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[Description and date of item], [Box/folder number], Faris, Faris, and Stephens, Architects, Records, A&M 3330, West Virginia and Regional History Center, West Virginia University Libraries, Morgantown, West Virginia.
Gift from Stephens, Tracy, 1999 April 28
Gift from Stephens, Tracy, circa 2015 October 12
Frederick Fisher Faris
Frederick F. Faris was born in St. Clairsville, Ohio on August 1, 1870. His family moved to Wheeling, West Virginia two years later. Faris was educated in Wheeling public schools. He worked as a draftsman for Edgar Wells in the Wheeling firm of Klieves, Kraft and Company (a Wheeling architectural and building contractor company), before he left the city to work for architects in Chicago and New York City. Faris returned to Wheeling in 1892, where he entered into a partnership with Joseph Leiner forming Leiner & Faris. In 1894, Faris left that partnership and formed the partnership of Franzheim, Giesey & Faris, with Edward B. Franzheim and Millard Fillmore Geisey. Franzheim left the partnership in 1899, and the pair continued as Geisey & Faris. In 1911, he entered private practice as F.F. Faris Architect. Faris died June 27, 1927, at 56, from complication resulting from strep throat and is buried in Wheeling's Greenwood Cemetery. Faris married Nellie Egerter Faris (1876-1973) in 1897. The couple had no children. Following his death, Faris' nephews Frederic P. Faris and Philip V. Faris took over the practice.
Frederic P. Faris
Frederic P. Faris was born February 14, 1901, in Wheeling, West Virginia. He was likely educated in Wheeling public schools. He attended Cornell University, graduating with a BA in Architecture in 1923 and an MA in Architecture in 1924. Faris worked along with his older brother Philip Faris (1899-1974), an engineer, in his uncle's practice prior to his death. After Frederick Faris' death, the practice was styled as Faris Associates. In the early 1950s, the firm was known as Frederic Faris AIA. Faris died July 14, 1964. He is buried in Wheeling's Greenwood Cemetery. Faris married Mary Elizabeth Steinbicker in 1947. The couple had no children. The practice passed to Tracy R. Stephens.
Tracy Ralston Stephens
Tracy R. Stephens was born in Cameron, West Virginia on November 14, 1901, but lived in Western Pennsylvania prior to the family relocating to Morgantown in the late 1910s. Stephens initially attended West Virginia University, but since WVU has no architecture program he transferred to Carnegie Institute of Technology in Pittsburgh, where he completed his architecture studies. He graduated in 1930. Stephen had worked for the Clarksburg firm of Edward J. Wood & Son Licensed Architects while at Carnegie Tech. Following his graduation, he became a member of the practice where he worked from the early 1930s until World War II. He left the practice during the war to work at Fairchild Aircraft in Hagerstown, Maryland. After the war, he returned to Clarksburg and started his own practice, Tracy R. Stephens Architect in 1947. In the early 1960s, Frederic Faris persuaded Stephens to join his practice to help with an abundance of commissions with West Liberty State College (now West Liberty University) in West Liberty, West Virginia, especially the Hall of Fine Arts. Upon the death of Frederic Faris, the architectural firm's name changed again, this time back to Faris Associates, and was comprised of Tracy Stephens, Philip Faris, and Merle Peterson (Peterson later became the West Virginia University Campus Architect). After Philip Faris retired in 1972, the firm became Tracy R. Stephens, AIA, Architect. Stephens died in Cumming, Georgia on November 4, 2003, and is buried in Cedar Grove Cemetery, Mount Morris, Pennsylvania. Stephens never married.
The Faris, Faris, and Stephens, Architects, Records consists of the records of approximately 300 to 350 architectural design
projects dating from circa 1890 through 1990. This collection represents the architectural design work of three prominent
West Virginia architects: Frederick F. Faris (1870-1927), Federic P. Faris (1901-1964), and Tracy R. Stephens (1901-2003).
Faris, Faris, and Stephens were collectively responsible for a broad range of architectural designs including private residences,
banks, churches, schools, public housing, and recreational and industrial buildings. Additionally, these architects also designed
furnishings, hardware, and signage for several of these design projects. Geographically, this collection is centered on Wheeling,
but also includes projects from West Virginia's Northern Panhandle and regionally including Ohio and Pennsylvania.
