The
University Neighborhood
Hyde Park-Kenwood
The increasing
attractiveness of Hyde Park-Kenwood led many of Chicago's wealthiest
businessmen, including University trustees Martin A. Ryerson, Harold
Swift, and Julius Rosenwald, to build impressive homes in the area.
They were joined by prosperous middle-class families and by the great
majority of University faculty, who were attracted by comfortable homes
in an appealing neighborhood within walking distance of the campus.
Their houses were frequently designed by firms with distinguished national
and regional reputations: Frank Lloyd Wright, George W. Maher, Holabird
& Roche, Wilson & Fox, Marshall & Fox, Alfred Alschuler,
and Solon Beman among them.
A
Creative Center
Some of the architects
who designed the University's Gothic buildings secured commissions for
other work in Hyde Park. Henry Ives Cobb, the University's first architect
and the creator of its campus plan, built three houses in Hyde Park
in the 1890s, one for President William Rainey Harper. Dwight H. Perkins,
whose "Prairie Gothic" design for Hitchcock Hall incorporated ornamentation
based on Midwestern fauna, produced three Hyde Park residences. Howard
Van Doren Shaw, the fashionable architect of many North Shore estates
and the University's Quadrangle Club, executed more than fifteen commissions
in the neighborhood, many of them sophisticated adaptations of traditional
English manor houses.
Horace B. Mann, one of
the principals of Mann, MacNeille & Lindberg and a brother of a
University physics professor, led his firm to design four separate complexes
of linked rowhouses that came to be called "professors' houses." Bordering
shady Hyde Park streets and incorporating all the amenities of comfortable
upper-middle-class life, these rowhouses epitomized the successful integration
of a large university into a prosperous residential neighborhood.