Wesley Clark Dodson had just begun establishing himself as a civic-minded architect in Alabama when the outbreak of the Civil War dramatically altered his life. He fought with the 40th Alabama Infantry Regiment and emerged from the war disabled. In 1866 he was determined to begin again in Texas. He gradually built a career designing courthouses, jails, churches, and schools; institutions he saw as necessary to create a good, strong society in Texas. Eleven of Dodson’s public buildings are still in use today and nine of Dodson’s buildings in Texas, including the First Presbyterian Church in Palestine and the courthouses of Parker, Hill, and Lampasas Counties, are listed in the National Register of Historic Places.
The Architecture of Wesley Clark Dodson reveals how Dodson transitioned from being a pre–Civil War master builder to a late nineteenth century professional architect with a membership in the prestigious American Institute of Architects; details the important role he played in elevating architecture to the status of a licensed profession; and provides insights into the process of building these public institutions and the difficulties encountered. Drawing from extensive research in public records, personal letters, collected papers, and memoirs drafted by Dodson in his eighties, Mary Helen Dodson has assembled a portrait of an important and influential architect during the “golden age of courthouse construction” in Texas.
Book is hardcover, 288 pages.
