Bentley, Merman, and Skogstad Architectural Drawings
Scope and Contents
An architectural design firm of La Crosse, Wis., called variously Bentley and Merman, Merman and Skogstad, and Otto Merman Architect.
The largest number of projects are for La Crosse, Wis., but other Wisconsin cities are represented, as well as Indiana, Iowa and Minnesota. Other cities that have a fair amount of representation are Wisconsin cities Galesville, Sparta, West Salem, and in Minnesota, Winona. Some unidentified client projects are filmed at the end of the seventh roll.
Dates
- 1918-1934
Creator
- Merman & Skogstad (La Crosse, Wis.) (Organization)
Access to Materials
Materials in this collection are available for patron use.
Historical Note
Percy Dwight Bentley was born in La Crosse, Wis., in 1885. He studied at Ohio Wesleyan University as a member of the non-graduating class of 1907. In September of 1906, Bentley entered Chicago’s Armour Institute and again in September of 1909.
Between 1907 and 1910, Bentley worked in La Crosse for Wells Bennett as a draftsman when not in school. In 1910, he formed a brief partnership with William Bajari, hiring Otto Merman as a draftsman. Both Merman and Bentley left La Crosse around 1913 or 1914 and headed for the Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN, area where Bentley became associated with Charles Hausler for about a decade. He returned to La Crosse periodically and he and Merman formally announced their partnership in La Crosse at the end of December 1917.(1) Their offices were at 210 Linker Building.
By 1921 Bentley had moved to St. Paul permanently until he later moved to Eugene, OR, about 1939. His architectural work, along with that of other architects, was honored by the Roswell, NM, Chamber of Commerce and Museum. The Chamber honored “a group of progressive American architects who lived and designed in the period 1900-1920.”(2) Bentley died in Eugene in Feb. 1968.(3) His obituary said he was a protégé of Frank Lloyd Wright and noted some residential structures of his design, such as 1634 King St., 1212 and 1222 Cass St., and 2425 Main St. Certainly Bentley’s legacy is his influence of the Prairie Style on residential architecture in the early twentieth century in La Crosse.(4)
Otto A. Merman was also born in La Crosse, Wis., in April 1890. He received his early training in the offices of architects Parkinson & Dockendorff from about 1907 to 1910. He moved to Minneapolis for a short time and returned to La Crosse to form a partnership with Percy Bentley. When Bentley moved permanently to St. Paul in about 1919, Merman assumed the practice. Merman began to specialize in public buildings, particularly schools.
In 1922 Merman associated with Herbert W. Skogstad until Skogstad’s death in 1929 at 39 years of age.(5) Merman continued to design many public buildings as well as some commercial and residential buildings. Otto Merman died at age 45 in June 1935.(6)
Resources consulted:
1 “Bentley & Merman New Designers Here: Percy Bentley in Partnership with Local Man,” La Crosse Tribune, Dec. 27, 1917, p.2.
2 “Bentley Work Recognized: Former City Architect Feted by Roswell, N.M.,” La Crosse Tribune, Jan. 23, 1957.
3 “Architect P. D. Bentley Dies at 83,” La Crosse Tribune, Feb. 8, 1968.
4 Rausch, Joan H. and Richard Zeitlin, Historic La Crosse: Architecural and Historic Record: A Summary of an Intensive Survey Report, (Architectural Researches, Inc. and Historical Resources, Inc.: 1984), p. 14.
5 “Funeral Services of H. W. Skogstad to be on Monday,” La Crosse Tribune, Sept. 15, 1929, p. 6.
6 “Otto Merman, Prominent as Architect, Dies,” La Crosse Tribune, June 3, 1935, p. 1.
Extent
0.7 Cubic Feet
Language of Materials
English
Abstract
An architectural design firm of La Crosse, Wis., called variously Bentley and Merman, Merman and Skogstad, and Otto Merman Architect. The architects involved were Percy D. Bentley (1885-1968), Otto A. Merman (1890-1935) and Herbert W. Skogstad (d. 1929). Bentley was a La Crosse native who attended the Armour Institute in Chicago. During his brief practice with Merman in La Crosse, the two designed a large number of distinguished Prairie School residences. After Bentley’s departure in 1919, former assistant and partner Otto A. Merman associated with Herbert W. Skogstad from 1922-1929. Skogstad was a graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the nature of commissions expanded after this partnership was established to include work for local institutions and businesses as well as residences. Merman continued the practice solo after Skogstad’s death in 1929 until his death in 1935.
The microfilmed records are of architectural drawings of buildings designed by these professional associations consist of nearly 300 projects, just over half of which are residential in type. Another quarter of the designs were for commercial buildings, the remaining quarter for public buildings and schools. Most projects were commissioned for locations in La Crosse and other Wisconsin cities with a few in Minnesota and one each in Iowa and Indiana.
Arrangement
Almost 300 project drawings are included on these seven reels of microfilm, and are arranged by state, therein alphabetically by city name and include the date of the design. For cities with more than one project, such as La Crosse, the business name or person who commissioned the project are listed alphabetically under that city’s name.
Acquisitions Information
(Accession No. 2004-13) Purchased through regular Special Collections materials budget, 2003, from the Wisconsin Historical Society. WHS Micro 1107 P95-1756 through P95-1762
This microfilm was produced by the Wisconsin Historical Society in 1987.
Physical Description
7 rolls of 35 mm microfilm
OCLC Number
17271287
Processing Information
Processed by Anita Taylor Doering, June 2004, based on a WHS finding aid by Fritz Knoble
Creator
- Merman & Skogstad (La Crosse, Wis.) (Organization)
- Bentley & Merman (La Crosse, Wis.) (Organization)
- Title
- Guide to the Bentley, Merman, and Skogstad Architectural Drawings, 1918-1935
- Status
- Completed
- Author
- Anita Taylor Doering, based on a WHS finding aid by Fritz Knoble
- Date
- 2004 June
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Code for undetermined script
- Language of description note
- English
Repository Details
Part of the La Crosse Public Library Archives Repository