A MAGNIFICENT ENTHUSIASM
Robert Reamer was the master builder behind Old Faithful Inn
written by Laura Zuckerman
The rustic masterpiece that is Old Faithful Inn at Yellowstone National
Park rises from a dreamscape of snow-touched peaks, mountain lakes and the
eponymous geyser that draws millions to a remote corner of Wyoming. Stoked by
fires at the earth’s center, the geyser captured the imagination of a nation when
survey parties reported their findings in the early 1870s.
In the lexicon of American architecture, Old Faithful Inn is an icon equivalent
to the landscape that fostered the birth of the world’s first national park; and it
is a structural statement that at once announces man’s presence in the wilds and
underscores his subservience to nature. The seven-story, rough-cut log structure,
which Yellowstone historian Lee Whittlesey describes as a “cultural mecca,” does
not face the ever-erupting geothermal feature that is its namesake; rather, the front
of the hotel is perpendicular to the geyser.
Modesty in the face of magnificence is a fitting metaphor
for Robert Chambers Reamer, the self-taught architect behind
the early 20th-century building that Stephen Loos, senior
director of the American Institute of Architects Western
Mountain Region, argues exhibits a scale and power equal to
its backdrop and speaks in the vernacular through the use of
native stone and logs from its locale.
Unlike the landmark inn that continues to draw applause
from the architectural
elite and gain fame
among the uninitiated,
Reamer has largely
languished in obscurity
even as several of his contemporaries, such as Frank Lloyd
Wright, were among the first American architects to achieve
cultlike status. Reamer was a taciturn man whose buildings
spoke volumes, a builder whose repertoire ranged from lodges
to urban edifices and whose styles encompassed everything
from the Prairie School to Art Deco. He was a designer
whose creativity was as vast as the West in which he built
the bulk of his celebrated buildings. Reamer was not limited
to a single architectural
idiom any more
than the landscape in
which he worked was
limited by uniformity.
If Old Faithful Inn is, as Whittlesey contends, the crown
jewel of lodges in the national park system, then it also
is the standard against which subsequent park structures
are measured. “What you get with someone like Reamer
through the work he does at Yellowstone is a major influence
that has come to shape national park architecture,”
says Jeffrey Ochsner, professor of architecture at the
University of Washington.
Loos suggests the inn has come to symbolize more than
an amenity. “What architecture with a capital ‘A’ brings to
the world is that uplift from the norm, the ability to inspire,”
he says.
Seattle-based architectural historian Lawrence Kreisman
paid early homage to Reamer with a 1977 study that
describes the Oberlin, Ohio, native’s brief formal education.
Chronic headaches forced Reamer to leave school when he
was 12. At 13, he departed for Detroit where a stay with relatives
led to work with an architectural firm. It was the dawn
of a career in architecture, gained by apprenticeship and
earned by a man whose native abilities in design and whose
respect for the marriage of beauty and utility — a hallmark
of the Arts and Crafts movement — would open doors
from San Diego to Seattle, from Clinton, Massachusetts, to
Gardiner, Montana, and produce an array of buildings, from
train stations to movie palaces.
Reamer was a man whose personal demons — alcoholism,
the death of a young wife, the amputation of a leg in
his last years, according to author Ruth Quinn — were kept
in abeyance by work that lent both form and substance to
his dreams of beauty. In her definitive work on the architect,
Weaver of Dreams: The Life and Architecture of Robert C. Reamer,
Quinn writes that Reamer was a man possessed in 1903
during the seminal design and construction phases for Old
Faithful Inn. Quinn notes that a visitor to the site during the
period observed that the 30-year-old Reamer’s single-minded
devotion to the project superseded his personal comfort,
causing him to neglect undressing at night or breakfasting
in the morning.
He had his reasons. Working in an era framed by a fresh
distinction between the professions of architecture and
structural engineering, and poised on the threshold of a shift
in the aesthetic that would usher in modernism — with
design to mimic the sleek lines of the machine at the expense
of ornamentation — Reamer at Yellowstone was the right architect at the right time for the right building.
It need not have been so. Quinn’s research shows
that turn-of-the-century proposals for the lodging
near Old Faithful veered wildly from a proposed
Queen Anne-style hotel to nine rustic cottages. It
was at this critical juncture that fate favored Reamer
in the form of financier Harry W. Child, head of the
company that held the hotel concession at the national
park. Child became acquainted with Reamer’s
work in San Diego and plucked him from that burgeoning resort community to
the outpost that was Yellowstone.
