Archives West Finding Aid
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Travel guide for Rome, Italy, with annotations by A. E. Doyle, 1905-1906
Overview of the Collection
- Author
- Hare, Augustus J. C. (Augustus John Cuthbert), 1834-1903
- Title
- Travel guide for Rome, Italy, with annotations by A. E. Doyle
- Dates
- 1905-1906 (inclusive)19051906
- Quantity
- 0.15 cubic feet, (1 folder in shared box)
- Collection Number
- Coll 1057
- Summary
- Copy of the 1905 edition of Augustus J. C. Hare's travel guide for Rome, Italy, titled "Walks in Rome," with pencil annotations by architect A. E. Doyle (1877-1928). Doyle traveled in Europe for several months in 1906, and used this guide during those travels.
- Repository
-
Oregon Historical Society Research Library
1200 SW Park Avenue
Portland, OR
97205
Telephone: 503-306-5240
Fax: 503-219-2040
libreference@ohs.org - Access Restrictions
-
Collection is open for research.
- Languages
- English
Biographical NoteReturn to Top
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/
Content DescriptionReturn to Top
The collection consists of a copy of the 1905 edition of Augustus J. C. Hare's book "Walks in Rome," which was owned by architect A. E. Doyle of Portland, Oregon, when he was visiting Rome, Italy, in 1906. On the title page is an ink inscription reading, "Albert E. Doyle / Rome July 18, 1906 / French, Lemon & Co. / 49 Piazza di Spagna." The text of the book contains pencil annotations made by Doyle in the summer of 1906. These annotations consist of passages that Doyle marked, as well as brief notes, including the dates that Doyle visited specific locations. The book includes several fold-out maps. In addition to the book, the collection also includes two tramway tickets, which had been placed between pages 564 and 565.
Use of the CollectionReturn to Top
Preferred Citation
Travel guide for Rome, Italy, with annotations by A. E. Doyle, Coll 1057, Oregon Historical Society Research Library.
Restrictions on 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.
Administrative InformationReturn to Top
Acquisition Information
Gift of Dale A. Lucas, August 2024 (RL2024-059).
Custodial History
At an unknown date after Doyle's trip to Europe, the travel guide was acquired by a bookstore in Portland, Oregon. Architect Dale A. Lucas purchased the guide from this bookstore, and consulted with Doyle's grandson, George Andrews, who confirmed that Doyle had owned it.
Related Materials
A combination diary and sketchbook that Doyle kept during the same trip to Europe is part of Coll 362, the Marjorie Newhouse collection of materials relating to A. E. Doyle, at the Oregon Historical Society Research Library. The 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.
Related Materials
Additional papers of A. E. Doyle, as well as his personal library, are held by the Reed College Library in Portland, Oregon. Other architectural plans and papers from A. E. Doyle and associated firms are part of the Pietro Belluschi papers at the Syracuse University Library in New York.
Names and SubjectsReturn to Top
Subject Terms
- Architects--Oregon--Portland
Personal Names
- Doyle, A. E. (Albert Ernest), 1877-1928
Geographical Names
- Rome (Italy)--Description and travel--20th century
Form or Genre Terms
- ephemera (general object genre)
- travel guidebooks
Other Creators
-
Personal Names
- Doyle, A. E. (Albert Ernest), 1877-1928 (annotator)