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Marjorie Newhouse collection of materials relating to A. E. Doyle

 Collection
Identifier: Coll 362

Scope and Contents

The collection consists of papers and photographs of and relating to architect Albert Ernest Doyle of Portland, Oregon, and his family. The materials were compiled by Doyle's granddaughter Marjorie Newhouse (1933-2015). Papers in the collection include a combination sketchbook and diary that Doyle kept while touring Europe in 1906; letters to his future wife, Lucie Godley; materials relating to Doyle and Godley's marriage; letters to his daughter, Kathleen Doyle (later Kathleen Stokes and then Kathleen Newhouse); and materials relating to Doyle's other trips to Europe. Photographs in the collection are primarily of buildings that Doyle designed, but also include portraits of Doyle, photographs of the Doyle family and their friends, and photographs of the Oregon coast.

Other materials in the collection include a 1919 issue of The Architect and Engineer, with an article about Doyle's work; a 1928 issue of the Reed College Bulletin, dedicated to Doyle's memory; ephemera of the Godley family, including a marriage certificate for Lucie Doyle's parents; a book that Albert E. Doyle owned; a passport for Kathleen Doyle; a history of the Godley, Gray, and Doyle families; compiled biographical information and clippings about Doyle and other artists from Portland; and a drawing with an inscription to Marjorie Newhouse.

Dates

  • Creation: 1864-2000

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Collection is open for research.

Conditions Governing Use

The Oregon Historical Society owns the materials in the Research Library and makes available reproductions for research, publication, and other uses. The Society does not necessarily hold copyright to all materials in the collections. In some cases, permission for use may require seeking additional authorization from copyright owners.

Biographical Note

Albert Ernest Doyle, known as A. E. Doyle in his life, was born in 1877 in Santa Cruz, California, and moved with his family to Portland, Oregon, as a child. In 1893, he began an apprenticeship with the Portland architectural firm Whidden and Lewis. He worked for Whidden and Lewis until 1901, when he moved to New York to work for architect Henry Bacon. While in New York, Doyle took architectural courses at Columbia University. Doyle returned to Portland to work once more at Whidden and Lewis in 1904, and designed the Lewis & Clark Centennial Exposition's Forestry Building in 1905. Doyle subsequently founded his own firm.

In 1906, Doyle traveled in Europe for several months. After returning to Portland, he married Lucie Godley (1877-1953); the couple had four children: Kathleen, Helen, Billy, and Jean. In 1908, Doyle's firm received its first major commission: the Meier & Frank department store in downtown Portland.

Doyle designed commercial and public buildings as well as residences, both in Portland and elsewhere in Oregon. Notable structures designed by Doyle in Portland included the Multnomah County Public Library, the U.S. National Bank building, the Lipman Wolfe Department Store, the Northwestern Bank Building, the Pittock Block, several buildings on the Reed College campus, the Pacific Building, the Terminal Sales Building, and Multnomah Civic Stadium (now Providence Park). Residences that Doyle designed included the homes of H. Russell Albee, Frank J. Cobb, Bert Ball, Joseph Bowles, Henry Wentz, and Mary Frances Isom.

Doyle was diagnosed with kidney disease in 1925, but continued to work. He died in January 1928. After his death, his firm was renamed A. E. Doyle and Associates; it retained this name until 1943, when member Pietro Belluschi (1899-1994) purchased the firm and renamed it for himself.

Source: "Albert E. Doyle (1877-1928)," by Val Ballestrem, Oregon Encyclopedia, https://www.oregonencyclopedia.org/articles/doyle_albert_e/

Extent

0.8 Cubic Feet (1 legal document case; 1 slim legal document case; 1 oversize folder (20x24) in shared flat box)

Language of Materials

English

Abstract

Papers and photographs of and relating to Albert E. Doyle (1877-1928), an architect from Portland, Oregon, and his family. Materials include photographs of buildings that Doyle designed, correspondence, a combination diary and sketchbook that Doyle kept while traveling in Europe, and biographical and genealogical materials. The collection was compiled by Doyle's granddaughter Marjorie Newhouse (1933-2015).

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Gift of Marjorie Newhouse, March 2013 (Lib. Acc. 27875).

Related Materials

The Oregon Historical Society Research Library also holds two collections of Doyle's architectural drawings: the A. E. Doyle architectural papers, Mss 3022; and the Doyle and Patterson architectural papers, Mss 3075. An annotated travel guide that Doyle owned during his 1906 trip to Europe is designated Coll 1057.

Related Materials

Additional papers of A. E. Doyle, as well as his personal library, are held by the Reed College Library, Portland, Oregon. Other architectural plans and papers from A. E. Doyle and associated firms are part of the Pietro Belluschi papers at Syracuse University Library, New York.

Processing Information

Processed and initially cataloged by Shawna Gandy in 2013. Collection description was expanded into a full collection guide and revised to conform to current standard in October 2024. Collection was titled "Marjorie Newhouse collection of materials relating to Albert E. Doyle" prior to November 2024.

Title
Guide to the Marjorie Newhouse collection of materials relating to A. E. Doyle
Status
Completed
Author
Jeffrey A. Hayes
Date
2024
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Language of description note
Finding aid is written in English.

Repository Details

Part of the Oregon Historical Society Research Library Repository

Contact:
1200 SW Park Ave.
Portland OR 97205 United States
5033065204
5033065240