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Ben and Harriet Schulein House

Coordinates: 42°31′2.7″N 96°24′6.5″W / 42.517417°N 96.401806°W / 42.517417; -96.401806
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Ben and Harriet Schulein House
View from the southwest
Ben and Harriet Schulein House is located in Iowa
Ben and Harriet Schulein House
Ben and Harriet Schulein House is located in the United States
Ben and Harriet Schulein House
Location2604 Jackson Street
Sioux City, Iowa
United States
Coordinates42°31′2.7″N 96°24′6.5″W / 42.517417°N 96.401806°W / 42.517417; -96.401806
Built1913
ArchitectWilliam L. Steele
Architectural stylePrairie School
NRHP reference No.97001289[1]
Added to NRHPOctober 30, 1997

The Ben and Harriet Schulein House, also known as the Ben Schulein House, is a two-story historic residence located at 2604 Jackson Street, Sioux City, Iowa, in the United States. Designed in 1913 for a locally prominent Jewish businessman and his wife by William L. Steele (1875–1949), it represents a turning point in Steele’s development as an architect by introducing Prairie School features.

Steele had served in the office of the famous Chicago architect Louis Sullivan (1856–1924) prior to settling in Sioux City in 1904. Sullivan criticized the then-dominant styles of architecture based on historical revivals or eclectic mixing of historical features, championing instead progressive architecture based on concepts such as elimination of historical styles, simplification, functional and “true” expression of a building’s purpose, embrace of new technology, and the frank use of materials without disguise. Another of Sullivan's protégés, Frank Lloyd Wright (1867–1959), was inspired by Sullivan to pioneer the Prairie Style of architecture at the turn of the 20th Century. However, Steele had been relatively unsuccessful in interesting clients in the Sioux City area in his progressive ideas about architecture, although he had designed a number of mildly progressive American Craftsman bungalows and the Davidson Building (Sioux City, 1912–1913), a Sullivanesque office block.

The wide eaves and strong horizontal lines of the Schulein House represent Steele’s first tentative steps in the direction of the Prairie School. From now on, whenever budget and client could be stretched far enough, Steele would turn away from other architectural styles and pursue Prairie Style. Steele’s evolution as a noted Prairie architect would continue with two Prairie-influenced buildings in 1915: the Carnegie Library (Armour, South Dakota) and the Livestock National Bank (Sioux City). These in turn led to the Woodbury County Courthouse (1915–1918, with George Grant Elmslie as principal designer), the First Congregational Church (1916–1918), the Charles Mix County Courthouse (1916–1917), the H.H. Everist House (1916–1920), and many other celebrated Prairie School designs in Sioux City and elsewhere in Iowa, Nebraska, and South Dakota.

Steele continues the horizontal line of the porch eaves across the porte-cochère to the left. Similarly, he continues the thin water table between the brick foundation and the main floor windows, becoming the coping for the porch wall. These and other visual devices emphasize the horizontal lines.

See also

References

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.