William Le Baron Jenney in Riverside

100 Years Later:
The Legacy of William Le Baron Jenney in Riverside

image of the L.Y. Schermerhorn Residence by William Le Baron Jenney
L.Y. Schermerhorn Residence by Jenney

On display through March 2008, the Riverside Historical Museum exhibit selects photographs of structures designed by Jenney for Riverside, including the Village’s symbolic Water Tower (1869). The photographic display is available to view on Saturdays from 10am-2pm. Group tours can be scheduled outside of the museum’s open hours.

William Le Baron Jenney (1832-1907) is most remembered as designing the First steel framed Skyscraper thanks to his design of the Home Insurance Building (1884) in Chicago. However, 15 years before that ground breaking achievement, Jenney was involved in another pioneering activity, the planned community of Riverside, Illinois. The Riverside Historical Museum is commemorating Jenney’s work in Riverside through a new exhibit of photographs.

A native of Massachusetts, William Le Baron Jenney (1832-1907) served as an engineer in the Civil War, where he designed fortifications at Corinth, Shiloh, and Vicksburg. He came to Chicago in 1867, forming the firm of Jenney, Schermerhorn and Bogart. Together with landscape architects Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux, Jenney’s firm helped develop Riverside, Illinois, the nation’s first planned “railroad suburb.” Jenney also was involved in the planning of Chicago’s extensive boulevard system, most notably Douglas, Garfield, and Humboldt parks.

image of the William T. Allen Residence by William Le Baron Jenney
William T. Allen Residence by Jenney

A National Historic Landmark, Riverside, Illinois’ unique look is often credited to Frederick Law Olmsted, who was hired in the fall of 1868 to design a suburb with the conveniences of the city with the beauty of the country. Yet, by spring of 1870, it was William Le Baron Jenney that would oversee the completion of Olmsted’s vision, as Olmsted’s firm resigned from the project. As superintendent, Jenney would go on to design the town’s hotel and many of the first homes (including his own).

Jenney is best known for his role in the development of the steel-framed skyscraper, in such designs as the Leiter I Building (1879; demolished), the Home Insurance Building (1884; demolished), and the Leiter II, Ludington and Manhattan buildings. Jenney’s architectural office was a well-known training ground for young architects, including Daniel H. Burnham, William Holabird, and Louis Sullivan.

Contact: history@riverside.il.us
Phone: (708) 447-2542

unlimited