A. E. Doyle

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Albert Ernest Doyle (1877-1928) was a prolific architect in the U.S. states of Oregon and Washington. He is most often credited for his works as A.E. Doyle.

Doyle was born in Santa Cruz, California, and moved with his family to Portland, Oregon where he ultimately established his practice. He enrolled at Columbia University in 1903, after an apprenticeship with the firm of Whidden & Lewis, where he substantially designed the Forestry Building of the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition.[1][2] While at Columbia, he worked in the office of architect Henry Bacon.

After returning to Portland, he and fellow architect William B. Patterson established their firm Doyle & Patterson, employing among others the young, later-famous architects Pietro Belluschi and John Yeon. Doyle & Patterson's Revival- and Italianate-style works set the tone for other commercial buildings in Portland, especially the use of glazed terra-cotta. A series of residential cabins along the Oregon and Washington coasts inspired a regional style that was widely emulated in the 1930s. Doyle also designed Portland's public drinking fountains known as Benson Bubblers.[3]

Unbuilt works include additions to the now-demolished Portland Hotel and Doyle's own United States National Bank. Doyle also drew up an original design for the Equitable Building which called for an Art Deco skyscraper design.[4] The building ended up being built after World War II by Pietro Belluschi in its noted and early International Style design.

Doyle is sometimes credited with the design for Timberline Lodge on Mount Hood near Government Camp, Oregon, but he was merely one of several architects solicited to draw up plans for the building, which ended up being designed by Forest Service architects.[5]

Doyle died in Portland in 1928.

Doyle's collection of architecture books was purchased by Reed College.[6]

Contents

Buildings marked (NRHP) are on the National Register of Historic Places

  • Corvallis Public Library

  1. ^ Deering, Thomas P. Jr.. Site History: Building On Mount Hood. Mountain Architecture: An Alternative Design Proposal for the Wy'East Day Lodge, Mount Hood Oregon. Retrieved on 2007-09-11.
  2. ^ Historic Portland: Lewis & Clark Expostion. pdxhistory.com. Retrieved on 2007-09-11.
  3. ^ Portland Water Bureau
  4. ^ Bosker & Lencek. Frozen Music: A History of Portland Architecture. 
  5. ^ Deering, Thomas P. Jr.. Timberline Lodge: A Major Hotel Comes To Mount Hood. Mountain Architecture: An Alternative Design Proposal for the Wy'East Day Lodge, Mount Hood Oregon. Retrieved on 2007-09-11.
  6. ^ Reed College Library Special Book Collections

  • Bart King, An Architectural Guidebook to Portland. Layton, Utah: Gibbs Smith Publishing, 2001.
  • Lena Lenceck and Gideon Bosker, Frozen Music, a history of Portland Architecture. Oregon Historical Society, 1985.
  • Lawrence Kreisman, Made to Last: Historic Preservation in Seattle and King County. Historic Seattle Preservation Foundation, 1999.
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