Remembering Ann MacGregor

Photos and text © Mark Hertzberg (2024)

Ann MacGregor one of Mason City, Iowa’s heroes in helping save Frank Lloyd Wright’s last surviving hotel, the Park Inn, and the adjacent City National Bank, died peacefully October 2, it was announced today.

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The hotel and bank buildings, which opened in 1910, had deteriorated so badly that the city had put them up for sale on eBay in the late 1990s or early 2000s. Mason City rallied to save the buildings. Ann served as Executive Director of the newly formed Wright on the Park. Today the Historic Park Inn Hotel is a popular boutique hotel for visitors to Mason City, whether or not they are there on a Wright pilgrimage.

Ann was a genial, giving person. Her obituary outlines her life of service, including as a nurse on the medical ship SS HOPE and as a public health nurse for the Migrant Action Program in the late 1960s in Mason City.

https://www.bratleyfamilyfuneralhomes.com/obituary/ann-macgregor

In 2013 she published a book about her six years service around the world on the HOPE, beginning in 1958 [it is no longer in print]:

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I met Ann in May 2005 when the late Bob (Dr. Robert) McCoy, another one of Mason City’s heroes in saving the hotel and bank building, invited me there to give a talk, and I began photographing the buildings. They were still in a raw state. Ann and I connected in two other ways, one as passionate bicyclists.

The other story tells you quite a bit more about Ann. She began corresponding with Marshall Jones after I told her about his insights into Wright’s work. Jones is serving two consecutive life terms in a Wisconsin prison for a double murder.

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When I interviewed Jones in 2008 for a project about the criminal justice system he told me how much he enjoys reading “anything I can get.” I sent him my Wright in Racine book. He quickly sent me an incisive review back. We began corresponding, in large part about Wright. How much does Jones understand Wright? In addition to Ann being impressed by his insights, the late Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer corresponded with Jones, as well, after I sent Pfeiffer some of Jones’s letters about Wright’s work. When I sent the late Ron McCrea Jones’s review of his Building Taliesin, McCrea wrote me that Jones picked up on a point that no one else had, and he was going to quote him in a talk at Taliesin West. Ann corresponded with Jones for many years, and Jones often wrote me how much he appreciated her letters and friendship. Now I must write him about Ann’s passing.

Ann’s memorial service will be Saturday November 30, as noted in the obituary. I will leave you with a photo of Ann in the bank building in 2010, and of Ann and Bob McCoy she and Wright on the Park were honored with the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy’s prestigious Wright Spirit Award on October 13, 2012, during the group’s annual conference:

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Thank you, Ann, for your friendship and service.

(My remembrance of Bob McCoy is at:

https://wrightinracine.net/tag/bob-mccoy/

Please scroll down for previous posts on this website.

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 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

Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer, 1930 – 2017

Photos (c) Mark Hertzberg, 2018

LR MAM Wright Exhibition 099.jpgThere are numerous tributes to Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer who died yesterday in Scottsdale, Arizona. I am grateful to him for his friendship and for the Foreword he wrote for my book about the SC Johnson Research Tower in 2010.

His contributions to the World of Wright are well known. There is another part of Bruce’s story that few people know. In 2008 I befriended Marshall Jones, a young African-American man serving two consecutive life sentences in Wisconsin for a double homicide. I got to know Marshall when I interviewed him for a book about the criminal justice system. Circumstances led to my sending him my first two books about Wright’s work in Racine, a year apart. I was impressed by Marshall’s responses to the books and other Wright books I had people send him. I shared his insights with Bruce…who began corresponding regularly with him, as well. Marshall often mentioned how much he enjoyed hearing from Bruce. He was moved that such a giant would pay attention to him.

We had corresponded for many years and talked on the phone, but I did not get to meet Bruce and OsKar Munoz until February, 2011, when Bruce spoke at the opening of a Wright exhibition at the Milwaukee Art Museum.

LR MAM Wright Exhibition 048.jpgBruce and OsKar Munoz at the Milwaukee Art Museum.

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LR MAM Wright Exhibition 093.jpgBruce greets Floyd and Caroline Hamblen.