Series 1 consists of architectural drawings, including tracings (pencil drawings) and ink on vellum drawings of plan, elevation,
and sections; structural, masonry, hardware, and furnishings detail drawings; structural steel drawings; construction drawings;
and preliminary design sketches. There are also white prints and blueprints, often used for field measurements, as well as
bound presentation set drawings for public and client perusal and approval. Additionally, there are sub-contractors' blueprints,
mostly from local Wheeling ornamental and structural iron works. Lastly, there are architectural renderings for a number of
projects, most in color. This series also includes original measured drawings prepared by other Wheeling architects including
Charles W. Bates and Edward B. Franzheim. How these drawings became part of this collection is unclear, but they were probably
loaned to Frederick F. Faris for use in remodeling projects and never returned.
Series 2 includes textual records, such as correspondence, reports, price quotations for material and other services, specifications,
contracts, prints/drawings, and other documents regarding architectural projects. Rough contents list is available upon request.
Series 3. Addendum of 2015 October 12 includes materials regarding the accomplishments of architect Tracy Stephens and commemoration
of his work in Wheeling, WV. Featured projects include Alterations to the West Virginia Independence Hall and the Paul M.
McKay Residence, with drawings, notes, and specifications included. There are also project-specific financial records spanning
several years of Stephens's career; newspaper clippings featuring articles about his work, brief correspondence from the American
Institute of Architects about historical research being conducted on Stephens, and materials from Frederic Faris's education
at Cornell University.
Series 4 includes architectural books collected by Faris, Faris, and Stephens throughout their careers. There are guidebooks
for designing various kinds of buildings, like schools, hospitals, and residences; biographies of prominent architects; and
task-specific manuals for projects like floodproofing and modernizing buildings. The majority of the books were published
from 1921-1991, so they demonstrate some of the ways that best practices and design choices evolved throughout the 20th century.
Additionally, these books provide insight into the influences behind Faris, Faris, and Stephens's work. A list of book titles
is provided in each box's scope and contents note.
Includes tracings (pencil drawings) and ink on vellum drawings of plans, elevations and sections; structural, masonry, hardware, and furnishings detail drawings; structural steel drawings; construction drawings; and preliminary design sketches. There are also white prints and blueprints, often used for field measurements, as well as bound presentation set drawings for public and client perusal and approval. Additionally, there are sub-contractors' blueprints, mostly from local Wheeling ornamental and structural iron works. Lastly, there are architectural renderings for a number of projects, most in color. This series also includes original measured drawings prepared by other Wheeling architects including Charles W. Bates and Edward B. Franzheim. How these drawings became part of this collection is unclear, but they were probably loaned to Frederick F. Faris for use in remodeling projects and never returned. The drawings have been arranged into subseries according to the purpose of the building or property represented. There is likely crossover between projects represented in this series and those represented in series 2.
location: Moundsville, WV
project no: 1499; architect: Faris Associates; location: 324 Main Street, Wheeling, West Virginia
architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Flushing, Ohio
location: Wheeling, WV
architect: Stevens, W. A.
location: Wheeling, WV
vellum
architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: Fifth Street and Hanover, Martins Ferry, Ohio
architect: Bates, Charles W.
project no: A-132
architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: Ohio County, West Virginia
project no: 1178; architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: 1129 Market Street, Wheeling, West Virginia
project no: 1227; architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: 2060 National Road, Wheeling, West Virginia
location: Wheeling, WV
location: Wheeling, WV
architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Intersection of Barnesville and National Road, Wheeling, West Virginia
location: Steubenville, OH
architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: Wheeling, West Virginia
location: Wheeling, WV
blueprints
project no: 1077; architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: Nineteenth Street, Wheeling, West Virginia
project no: 1077; architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: Wheeling, West Virginia
location: Akron, OH
architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: North Main Street, Wheeling, West Virginia
architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Wheeling, West Virginia
architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Market Street, Wheeling, West Virginia
architect: Faris, Frederick
architect: Faris, Frederick
architect: Faris, Frederick
architect: Faris, Frederick
For additional drawings see A&M 3330 Series 1 Boxes 16, 65, 76, 207
For additional drawings see A&M 3330 Series 1 Boxes 16, 65, 76, 207
rolled
architect: Faris, Frederick
architect: Faris, Frederick
location: St. Clairsville, OH
location: Wheeling, WV
architect: Bates, Charles W.
