Alice Millard

Alice Parsons Millard (May 4, 1873 – July 15, 1938) was an American bookseller and promoter of culture in the Arroyo Seco region of Los Angeles County. She is widely known for commissioning Frank Lloyd Wright to build her house (La Miniatura) in Pasadena.

Chicago

Millard was born in Chicago and left as a young woman to study art in London. On a visit home to Chicago, she wandered into the Chicago book store operated by A.C. McClurg and asked for a book on William Morris. George Millard, who worked in the Rare Book Department, "was pleased to help the attractive young woman who had interests similar to his own," according to Ward Ritchie.[1] A romance ensued and in 1901, Parsons accompanied Millard on a book-buying trip to England. Parsons was 28 when she married Millard (age 55) in St. Bridge's in London. In 1906, their friend Frank Lloyd Wright designed a house for them in the Prairie School style (now called the George Madison Millard House) located in the Highland Park neighborhood of Chicago.

Pasadena

George and Alice Millard moved to Pasadena after George's retirement in 1913. The couple converted a bungalow on Huntington Drive in South Pasadena into a book salon. When George died, Alice carried on with their book-buying business along with antique furniture. She commissioned Frank Lloyd Wright. According to Ritchie, "Wright was not interested in doing a traditional house on the traditional flat lot in a respective neighborhood which Alice had already purchased. He searched the area and found a tree-covered ravine leading into the Arroyo which he persuaded Alice to buy. He snugly fit the house therein."[1]

As Alice Millard, "she became one of the most important American booksellers of the 20th century, advising, teaching, and influencing such affluent disciples as William Andrews Clark, Templeton Crocker, Caroline Boeing Poole, and Estelle Doheny."[2]

gollark: In Spanish, it's the word for "black",even, IIRC.
gollark: poßibly.
gollark: I would, personally, like to be mostly generalist and not excessively tied to some particular industry/etc.
gollark: Anyway, I feel like specializing entirely in some esoteric computer science field is problematic.
gollark: And yes, you *have* summoned me, and you *may* regret it.

See also

Artists of the Arroyo Seco (Los Angeles)

References

  1. Ritchie, Ward (1996). A Southland Bohemia, The Arroyo Seco Colony as the Century Begins. Pasadena: Vance Gerry.
  2. Michele V. Cloonan. "Alice Millard and the Gospel of Beauty and Taste". In Danky, James P.; Wiegand, Wayne A. (2006). Women in print essays on the print culture of American women from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Madison, Wis.: University of Wisconsin Press. p. 159. ISBN 9780299217839.
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