Charles Kaiser Sumner (1874–1948) was an American architect, who practiced primarily in California.
Formative years
editBorn as Charles Sumner Kaiser in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania in 1874, Charles Kaiser attended the Columbia University School of Architecture. He received a traveling scholarship to Europe and the Middle East and was hired by McKim, Mead and White in New York, where he worked for Charles Follen McKim.
Career
editKaiser, as he was still known at the beginning of the twentieth century, moved to Berkeley, California in 1906 and opened a practice there, designing houses and the Claremont Club, as well as houses and the Farmers and Merchants Bank in Sacramento. In 1916, he moved to Palo Alto and established his practice in San Francisco.[1]
Responding to anti-German sentiment during World War I, he reversed his middle and last names in 1917, calling himself "Charles Kaiser Sumner."[1]
Sumner designed as many as fifty houses in Palo Alto, with twenty houses on the Stanford University campus. His work was primarily residential, with occasional commercial or institutional clients. At the request and personal expense of National Park Service director Stephen T. Mather, Sumner designed the Rangers' Club in Yosemite National Park in 1928. It is now a National Historic Landmark.[2]
Later years and death
editSumner practiced until 1941. He died in Palo Alto on May 25, 1948.[1]
References
edit- ^ a b c "Charles Sumner, Architect". Palo Alto Stanford Heritage. Retrieved 27 June 2011.
- ^ "Rangers' Club". National Park Service. Retrieved 27 June 2011.
External links
edit- Charles K. Sumner at Palo Alto Stanford Heritage