Julia Ideson Library
Preservation Partners

 
 

In 2006, the Julia Ideson Library Preservation Partners (JILPP) was formed as a Texas not-for-profit corporation. Chaired by Phoebe Tudor, this group has accepted the challenge of raising the funds necessary to:

1) Build a state-of-the-art, environmentally sensitive archival storage wing on the south side of the building, following the original plans of Ralph Adams Cram. The wing will be the new home of the valuable archives of the Houston Public Library's Houston Metropolitan Research Center. Highlights of this important collection include approximately:

  • 4 million photographs of historic events and everyday life in Houston and the area
  • 125,000 architectural drawings from more than 250 architects, the second-largest collection in the State of Texas, information about which can be accessed online at http://www.houstonlibrary.org/cgi-bin/archives/architecture.pl
  • 7,000 volumes of rare children's books
  • 12,000 volumes of rare books and 3,000 rare pamphlets in the John Milsaps collection, first donated to the library in 1904.
  • Holdings in HMRC's Special Collections (rare books) include a 1615 edition of Don Quixote, a fifteenth-century illuminated Book of Hours from Flanders, and first editions of Moby Dick and Alice In Wonderland
  • More than 300 rare maps of Houston, Texas and the Southwest dating from 1561

2) Preserve the architectural integrity of the building and restore its public spaces to their original grandeur.

3) Create a welcoming environment, including a public reading room in the historic Texas Room and beautifully landscaped gardens so that more Houstonians may enjoy this historic building and its grounds.

The Julia Ideson building, located at 500 McKinney, was designed by the noted Boston architecture firm Cram & Ferguson and opened in 1926 as the centerpiece of a planned five-building civic center in downtown Houston.

Ralph Adams Cram was one of the country's foremost practitioners of Gothic and other revival styles. In the case of this landmark building, he utilized a Spanish Renaissance style appropriate to the city's Texas heritage. He also designed the campus plan for Rice University and Trinity Episcopal Church in Houston, the campus of Princeton University in New Jersey, the United States Military Academy at West Point, and St. John the Divine Church in New York City. He collaborated on the design of the Julia Ideson Building with the distinguished Houston architect William Ward Watkin, a professor of architecture at the Rice Institute (now Rice University) and a former employee of Cram's.

Due to the economic crash of 1929, and the Great Depression, Cram & Ferguson's total vision was not realized; when additional civic buildings were erected, they were in the "moderne" style of the 1930s.

The Julia Ideson building, which also contains the City's largest installation of public murals completed under the post-Depression-era Works Progress Administration, served the citizens of Houston as their main library until 1976, when the new and larger Jesse H. Jones library building opened across the plaza. At that time, the Houston Metropolitan Research Center was established under the leadership of Harold M. Hyman, today the William P. Hobby Professor of History, Emeritus, at Rice University. The Julia Ideson library was altered to include six floors of storage through the center of the structure for archived materials.

As a Recorded Texas Historical Landmark, a City of Houston Protected Landmark, a Texas State Archaeological Landmark and a landmark listed in the National Register of Historic Places, the Ideson's distinctive architecture and decoration have been preserved. However, the building is in critical need of refurbishment and repair. In addition, the archival collection has outgrown the space available and also requires more sophisticated climate and humidity control, and appropriate storage facilities.

An independent 501c3 organization, the Julia Ideson Library Preservation Partners will be responsible for raising the majority of funds necessary for this project. In partnership with the City of Houston, JILPP will work to ensure the design and construction of the building is completed to the highest of standards in a financially responsible manner. JILPP will work closely with appropriate City of Houston and Houston Public Library staff members throughout all phases of the project.

 

 

Phoebe Tudor, Chairman
Minnette Boesel, Vice-Chairman
Margaret C. Skidmore, Vice-Chairman

LIST OF BOARD MEMBERS (click here)


IN THE NEWS >>

Houston Chronicle Editorial (click here)

Ideson Library on the KPRC Channel 2 News.
Watch the video (click here)

Houston Library Goes for
Silver LEED Restoration (click here)

Houston Set to Expand Ideson Library Based on Cram's Original Intentions (Texas Architect) (click here)

The building housing the city's collection of historical documents is too cramped, but a project aims to change that / Where the past is (Houston Chronicle) (read more)

Houston's first library building is set for a major face-lift (Houston Chronicle) (read more)


 



"Your commitment to raise private funds from foundations, individuals and corporations for the expansion of the archival facilities as well as for the preservation and restoration of one of our city's most important historic buildings is greatly appreciated.."

Mayor Bill White's Letter

 
PHOTO ARCHIVE
 


Margaret Lawler, Executive Director
713.660.0772
preservationpartners@ideson.org
2726 Bissonnet, #240-203
Houston, Texas 77005

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