Carl F. Struck

Carl F. Struck (January 29, 1842 – March 3, 1912) was a Norwegian American architect, who designed private residences, civic buildings and commercial structures throughout the Midwest in the latter part of the 19th century.[2]

Carl F. Struck
BornJanuary 29, 1842 [1]
DiedMarch 3, 1912
Occupationarchitect
Spouse(s)Vasillia Thrane

Biography

Carl F. Struck was born in Christiania (now Oslo) Jan. 29 and christened in Oslo domkirke (Cathedral) Apr. 27 the same year, His parents were Hans Henrik Struck born in Eutin, Ostholstein and spouse Rønnaug Marie Jonasdr Elg born in Faaberg, Oppland. He was educated there and in Copenhagen before immigrating to the United States in 1865. After employment at architectural offices in Brooklyn, Cleveland, Chicago and Marquette, he arrived in Minneapolis in 1881, where he worked for the next twenty years. Among his most important commissions were designs for Scandinavian fraternal buildings and churches.[3]

The son of a German father and Norwegian mother (of Swedish descent),[4] Struck was married to Vasillia Thrane (1852- 1920), whose father, Marcus Thrane, was one of the founding fathers of the Norwegian labor movement.[5]

National Register of Historic Places

Two Minneapolis buildings designed by Carl F. Struck are in the National Register of Historic Places: the Bardwell–Ferrant House at 2500 Portland Avenue South and the Pracna Building in the St. Anthony Falls Historic District.[6] Another one of his Minneapolis works, Dania Hall, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1974 and removed from the list after its destruction by fire in 2000.[7] The main building of the Grain Belt Brewery in Northeast Minneapolis is also in the National Register of Historic Places. Although Struck did not contribute to its design, he was the architect for an office building at 1215 Marshall Street NE that was part of the complex.[8]

Selected buildings

Minneapolis
Other locations
gollark: OR DO I?
gollark: Say, "most uses of apioforms in a sentence"?
gollark: Can you just make them do stuff for arbitrary record?
gollark: Kerbals are actually plants. Also, they signed up for it.
gollark: "Life in forced solitary confinement" is pretty much "horrible torture".

References

Courthouses

Online book

44. The Story Of Normanna Hall

Historic American Newspapers

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.