I was looking to see if any Palmer & Lamdin houses had recently been listed and came across this image on Instagram.
It is a local landscape architect, Bob Jackson, who has apparently named his two dogs, Palmer and Lamdin.
Well played, Bob!
Showcasing the work and history of the architects Edward L. Palmer and William D. Lamdin and their firm, Palmer and Lamdin, which worked mostly on residential projects in Baltimore in the first 30 years of the 20th century.
I was looking to see if any Palmer & Lamdin houses had recently been listed and came across this image on Instagram.
It is a local landscape architect, Bob Jackson, who has apparently named his two dogs, Palmer and Lamdin.
Well played, Bob!
By the 1920's, the oldest parts of Roland Park were more than 30 years old, and it was beginning to become a settled neighborhood, not just a summer enclave. So, it needed a school which all the local children could attend.
There was a small school, known as Todd’s Academy, with an enrollment of 112 children, on the corner of Roland Avenue and St. John’s Road. But there was not enough room to expand to accommodate the children who now were living in the area.
At this time, Baltimore was embarking on an
ambitious plan, building schools in many of Baltimore's neighborhoods using the
services of some of the city's best architects. And certainly, schools of that
era reflect the classical architecture which was the watchword.
Oldies like me still refer to the school as Roland
Park Public School to delineate it from Roland Park Country Day School, located
directly across the street since the late 1970s.
The plan was to build a new school with 16 classrooms, and the enrollment was projected to be about 700 students, which equaled more than 40 children per classroom. The land for the school had been acquired by the City through eminent domain from property owned by the Gilman School.
The City’s allocation for the project was $430,000, which is about $48.6 million today. This included the design/build for the building and playgrounds, paving and plantings.
As
mentioned, Baltimore City tapped the architects Palmer & Lamdin to design
the school. Edward Palmer had been the “house architect” for the Roland Park
Company and later designed many of the most interesting houses in Homeland and
Guilford. Additionally, Palmer & Lamdin worked on sections of Bryn Mawr and
Friends Schools.
Many of
Palmer & Lamdin’s influences were inspired by their European travels. English, and
specifically Cotswolds-style architecture was a particular favorite, followed by the
chalets of Switzerland, and architecture from the Normandy region of France. They did design an Italian monastery
in Howard County in 1926, therefore, an Italian-style school building was not
much of a stretch.
The school is modeled on a classic Italianate design, unlike anything else in Roland Park. To emphasize its importance, the school was built on a small rise on the main street through Roland Park.
Key visual components of the Italianate style
include:
About 15% of Italianate buildings in the United
States include a tower, which, at Roland Park, was an early ventilation system.
In the original blueprints, which I was able to photograph at the University of Baltimore’s architectural archives, you can see that the building’s design didn’t vary too much from the architects’ plans and elevations.
The decorative stone on the sides of some of the windows still remain. As does the design for the small balcony above the front door.
This 1962 photograph of a class at the Junior High
School still shows some of the original details, including a “casualty clearing
station” sign for civil defense. This was at the height of the Cold War and
the school would have been used as a nuclear fallout shelter which would have
been in the basement of the building.
The initial specifications for the building were to
have had imitation stone trim, but there was a great deal of push-back for
this, as it didn’t have the look or long wear of natural stone.
Letters
to the editor of the Sun went back and forth, pro and con, and eventually the faux-stone
people won the battle.
Under threat of arrest, the City’s building
inspector had refused to issue a permit for the foundation and groundwork of
the new school. The Great Baltimore Fire of 1904 was still fresh in people’s
minds, and the codes called for fire-safe cinderblock in the foundation. After
several months, the issue was resolved, no one was arrested, and the
construction could finally begin.
By December of 1926, newspaper stories were reporting that the new Roland Park School was already crowded. By 1928, a proposal for an addition was put out for bid and once again, Palmer & Lamdin won the job.
The addition would be added onto the north side of the building, backing up to the property owned by Gilman School. The capacity went from 850 to nearly 1,400 students.But nothing’s ever easy. In the spring of 1929,
serious cracks were discovered in the wall of the gymnasium, then only three
years old. It was closed to students immediately. The vertical cracks went
along the structural piers which helped support the upper floor. It was said
that the cracks had been visible for about three years, but that they hadn’t
worried anyone, and they had just been plastered over!
The
inspectors had opened the wall, but when the city’s crew came to take
documentary photographs, the wall had been plastered and painted over to
disguise where the cracks were. The wall was finally torn out so that steel
girders could be installed, and it was found that there was no mortar between
the bricks!!!
Additionally,
surprise! there were issues with the cast stone that had been used, chunks of
it were dropping off, and they crumbled at a touch.
In the early 1980s, rumblings began with a rumor that the Roland Park Public School would be torn down, and an entirely new building would be constructed. A distant second-place option was to renovate the school and install all new utilities.
Of course, a mighty uproar ensued, but the school was enlarged and renovated as we see it today.Here are
some interesting facts I discovered when I was researching this lecture:
Between
1929 and 1931, the name of the street just to the south of the school was changed
from Linden Avenue to Deepdene Road.
Roland
Park School was once home to one of public baths scattered around the city and
funded by William Walters of Walters Art Museum fame. I found a small clip in a
1931 article in the Baltimore Sun which mentioned that the public baths located
at Roland Park School had the fewest users of any other public bath in the
city. Towels and soap were available for five cents per person.
It is down to the skill of the architects, Palmer & Lamdin, and the wisdom of those who followed, that the building that is Roland Park School is still intact, and retains most of its original classic Italianate design on its one-hundredth anniversary.
My sources for this lecture were:
A special
thanks goes to RPEMS alumni, Anson Stine, who helped with the drone footage.
I am giving a lecture about the 100th anniversary of the building of Roland Park School (now Roland Park Elementary/Middle School) and its 100th Anniversary.
Luckily, I knew that the University of Baltimore held some of the Palmer & Lamdin archives, so I checked to see whether they had some for RPEMS. They did!!!
Here are some of the best ones.