Alexander Chadbourne Eschweiler was an American architect with a practice in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He designed both residences and commercial structures. His eye-catching Japonist pagoda design for filling stations for Wadham's Oil and Grease Company of Milwaukee were repeated over a hundred times, though only a very few survive. His substantial turn-of-the-20th-century residences for the Milwaukee business elite, in conservative Jacobethan or neo-Georgian idioms, have preserved their cachet in the city.
Early life
Eschweiler was born in Boston, Massachusetts. He studied at Marquette University and Cornell University, graduating in 1890. Eschweiler opened his practice in Milwaukee in 1892. In 1923 his sons, Alexander C. Eschweiler Jr., Theodore, and Carl joined him in practice.
Career
A number of Eschweiler works are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Eighty-one surviving commissions were listed in the exhibition "Alexander Eschweiler in Milwaukee: Celebrating a Rich Architectural Heritage" at the Charles Allis Art Museum in 2007.
Personal life
Summer home
The Eschweilers had a second home on North Lake in the village of Chenequa, Wisconsin He did not design the residence. It was originally a 100-acre parcel he had purchased in the early 1900s, which included a small cottage from the 1870s. It was eventually torn down and the land was subdivided to settle the estate. The property was split into a 2.8-acre parcel and an 8.3-acre parcel, but six of the acres in the larger parcel are along the lake and are placed in a conservation easement that prohibits development. Eschweiler was instrumental in the incorporation of the village of Chenequa. He was one of a handful of notable residents that testified in court that it was his residence.
Death
He is buried at St. Peter's Episcopal Church, North Lake, next to his wife and daughter. His plot is near St. Teresa of Calcutta Church, "so he could overlook his 'masterpiece.'"
Legacy
The Eschweiler Prize, made from a bequest of Alexander C. Eschweiler, Jr., in memory of his father Alexander C. Eschweiler, is an annual award of approximately $3,000 given to a student in architecture at Cornell. Eschweiler's son Carl's diploma hangs in the front office of Stone Bank School, where Alexander's children attended.
Selected works
Works include :
Edward Cowdery House, 2743 N. Lake Drive, Milwaukee, 1896.
John Mariner Building, Milwaukee, 1937. Art Moderne in style, with curved wrap-around corners; the first commercial structure in Milwaukee to feature air conditioning.
Wisconsin Gas Building, Milwaukee.
Wisconsin Telephone Building, 722 N. Broadway. Ground floor remodeled for AT&T.
Milwaukee Arena.
C. B. Bird House, 522 McIndoe St. Wausau, 1910,, NRHP-listed
Charles Allis House, 1630 E. Royall Pl. Milwaukee, WI, NRHP-listed
Bank of Hartland, 112 E. Capitol Dr. Hartland, WI, NRHP-listed
Edward D. & Vina Shattuck Beals House, 220 N. Park Ave. Neenah, WI, NRHP-listed
Joseph Dessert Library, 123 Main St. Mosinee, WI, NRHP-listed
One or more works in East Hill Residential Historic District, roughly bounded by North Seventh, Adams, North Tenth, Scott and North Bellis Sts. Wausau, WI, NRHP-listed
Thomas A. Greene Memorial Museum, 3367 N. Downer Ave. Milwaukee, WI, NRHP-listed
Harold Hornburg House, 213 Warren Ave. Hartland, WI, NRHP-listed
Arthur Manegold House, 1202 S. Layton Blvd, Milwaukee, WI, NRHP-listed
Marathon County Fairgrounds, Stewart Ave. Wausau, WI, NRHP-listed