Francis John Plym (1869-1940), Architect & Inventor

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Lincoln, Nebraska, 1900-1903

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Lincoln, 1900-1902; Kansas City, Missouri, 1903-1907; Niles, Michigan, 1907-1940

Francis John Plym was born in Sweden in 1869. His father Osley Plym, a cabinetmaker, brought the family to America when Francis was an infant and settled in Aledo, Illinois.[24] Plym earned a bachelor of science in architecture from the University of Illinois College of Engineering in 1897.[25] He began practicing as an architect with Marcus Leach in Lincoln, Nebraska in 1900 as Leach & Plym. Early in 1903, Plym announced his departure for Kansas City, with the intention of opening an associated office there, but the partnership with Leach apparently ended at that time.[22] Plym married Jennie M. Barber of Lincoln in 1903 and they had three children. In 1906 Plym patented a system of metal framing for plate glass storefronts and founded Kawneer Manufacturing Company to produce the storefronts. He moved the company to Niles, Michigan in 1909. Kawneer still exists as a division of Alcoa (2018).

This page is a contribution to the publication, Place Makers of Nebraska: The Architects. See the format and contents page for more information on the compilation and page organization.

Compiled Nebraska Directory Listings

Lincoln, Nebraska, 1900-1903

Educational & Professional Associations

Buildings & Projects

Dated

Design for City Library (1900), Lincoln, Nebraska.[23][e]

New Central (McKinley) School (1902), 15th & M Sts, Lincoln, Nebraska.[16][17][a]

W. D. FitzGerald house (1902-1903), 1106 South 20th, Lincoln, Nebraska.[3][15] (LC13:D07-0046)

Lutheran Academy Building (1903), Wahoo, Nebraska.[13][18][b]

Dr. John S. Leonhardt house, probably 1726 N Street, Lincoln, Nebraska.[7][d]

Undated

Residence for H. P. Lau, Jr. (n.d.), Lincoln, Nebraska.[19]

Sutton National Bank & Odd Fellows Hall, (Sutton?).[4]

H. W. Davis store Building, (Lincoln, Nebraska?).[5]

Osceola Auditorium, Osceola, Nebraska.[6]

Clay Center School, Clay Center, Nebraska.[8]

Lincoln Daily Star Building, Lincoln, Nebraska.[9]

George Loveland house, 20th & C, Lincoln, Nebraska (2sfr., $45,500).[10]

Masonic Hall Assoc., reconstruction (Lincoln, Nebraska?).[10]

N. P. Lundeen house (2sfr. cottage, &2000) (Lincoln, Nebraska?).[10]

Bissell & Seavy Brick Store, Wolbach, Nebraska.[11]

Mrs. Harrison house, 14th & H, Lincoln, Nebraska ($5000).[12]

Mrs. Lawless house, 16th & Cherry, Lincoln, Nebraska ($2000).[12]

M. E. Church, Minden.[14]

Considered for Carnegie Library, Grand Island, Nebraska.

Notes

a. School Board Journal of October 1902 includes an elevation of "New Central School, Lincoln, Neb. 10 Class Rooms, Library, Reading Room and Manual Training Rooms. Cost $25,000. Leach & Plym, Architects, Lincoln, Neb." School board minutes indicate T. P. Harrison constructed a 10 room school house on the high school grounds in 1902, for $24,500. The school was called "New McKinley School" by 1903[16][17]

b. The Wahoo academy building is estimated to cost $25,000, according to School Board Journal.[18]

c. School Board Journal of January 1899 lists: "Lincoln, Neb. A new $8,000 ward school. Plans drawn by architect M. Leach."[20]

d. The Lincoln Star of January 24, 1903 carried an announcement "Dr. Leonhardt, Office & Residence, Removed to 1726 N Street." The 1903 Sanborn Map Co. atlas of Lincoln shows that parcel as unimproved, while the 1928 edition shows a large two-story frame house on the site. Probably Leonhardt built 1726 N around 1903.[21]

e. The six architectural firms which submitted "separate sets of drawings and specifications" for Lincoln's Carnegie-supported library were Stone, Carpenter & Wilson of Providence, R. I.; Ferry & Clas of Milwaukee; Roberts & Woods, Leach & Plym, and James Tyler & Son of Lincoln; and Fisher & Lawrie of Omaha.[23]

References

1. Lincoln Trade Review 1:36 (Feb 7, 1903), 3. (Architects prepare to open Kansas City office to be under charge of Francis Plym. Lincoln office run by Marcus Leach.)

2. Lincoln Trade Review 1:50 (1903), 8. (re: Kansas City.)

3. Lincoln Trade Review 1:47 (1903), 3 (Work to commence, Apr 1903, plans drawn last fall).

4. Lincoln Trade Review 1:48 (1903) (construction has commenced; Odd Fellow Hall on second floor of band and adjoining building).

5. Lincoln Trade Review 1:52 (1903), 10 (bids let).

6. Lincoln Trade Review 1:52 (1903), {plans under preparation; brick building, 54 x 90, large seven-tier gallery holds 800-1000 people).

7. Lincoln Trade Review 2:4 (1903), 3 ($2000).

8. Lincoln Trade Review 1:3 (1902), 4 (plans & bid let, $8,000).

9. Lincoln Trade Review 1:7 (1902), 4 (contracts).

10. Lincoln Trade Review (1902), 4.

11. Lincoln Trade Review 1:15 (1902), 3 (80 x 50 ft).

12. Lincoln Trade Review 1:20 (1902), 4.

13. Lincoln Trade Review 1:26 (1902), 3 (contract to plan; three story brick, 50 x 91, twelve and fourteen foot clgs, $25,000, to be completed by 1903).

14. Lincoln Trade Review 1:37 (1903), 3 (draw plans for 61 x 68 ft bldg.).

15. Listed in the National Register of Historic Places within the Mount Emerald and Capitol Additions Historic District.

16. School Board Journal (January 1902), 11 (with elevation); (October 1902), 11; (January 1903), 13 (with photograph).

17. Yost, Carl. "History of the Lincoln Schools 1864 to 1925," typescript, University of Nebraska: N.Y.A. Program, 1936; 101. Copy at Lincoln Public Schools archive.

18. School Board Journal (January 1903), 27.

19. Bob Robinson, Lincoln, to D. Murphy, May 17, 2016; from original blueprints in his possession.

20. School Board Journal (January 1899), 392.

21. Lincoln Star (January 17, 1903), 2.

22. "People You Know," (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (February 1, 1903), 6.

23. "Plans for Library--Board Declares Fisher & Lawrie the Winners--Competition Was Strong--Six Architects Submitted Drawings." (Lincoln) Nebraska State Journal (July 22, 1900), 1.

24. Francis John Plym passport application, April 1, 1921, on-line by Ancestry.com. U.S. Passport Applications, 1795-1925, s.v. "Francis John Plym [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2007.

25. "Ninety-One in Class--Commencement Exercises at the University of Illinois," The Inter Ocean (Chicago, Illinois (June 10, 1897), 10.

Page Citation

D. Murphy & E. Zimmer, “Francis John Plym (1869-1940), Architect & Inventor,” in David Murphy, Edward F. Zimmer, and Lynn Meyer, comps. Place Makers of Nebraska: The Architects. Lincoln: Nebraska State Historical Society, October 8, 2018. http://www.e-nebraskahistory.org/index.php?title=Place_Makers_of_Nebraska:_The_Architects Accessed, November 12, 2024.


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