architect: Bates, Charles W. (?)
location: Wheeling, West Virginia
project no: 312; architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Bellaire, Ohio
architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: 1196 Market Street, Wheeling, West Virginia
Bloch Brothers Tobacco Co.
architect: Faris, Franzheim, and Giesey
mounted prints
project no: 1207; architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Wheeling, West Virginia
rolled
project no: Com A 131; architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Seventeenth Street, Wheeling, West Virginia
warehouse is entirely of poured concrete construction
project no: 1078; architect: Van Alstyne, R.E.; location: Wheeling, West Virginia
rolled
rolled
rolled
location: Moundsville, WV
location: Moundsville, WV
project no: 1452; architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Hazlett Avenue, Wheeling, West Virginia
location: WV
project no: 1200; architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: Ohio County, West Virginia
location: Bridgeport, OH
architect: Edward J. Wood and Son Associates; Stephens, Tracy; location: Clarksburg, West Virginia
project no: 1167; architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: Wheeling, West Virginia
architect: Dayton, Albert F.; location: Marshall County, West Virginia
rolled
rolled
project no: 1439; architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: WV Route 7, Marshall County, West Virginia
project no: 1002; architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Wheeling, West Virginia
location: Wheeling, WV
rolled, ink on vellum
architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Folsom, West Virginia
architect: Cellarius & Hilmer; location: Cincinnati, Ohio
architect: Dayton, Albert F.
project no: Pi-8562; architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Wheeling, West Virginia
project no: 1046; architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: Wheeling, West Virginia
architect: Dayton, Albert F.
architect: Bates, Charles W.
location: West Liberty, WV
project no: 1109; architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: West Liberty, West Virginia
project no: 1463; architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: West Liberty, West Virginia
location: West Liberty, WV
rolled
rolled
rolled
Robert J. Bennett title block
rolled
project no: 1409; architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Wheeling, West Virginia
opened 1911, burned 1914, reopened 1915
rolled, Fred Faris with Charles Bates title block
project no: 1443; architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: Wheeling, West Virginia
mounted blue prints
location: Wheeling, WV
location: Wheeling, West Virginia
architect: Bates, Charles W.
mounted blue prints
mounted blue prints
mounted blue prints
mounted blue prints
mounted blue prints
mounted blue prints
project no: 1076; architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: Roney's Point, West Virginia
location: Moundsville, WV
architect: Bates, Charles W.
project no: 1288; architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: Kruger Street, Elm Grove, West Virginia
rolled
architect: Faris, Frederick
architect: Faris, Frederick (?)
architect: Faris, Frederic
likely for 1929 renovation of WV State Prison
rolled
location: Wheeling, WV
location: Wheeling, WV
location: Wheeling, WV
location: Wheeling, WV
architect: CC Smith and Son; location: New Martinsville, West Virginia
architect: Stephens, Tracy; location: West Virginia
project no: 1127; architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: Roney's Point, West Virginia
rolled
location: WV
location: WV
location: WV
rolled
Rolled
location: Wheeling, WV
location: Wheeling, WV
location: Wheeling, WV
originally designed by Frederick F. Faris 1905
project no: WPCR-359; location: 57 Fourteenth Street, Wheeling, West Virginia
project no: 1235; architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Wheeling, West Virginia
location: Wheeling, WV
architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Wheeling, West Virginia
location: Cumberland, MD
architect: Faris, Frederic
architect: Faris, Frederic
rolled
rolled, dedicated 1918
architect: Schmertz and Erwin; location: Table Rock Lane, Wheeling, West Virginia
architect: Haag and Assoc.
project no: 1024; architect: Faris, Frederic; location: St. Clairesville, Ohio
project no: 1049; architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: McMechen, West Virginia
mounted print
architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Bellaire, Ohio
architect: Faris, Frederick
architect: Faris, Frederick
architect: Faris, Frederic
architect: Faris, Frederick and Millard Fillmore Giesey (?)