Old Faithful Inn, which opened in 1904, is a structure that builds on itself like
a living organism, the same principle behind the towering fireplace, which former
Montana State University professor of architecture David Leavengood notes is in
fact four outsize fireplaces backed into one another with fireplaces in each of the
four corners. The inn is a structure of paradoxes, says Denver architect Loos, at
once grand and cozy, achieving drama through the use of humble materials.
It is doubtful the inn could be reproduced today in an era
of rock-star architects, says Seattle architect Leavengood. The
sensitivity Reamer exhibited in his design points to a deep
understanding of the site and of the West, and that is not
the spirit many builders of log mansions bring to their work
today. “There is a marketing of timbered buildings now that
attempts to give them legitimacy by saying they are following
a historical tradition endemic to the West,” Leavengood
adds. “But some of these log buildings are bastardizations
of Reamer’s work; they are big monsters, lumbering on the
landscape instead of working with it.”
Preeminent Victorian art critic John Ruskin said great
architecture was infused with a magnificent enthusiasm,
describing builders capable of producing works that
expressed the “restlessness of the dreaming mind”; builders
who, through their work, gestured toward great truths
of benefit to all society. Elevated above the crowd, those
builders sought refuge below it, with humility their lodestar.
Reamer scholars note that he shunned the limelight and even
in the 1920s, at the pinnacle of his career in Seattle, he was
characterized as enigmatic, if not self-effacing. In a thumbnail
newspaper sketch of Reamer uncovered by Kreisman, he
is portrayed as “a poet, an artist in design” who “appears to
be looking down, while he builds looking up.”
Reamer’s affiliation with Child was fruitful personally,
professionally and financially, and before he would
depart for what would become a highly successful career in
Washington State, Reamer built a residence for the Child
family at Mammoth Hot Springs in 1908 — the Executive
House — whose strong horizontal lines evoke the Prairie
School. In Weaver of Dreams, Quinn notes that commentary
by architectural experts suggests the Executive House is
likely the single extant example of that style in the Rockies.
Reamer’s association with the Metropolitan Building
Company in Seattle would cement his reputation for versatility,
with a series of Art Deco-style office-cum-storefront
structures in the growing city contributing to its transformation
from a cultural backwater to an urban area of distinction,
says Kreisman. “He left a legacy of modern, handsome,
innovative buildings,” he says.
Those include the Skinner Building, completed in 1926,
one of a host of Reamer buildings listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The Skinner is a dignified
structure with a sandstone façade that stands in stark contrast
to the ornate movie house it contains, with the 5th
Avenue Theatre “ … the most authentic example in that
era of traditional Chinese architecture and decoration outside
of Asia,” according to Kreisman. The Edmond Meany
Hotel, completed in 1931 but since extensively altered
and renamed, was the first continuously poured slip-form
concrete building in the Northwest, Leavengood says. The
boldly vertical hotel is a striking example of the modernist
principle, espoused by Wright mentor Louis Sullivan, that
form follows function.
The hotel was one of two major works Reamer completed
before his death. The Fox Theater in Spokane, Washington,
opened in September, 1931, at the peak of the city’s Golden
Jubilee. The poured concrete structure is a model of restraint,
with solidity and simplicity — those characteristics that
designer William Morris said were central to architecture
— among its abiding charms. Elizabeth Godlewski acted as
development director for the Fox during a seven-year restoration
that began in 2000, the same year it faced demolition
had it not been for Spokane residents who rallied around the
building once hailed as “phantasmagoric.” Ornamentation
is at a minimum in the theater, an austerity that Godlewski
says heightens its allure.
Reamer died of a heart attack in 1938 at the age of 64,
outliving a small but select band of stalwart supporters: his
second wife, lifelong patron Child and a brother close in
age and sentiment. This man who designed in simplicity
is remembered in simplicity: Quinn notes that a modestsize
stone in a Washington cemetery is inscribed only with
Reamer’s name and the dates of his birth and death. It is a
spare statement for a man whose legacy is as timeless as the
park that bears his magnum opus. “Though much is taken,
much abides,” muses Tennyson’s Ulysses as he prepares for
his final voyage. The words act as an appropriate epitaph for
an architect long dead, but whose buildings sail on.WAA