Amy Porter Rapp
Amy Porter Rapp | |
---|---|
Born | Amy Katherine Porter December 15, 1908 |
Died | June 19, 2002 | (aged 93)
Other names | Amy Katherine Porter Rapp |
Education | University of Oregon, B.A. |
Occupation | architect |
Years active | 1941–1955 |
Known for | residences and congregational churches |
Notable work |
|
Spouse |
Andrew Lee Rapp
(m. 1931; died 1996) |
Parents |
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Amy Katherine Porter Rapp (December 15, 1908 – June 19, 2002) was an American architect from Oregon. She worked primarily in Portland on residences and congregational churches.
Early life
[edit]Rapp was born in Halsey, OR.[1] Her parents were Catherine Maude Hopkins and Frank Hailey Porter.[1] Frank Hailey Porter represented Linn County in the Oregon House of Representatives from 1913 to 1917.[1]
The Rapp family moved to Portland, Oregon in 1919.[1] Rapp graduated from Grant High School in 1927.[1] She attended the University of Oregon and graduated with a degree in architecture in 1931.[1] A highlight of this period was Rapp's introduction to Frank Lloyd Wright. A friend of department head W.R.B. Willcox, Wright gave critiques of current student projects and participated in informal gatherings with students.[2] At the University of Oregon, Rapp belonged to the Alpha Omicrom Pi sorority.[1] Architect Chloethiel Woodard Smith was one of her sorority sisters.[2]
Rapp married Andrew Lee Rapp (d. 1996) in 1931.[1]
Career
[edit]Rapp graduated with the onset of the Great Depression and had trouble finding work as an architect. According to her, "In 1931, with the Depression, no jobs were available for a geologist and certainly no job for a fledgling architect – in fact – no jobs at all. We were lucky - we managed my dad's apartment building."[2]
In 1941 the Rapps bought a 50' x 150' lot and Amy designed the family's home herself.[2]
It was not until 15 years after graduation that Rapp started designing homes in reaction to a lack of government funds for new veteran homes. She did this with no prior office experience, two children and a third on the way. Rapp comments on this with a memory of her youngest child who tip-toed through the house, she "heard, 'Shush, Mama is architecting.' I thought – that's it. I burned the midnight oil after that until he was in school."[2]
As a volunteer, she chaired the Building Committee of the First Congregational Church in Portland, and represented the church on the jury for the Portland Center for the Performing Arts.[2] She drew plans for church additions, and strove to keep the existing exposed stonework and brick. She further reviewed expansion plans and grew her professional skills of client relationships.[2]
Rapp completed her last commissioned home in 1955 and turned to help her husband with the Green Furniture Hospital, which was a repairing and refinishing shop of furniture that later added antiquities.[2]
Education
[edit]B.A., University of Oregon, 1931.
Notable Projects
[edit]- Single Family Homes; Oregon
- First Congregational Church Remodel; Great Falls, Montana
- First Congregational Church Basement Remodel; Portland, OR