location: Martin's Ferry, Ohio
location: Martin's Ferry, Ohio
mounted prints
project no: 1242; architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: Edgington Lane, Wheeling, West Virginia
location: Bellaire, OH
architect: Franzheim, Edward
architect: Franzheim, Edward
project no: 1225; architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: Wetzel County, West Virginia
project no: 1237; architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Wheeling, West Virginia
architect: Faris, Frederic
architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Wheeling, West Virginia
architect: Faris, Frederic; location: 41 Fifteenth Street, Wheeling, West Virginia
architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Woodsdale, Wheeling, West Virginia
location: Miltonsburg, OH
architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: Wheeling, West Virginia
architect: Faris, Frederic; location: North Main Street, Wheeling, West Virginia
project no: 418; architect: M.R. Johnke, W.F. McCulloch
project no: 1094; architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: 745 North Main Street, Wheeling, West Virginia
architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Wheeling, West Virginia
location: Barnesville, OH
rolled
project no: 1165; architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Wheeling, West Virginia
architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Wheeling, West Virginia
project no: 1053; architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: Water Street, Wheeling, West Virginia
architect: Franzheim, Edward
architect: Franzheim, Edward
rolled, designed by F.F. Faris 1903-1906
project no: 1281; architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Wetzel County, West Virginia
architect: James Barbitta and Assoc.
location: West Liberty, WV
project no: 1280; architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Bethlehem, West Virginia
architect: Faris, Frederic; location: 719 North Main Street, Wheeling, West Virginia
project no: 1166; architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: Cecil Place, Wheeling, West Virginia
architect: Gandee, Thomas and Sprouse
rolled, last building designed by F.F. Faris
ink on vellum
rolled
architect: Faris, Frederic; location: 36 Belmont Street, Bellaire, Ohio
architect: Engstrom and Wynn
location: Wheeling, WV
location: Wheeling, WV
location: Wheeling,
location: Wheeling, WV
location: Wheeling, WV
location: New Martinsville, WV
project no: 1096 A; architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: Hawthorne Court, Wheeling, West Virginia
rolled
rolled
architect: Franzheim, Edward
architect: Franzheim, Edward
architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Hawthorne Court, Wheeling, West Virginia
rolled, Elmhurst Mansion
architect: Hecky-Yee / The Dillon Company
architect: Faris, Frederic
architect: Bates, Charles W.
architect: Franzheim, Edward (?); location: Wheeling, WV
architect: Franzheim, Edward (?); location: Wheeling, WV
architect: Faris, Franzheim, and Giesey; location: Wheeling, WV
Theater restoration following fire
location: 1112 Market St., Wheeling, West Virginia
architect: Faris, Frederic; location: St. Clairesville, Ohio
rolled, ink on vellum
Includes drawings of mixed use spaces, unidentified drawings, maps, and other material that did not fit into other categories.
architect: Faris, Frederic (nephew); location: Martins Ferry, Ohio
location: Ohio County, West Virginia
ink on mylar
architect: Stone and Thomas
architect: Stone and Thomas
architect: Stone and Thomas
architect: Stone and Thomas
architect: Faris, Frederic; location: Wheeling, West Virginia
architect: Faris, Frederick and Millard Fillmore Giesey
Includes textual records, such as correspondence, reports, price quotations for material and other services, specifications, contracts, prints/drawings, and other documents regarding architectural projects. Many boxes contain records for multiple projects. There is likely crossover with projects represented in series 1.
Includes materials regarding the accomplishments of architect Tracy Stephens and commemoration of his work in Wheeling, WV. Featured projects include Alterations to the West Virginia Independence Hall and the Paul M. McKay Residence. There are also project-specific financial records spanning several years of Stephens's career; newspaper clippings featuring articles about his work, brief correspondence from the American Institute of Architects about historical research being conducted on Stephens, and materials from Frederic Faris's education at Cornell University.
Includes materials developed near the end of Stephens's career and after his death commemorating his work. This includes newspaper clippings featuring articles about Stephens and his projects in Wheeling, WV; brief correspondence from the American Institute of Architects about historical research being conducted on Stephens; and a copy of In Wheeling magazine featuring an article about the city's architectural history.
Includes materials used and created in daily activities at the Faris Associates/Tracy R. Stephens, AIA, Architect firm. This is comprised of the firm's financial records from periods in the late 1940s and early 1950s; notes, drawings, and specifications for the West Virginia Independence Hall (also known as the Wheeling Custom House) and Paul M. McKay Residence projects; notes from a Civil Engineering Mechanics course taken by Frederic Faris; and the Thirty-Third Architectural Exhibition Yearbook (1930).
