Congratulations, You’re the Owner of a House by Minerva Parker Nichols
How two families discovered their homes were designed by the first woman to found an architecture firm in the U.S.
How two families discovered their homes were designed by the first woman to found an architecture firm in the U.S.
Every now and then, the mailman delivers news that hits home. Just ask Rachel and Dan Solomon, or Matt and Rebecca Lisowski, who recently discovered via postmarked letters that their families’ residences were designed by Minerva Parker Nichols.
If Nichols’s name doesn’t register—it didn’t for the Solomons or the Lisowskis—you’re not alone. Molly Lester, who has been researching Nichols’s life and career for more than a decade, calls her "the most famous architect you’ve never heard of," despite being the first woman in the United States to practice architecture independently.
Over her lifetime, Nichols, who was born in 1862 and died in 1949, received more than six hundred mentions in newspapers around the world. When she was just 28—one year after opening her own practice in Philadelphia—her name was printed on average every third day. "These are the markers that show she was really respected," says Lester, associate director of the Urban Heritage Project at the University of Pennsylvania’s Stuart Weitzman School of Design. "They deepen our understanding of how long women have been actively shaping the built environment."
Now, Lester is exposing Nichols’s impact on architecture with an exhibition at UPenn, Minerva Parker Nichols: The Search for a Forgotten Architect. As lead scholar and cocurator, Lester traces a line through Nichols’s prolific career, detailing her designs of more than 80 buildings that include schools, churches, hotels, women’s clubs, and family homes.
Today, thirty surviving buildings have been identified. Recently, with the help of records and intel from Nichols’s descendants, Molly and her cocurator, Bill Whitaker, were able to connect the late architect to the historic Lubrecht Residence in Westport, Connecticut. That’s where the Solomon family has lived since 2016.
Built between 1935 and 1936, it’s one of the later projects in Nichols’s extensive portfolio. While some prospective buyers were dissuaded by the tight kitchen, wall-to-wall carpeting, and out-of-code knob-and-tube electrical, Rachel and Dan Solomon embraced the home’s leaded glass doors in the foyer, the big bay window overlooking the Saugatuck River, and the double-panel barn door that opens to an expansive front lawn where their children now play.
"Candidly we were not at all familiar with Minerva’s work," says Rachel of receiving the news. "We are so grateful to Molly for bringing her story to life and filling us in on the significant impact she had on architecture and women’s history."
"It’s unusual to get any real mail these days, so when we saw this, we weren’t sure what to make of it."
Since their discovery, the couple has come to know the house more intimately. "We see her fingerprints everywhere, from the design of the dowels on the staircase to the flow of the upstairs bedrooms," Rachel says. She and her husband have overseen a few surface-level restoration projects, including retiling the bathrooms, removing old carpets, and refinishing the original white oak floors. One of their bigger projects was turning the library and sitting room into a speakeasy-style space where they could host friends or chat after putting their kids to bed. They replaced the room’s original built-in bookshelves with a bar, a regret after having learned through Lester’s podcast, What Minerva Built, that bookshelves accessible to children were one of the architect’s hallmarks. "We were mortified," remembers Rachel. "As a result of that, we think long and hard before doing anything."
While the Solomons own one of Nichols’s later residential projects, Matt and Rebecca Lisowski are residing in one of her earliest, a design that predates her establishing her own firm. In 2021, the Lisowskis purchased the Ashmead House, built in 1888 for a Civil War cavalry soldier and now part of a scenic suburb in Philadelphia. Soon after, the family received a letter from UPenn notifying them of the property’s notable origins. "It’s unusual to get any real mail these days, so when we saw this, we weren’t sure what to make of it," says Matt. "We had no idea about the significance of our house, let alone how it related to Minerva’s broader portfolio."
See the full story on Dwell.com: Congratulations, You’re the Owner of a House by Minerva Parker Nichols
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