisconsin.

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LR SCJ Wright Furniture 007.jpgA dining chair from Taliesin (c. 1925) frames a view of the library table for the Edward C. Waller House Remodeling (1899).

LR SCJ Wright Furniture 016.jpgThe library table, in turn, frames the Taliesin chair and an “origami chair” from Taliesin West (1946).

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Chairs from the David and Gladys Wright House (1950):

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LR SCJ Wright Furniture 031.jpgHanging lamp, William R. Heath House (c. 1905) – the lines are distorted by the camera angle.

While many of the pieces were designed specifically for his clients, he also designed the “Taliesin Collection” for the Heritage-Henredon company in 1955. A number of those pieces are included in the exhibit:

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In 2017 SC Johnson acquired a collection of two dozen models of Wright-designed homes by retired architectural draftsman Ron Olsen from Janesville, Wisconsin. The pieces remain on exhibit in the Wright gallery as “Model Citizen: Ron Olsen and Frank Lloyd Wright.”

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The furniture exhibit is on view until spring 2026.

To schedule a visit to the exhibit:

www.scjohnson.com/visit

Ron Olsen’s models, my story from 2017:

https://wrightinracine.wordpress.com/tag/ron-olsen/

Please scroll down in www.wrightinracine.com to read previous articles on the website.

Minerva’s 100th Birthday Bash

Photos © Mark Hertzberg

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Guest of honor: Minerva Montooth / Guests: 135 / Location: The Frank Lloyd Wright Visitors Center (formerly Riverview Terrace Restaurant) at Taliesin, recently named to the National Register of Historic Places. /  Hugs and kisses: Many / Photos taken: Many / Minerva: Ebullient as she greeted guests, seated in front of gold “100” balloons!

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LR Minerva 100th B'day Party 008.jpgMinerva, her daughter, Margo, and son, Andrew

LR Minerva 100th B'day Party 009.jpgThere was a video slide show

LR Minerva 100th B'day Party 015.jpgGranddaughter Divina Allan and great-granddaughter Eliza Harry-Ray, 4

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LR Minerva 100th B'day Party 031.jpgOlivia Dubson, a special friend of Minerva’s

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LR Minerva 100th B'day Party 049.jpgMargo reads from Minerva’s baby book…Minerva, a surprise twin, was late, setting the stage for a lifetime habit, Margo said with a chuckle.

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LR Minerva 100th B'day Party 052.jpgIndira Berndtson

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Birthday cakes were not always part of Depression-era birthdays. David Pedersen and Bazile Booth of Soups I Did It Again in Spring Green made up for any missed cakes with their angel food creation for Minerva:

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LR Minerva 100th B'day Party 073.jpgYes, Happy B/day Minerva! Indeed!

Scroll down for previous posts, including “The Marvelous Minerva Montooth” post

Happy 100th Birthday, Minerva!

© Mark Hertzberg

I have never repeated a post before, but today is a worthwhile day to do that, in honor Minerva Montooth on her 100th birthday! A link to my September 2021 post profiling her and her career in the World of Wright,  “The Marvelous Minerva Montooth,” is below her photo. Happy birthday, dear friend!

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https://wrightinracine.wordpress.com/2021/09/29/the-marvelous-minerva-montooth/

Scrolling down brings previous blog posts.