Includes architectural books collected by Faris, Faris, and Stephens throughout their careers. There are guidebooks for designing various kinds of buildings, like schools, hospitals, and residences; biographies of prominent architects; and task-specific manuals for projects like floodproofing and modernizing buildings. The majority of the books were published from 1921-1991, so they demonstrate some of the ways that best practices and design choices evolved throughout the 20th century. Additionally, these books provide insight into the influences behind Faris, Faris, and Stephens's work. A list of book titles is provided in each box's scope and contents note.
Books included: A Treasury of Contemporary Houses; The Second Treasury of Contemporary Houses; Planning School Buildings; Planning Guide for Radiologic Installations; Housing Design; Cities of Latin America; On Hospitals; Lettering on Buildings; The Eighth Wonder; Fascinating Spirited Cincinnati; Materials for Architecture; Progressive Architecture; Architectural Construction Volume 2; American Building Art 19th Century; American Building Art 20th Century
Books included: Toward Better School Design; Restaurants, Lounges, Bars; School Planning; Airports; Music, Acoustics & Architecture; Financial Survey of Urban Housing; American Architects Directory; Specifications for a Hospital; Floodproofing Non-Residential Structures; Design Guidelines for Flood Damage Reduction; Retrofitting Flood-prone Residential Structures; Manufactured Home Installation in Flood Hazard Areas; Lighting in Architecture
Books included: Biographies on Gropius, Neutra, Mendelson, Sullivan, Niemeyer, Gaudi, Nervi, Wright, Corbusier, Aalto, and Van Der Rohe; Planning and Building the Modern Church; Minimum Property Standards; U.S. Industrial Design; Landscape Architecture; Architectural Detailing; Living Spaces; Pencil Techniques in Modern Design; Shops & Stores; Urban Landscape Design
Books included: Landscape for Living; Makers of Contemporary Architecture; Metal Plate Lithography; The New World Architecture; The Effective Architect; Early American Homes
Books included: The New Style; Classical Greece; Planning Elementary School Buildings; Schoolhouse; Planning Secondary School Buildings; The Business of Architecture; Architectural Practice; The American Courthouse; The Practical Requirements of Modern Buildings
Books included: Houses for Good Living; Decorative Ornament; School Architecture; Display; Prado Madrid; Standard Plumbing Details; Architectural Engineering; Ticket to Paradise; Railroad and Bus Terminal Station Layout; Eero Saarinen on His Work
Books included: Hospitals, Clinics, and Health Centers; Design for Modern Living; An American Synagogue for Today and Tomorrow; The Writings and Sketches of Matthew Nowicki; Modern Physics Buildings; Designs for Outdoor Living; Stained Glass for Amateurs; Your Dream Home -- How to Build It for Less than $3500; Hospital Color and Decorations; Plan Reading for Home Builders; Manual Design & Construction; Structural Shop Drafting Textbook Volume 1; Design and Construction of General Hospitals; Aluminum in Modern Architecture Volume 1 and Volume 2
Books included: Modernizing Buildings for Profit; Modern Interiors; Curtain Wall Construction; Schools; Apartments and Dormitories; Modern Architecture in Mexico; Manual of Design; Repairing and Remodeling Guide for Home Interiors; Acoustical Design; Communities for Better Living; Guide for Planning School Plants; Hospital Planning
Books included: Perspective Projection; Smaller Retail Shops; Buildings for the Elderly; With Heritage So Rich; Shops and Stores; Three Centuries of Notable American Cities; Modern Furniture; Hospitals -- Integrated Design; Doctor's Offices and Clinics; Bridges
Books included: Builders of West Virginia; Your Solar House; Industrial Architecture; Good Practice in Construction; Airport Engineering; Strength of Houses; Eliel Saarinen; Architects' Specifications -- How to Write Them; The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Knowledge; The Modern Small Hospital; Nicholson's Building Director, Volume I and Volume II
Books included: Architectural Design Collaborators 1; Architectural Design Collaborators 2; Persien 1; Masters of Modern Architecture; Building Design Handbook; Building Insulation; Foundation Engineering; Changing the Skyline; The Construction of Small Houses; Architecture for the New Theatre; The Practical Application of Acoustic Principles; School Planning Handbook; Elliot 7: Drawing Materials, Surveyors, Supplies; Standards for Schoolhouse Construction; Building Practice Manual