Charles E. Roberts

Summary

Charles E. Roberts (March 13, 1843 – March 1934) was an American engineer, inventor and an important early client and patron of Frank Lloyd Wright.[1] In 1896, Wright remodeled Robert's house in Oak Park.

Charles E. Roberts house in Oak Park, Illinois. The interior redesign was done by Frank Lloyd Wright in 1896.

Personal life edit

Charles E Roberts was born on March 13, 1843, near Rochester, New York.,[2] the son of David Roberts and his wife Elizabeth Whipple Roberts.[3]

On February 3, 1876, Roberts married Cleantha Wilbur. They had five children: Alice May, Owen Wilbur, James Wilbur, Charles Willis and Chapin Roberts, all of whom were born in Illinois. Alice May Roberts (born December 13, 1876), married Prairie School architect Charles E. White, Jr. (b May 18, 1876, in Boston) who worked in Wright's Oak Park Studio (1903–1905), and who later remodeled the Charles E. Roberts Stable, on November 26, 1901.[4] Mrs. Charles E. Roberts (née Cleantha Wilbur) was the maternal aunt of B. Harley Bradley of Kankakee, IL, another important Wright client (her sister, Alice M. Wilbur, married Byron Chapman Bradley).[2]

Roberts died in Oak Park in March 1934.[5]

Influence on architecture edit

Roberts was an influential member of the building committee of Unity Temple in Oak Park, Illinois.[6] For Roberts, Wright also developed a series of block plans from 1896 to 1903, notably several variations of the Quadruple Block Plan.[7] For Roberts, Wright also designed the Charles E. Roberts Summer Home and five houses for Charles E. Roberts, Ridgeland, IL. Wright remodeled the Charles E. Roberts House and designed the Charles E. Roberts Stable in Oak Park.[8]

Many architectural historians have mistakenly identified Charles E. Roberts as the father of Oak Park Studio architect Isabel Roberts,[9] As has been well documented, Isabel's father was James H. Roberts, of South Bend, Indiana, the son of William and Sarah Roberts of Utica, New York. Charles E. Roberts and James H. Roberts were not siblings, in fact, even though both men were mechanically inclined, successful inventors, no family or business connection has been found between them.

Career edit

Charles E. Roberts served as the President and Director of the Chicago Screw Company, President and Director of the Standard Screw Company[10] and Vice President and Director of the Pearson Machine Company.[11][12] Roberts invented a machine that could make the tops and bottoms of screws at the same time; he sold the business for a million dollars and devoted the remainder of his life to other inventions.[13]

Among those, Roberts was also the inventor of a machine for threading bung-bushes, for Crane Brothers Manufacturing Company, of Chicago.[14] Roberts held automobile patent #748015 for an electric car which was made and marketed by the Standard Screw Company, issued on Dec. 20, 1903.[15] Roberts also invented a “Machine for Cutting Butter or the like Material”, the patent of which was owned by Charles E. Roberts and his son, Owen W. Roberts, Chicago. The patent was filed on Feb. 26, 1907.[16]

Roberts served on the board of trustees of Lombard College in Galesburg, IL.[17]

References edit

  1. ^ Frank Lloyd Wright: An Autobiography, by Frank Lloyd Wright, p. 383
  2. ^ a b U. S. Census 1880
  3. ^ Hamilton Family Tree, rootsweb.com
  4. ^ History of Royalton Vermont, by Mary Evelyn Wood Lovejoy, p. 946
  5. ^ Death of Charles E. Roberts, Long Prominent Here" in ‘’Oak Leaves’’, 29 March 1934
  6. ^ Frank Lloyd Wright: An Autobiography, by Frank Lloyd Wright, pp. 153, 158
  7. ^ Frank Lloyd Wright and His Vision of the Future, by Franz Sdoutz
  8. ^ Frank Lloyd Wright: A Bio-bibliography, by Donald Langmead, p. 4
  9. ^ See for instance, The Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright, by William Allin Storer, Second Edition, p. 150
  10. ^ The Manual of Statistics: Stock Exchange Hand-book, Volume 26, edited by Charles M. Goodsell, Henry E. Wallace p. 713
  11. ^ Directory of Directors in the City of Chicago, Volume 1902, by Audit Company of New York, p. 209
  12. ^ See also: Minding our Business, The Story of the Standard Screw Company, by James A. Taylor
  13. ^ Frank Lloyd Wright: A Biography, by Meryle Secrest, p. 179
  14. ^ House Documents, Otherwise Publ. as Executive Documents: 13th Congress; by United States. Congress, p. 273
  15. ^ The Horseless Age: The Automobile Trade Magazine, Volume 13, p. 23
  16. ^ Official Gazette of the United States Patent Office, Volume 132, by United States. Patent Office, p. 24
  17. ^ The Universalist Register, Containing the Statistics of the Church, p. 103