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Bruce and OsKar returned to Wisconsin on April 27, 2011 for a Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation meeting for site owners at the Johnson Foundation. I was astounded to hear that Bruce had never been to Wingpsread before. I was pleased to be able to document his visit that raw April day.LR Wright Fdtn. Wsprd 005.jpg

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LR Wright Fdtn. Wsprd 026.jpgBruce is flanked by portraits of H.F. Johnson, Jr. and Frank Lloyd Wright before giving his remarks to the conferees.

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LR Wright Fdtn. Wsprd 079.jpgBruce signs books for Ann MacGregor from Wright on the Park (Mason City, Iowa), above, and Mike Lilek and Denise Hice from Wright in Wisconsin, below.

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Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer, 1930 – 2017.

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Thank you, Bruce.

When was Wright possibly wrong?

(c) Mark Hertzberg 2017

When was Wright possibly wrong? For one, when he possibly made the handwritten notation “Lake Delavan” on one of the drawings for a proposed summer cottage and boathouse for J.D. Stamm in 1945 (Project #4513). And so the project has been listed as being meant for Delavan Lake in both Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer’s “Monograph” of Wright’s work and Volume 3 of “The Complete Works.”

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[Both drawings, above, (c) The Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation Archives (The Museum of Modern Art / Avery Architectural & Fine Arts Libary, Columbia University, New York), and used with permission.]

Sue and John Major, stewards of Wright’s Fred B. Jones estate (“Penwern”) on Delavan Lake commissioned me to write a book about Jones and Penwern in 2013. (The book will be published by the Wisconsin Historical Society Press in the fall of 2018.) I was intrigued by the Stamm project, and excited about it, when I saw it in “The Complete Works,” because I was not aware of such a late project for the lake. The latest documented Wright commission on Delavan Lake was from 1907.

A check of the known Wright correspondence in Anthony Alofsin’s “Index to the Taliesin Correspondence” and with Sally McKay at the Getty Research Center showed only one Stamm letter, an unrelated 1953 note from Stamm to Wright about a movie. Nor was there any record of the Stamms or the project in the Delavan area. Local historians wondered if the project was for Lake Nagawicka, near Delafield, 45 miles and two counties away from Delavan because they had heard of a Stamm marine-related business there.

The hunt was on to find the family. Inquiries to local historical societies and libraries in Delafield were not fruitful. As I often have while working on the book, I turned to Mary Stauffacher, a friend, who is a whiz at navigating ancestry.com. She found John Davies (not David) Stamm’s daughter. Lisa Stamm told me that her father was working on the project for his father, Victor Stamm, not for himself. While she was too young to remember much about the project, she remembered meeting Wright when she was about 3 years old in the late 1940s. And she thought that Lake Nagawicka was, indeed, the likely site of the project because her grandparents, who lived in Milwaukee, would summer on Lake Nagawicka, but she was not certain.

But I could not go on supposition. Lisa passed my questions on to her family, and a few days ago her daughter, Vanessa Parsons, came up with the definitive proof that the project was indeed meant for Lake Nagawicka, rather than Delavan Lake. I was bleary-eyed, nearing the end of an overnight bus trip from Milwaukee to Minneapolis, when I opened her welcome email with close up photos of the block lettering on her copy of the Stamm project. It clearly reads Lake Nagawicka. It took five months of on-and-off digging, but the mystery is solved and the record is set straight, with the generous and patient help of others.

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[Both photos above courtesy Vanessa Parsons and the Stamm family, and (c) The Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation Archives (The Museum of Modern Art / Avery Architectural & Fine Arts Libary, Columbia University, New York), and used with permission.]

Brian Spencer, AIA, who has extensively researched the Delavan Lake work, who did restoration work on Wright’s Wallis – GoodSmith House on Delavan Lake in 1992-93 and rebuilt the Penwern boathouse which had been destroyed by a 1978 arson fire in 2005 (working from a single sheet of Wright’s drawings), suggests that the mistake by Wright (or whoever made the notation) was understandable: Delavan? Delafield? Unless one is from the area, it would be easy to mix them up knowing that Wright had about a dozen commissions on Delavan Lake.

It is disappointing  to not know more about the commission and why it was not executed, but it is satisfying to know for certain which lake it would have been built on. Some Wright aficionados have asked for the exact location so they can hunt satellite photos, given that the project evidently would have been connected to an existing house. The hunt for that information continues.