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Architect Gilbert Horton moved from St. Paul to set up
practice in Jamestown on this date in 1911. He liked it immediately. The
prairie appealed to me, he said. I cant really say why...
but I think it was the people. They were open and friendly. The further
west you got, the more cordial people seemed to be. Somehow, and again
I cant say how exactly, the people I met here were different. They
didnt take a friend for granted... and here were those wide open
spaces.
Those wide-open spaces later influenced many of his architectural designs.
Some have been lost, but many wonderful examples of his work still stand
across North Dakota.
Schools were Hortons bread and butter he built 256 in the
Dakotas and Montana. Many still exist, including some of his 91 country
schools. Horton later told the Fargo Forum, I came up with an innovation
for one-room schools that made me popular with school boards and teachers.
That was, of all things, a basement. Before 1910, most schools were erected
on a concrete slab. (A) basement (had) a place for the stove and provided
a lunch and playroom for the kids.
Horton designed 22 schools in Medina, Woodbury and Homer townships alone.
Others were built in Mandan, Millarton, Wilton, Edmunds and Ellendale.
He also designed main street businesses, the theater in Cavalier and the
hospital in Hettinger.
I worked hard and kept healthy, he said. Before cars
came in, I hopped branch-line trains to get to where the job was. When
cars came, I wore em out in rapid succession. Researcher James
Smorada writes Horton estimated he drove 22 different cars 2.5 million
miles in his work.
Horton also came up with a method for insulating glass, known as double-glazing,
which eliminated the need for storm windows. But perhaps his greatest
work came about when construction materials became scarce in the late
1920s. Using hollow bricks, he came up with a way to build walls and provide
insulation at the same time. He used this design for the school auditorium
in Rogers and then in a building that later housed the Jamestown Sun.
In 1930, Horton discovered he could construct arches on the ground by
bending, laminating and bolting long strips of wood together. These arches
were then raised into position, and the roof and walls were added. Using
this technique he built Jamestowns Hippodrome, a large Art Deco
auditorium that received national attention for its unusual design
at an unusually low cost. Unfortunately, the Hippodrome has
since been demolished.
When the Great Depression hit, it nearly finished Horton. Close to bankruptcy,
he had to sell his house, and the family subsisted by raising chickens.
Horton then landed a job as Jamestowns city engineer and was able
to stay afloat until the tide turned.
In 1968, Horton became the first North Dakotan to be named a Fellow to
a society of American architects; ironically, he received the honor for
work he began developing during the depression. The two things the state
had in abundance, then, were rocks and people needing work. Fields provided
the first; the WPA provided the second. Finding the correct grain of a
fieldstone, his crews learned to split and chisel rocks so precisely,
theyd square up like bricks.
Hortons first great work in stone was an auditorium in Dickey thats
unfortunately gone. Other treasures like the Wishek Civic Center and the
Medina Village Hall are still with us. As Horton once remarked, The
walls, theyre just as sound as the day they were put in place.
Source: Century of Stories, Jamestown ND, Stutsman Co, 1983
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prior permission from North Dakota Public Radio.
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