Object Lesson: Architecture at Pullman National Monument as Both an Agent of Division and Collective Identity

IF 0.2 4区 艺术学 0 ARCHITECTURE Buildings & Landscapes-Journal of the Vernacular Architecture Forum Pub Date : 2022-09-01 DOI:10.1353/bdl.2022.0015
Sarah Fayen Scarlett, Laura Walikainen Rouleau
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Abstract

Few American places have been so conspicuously shaped by the politics of class and race over the long twentieth century as Pullman, Illinois, making it an important location for studying the role of placebased heritage practice in today’s fight for social justice and equality. This model company town, built in 1883 by luxurytrain producer George Pullman as the ultimate test of corporate paternalism, gained high praise at first, but became the poster child for company overreach when an 1894 strike highlighted worker frustration with Pullman’s control over both wages and rents (Figure 1). The company was ordered to divest itself from the town by 1907, but Pullman retained a distinctive identity on the south side of Chicago throughout the twentieth century, largely because of its recognizable architecture. When President Barack Obama created Pullman National Monument in 2015, he called for intersecting stories of race, class, labor, and place that would use the site’s history to “tell rich, layered stories of American opportunity and discrimination, industrial engineering, corporate power and factory workers, new immigrants to this country and formerly enslaved people and their descendants, strikes and collective bargaining.”1 Obama’s directive, however, set up a challenge for National Park Service (NPS) staff because the active heritage community in Pullman was deeply divided— spatially and racially— in ways that undermined the president’s holistic vision. In Pullman’s residential area south of the factory site and clock tower, the famous Florence Hotel and Greenstone Church punctuate about twentyfive blocks of red brick row houses. Starting in the 1960s, several community groups of middleclass, mostly White, residents developed a popular narrative about Pullman’s significance as the nation’s first professionally designed model town. Led by the Historic Pullman Foundation and the Pullman Civic Organization, these groups successfully listed the Pullman Historic District on the National Register of Historic Places and gained state and local designations in the 1970s. They have been active in historic preservation ever since. On the northern side of Pullman, however, a different history and preservation story prevailed. The National A. Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum, founded in 1995 and housed in one of SARAh fAyEN ScARLET T AND LAURA WALIK AINEN ROULEAU
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实物课:普尔曼国家纪念碑的建筑既是分裂的代理,也是集体认同的代理
在漫长的20世纪里,美国很少有地方像伊利诺伊州的普尔曼那样受阶级和种族政治的影响如此明显,这使它成为研究基于位置的遗产实践在当今争取社会正义和平等的斗争中所起作用的重要地点。1883年,豪华火车制造商乔治·普尔曼(George Pullman)建造了这个模范公司城,作为企业家长式作风的终极考验,起初获得了很高的赞誉,但1894年的罢工突显了工人对普尔曼对工资和租金的控制的不满,成为了公司过度扩张的典型代表(图1)。1907年,公司被命令从该镇剥离出去,但普尔曼在整个20世纪都保留了在芝加哥南部的独特身份。很大程度上是因为其可识别的建筑。2015年,贝拉克·奥巴马(Barack Obama)总统创建了普尔曼国家纪念碑(Pullman National Monument),他呼吁将种族、阶级、劳工和地点的故事交织在一起,利用该遗址的历史“讲述美国的机会和歧视、工业工程、企业权力和工厂工人、新移民和以前被奴役的人及其后代、罢工和集体谈判等丰富而多层次的故事”。然而,奥巴马的指令给国家公园管理局(NPS)的工作人员带来了挑战,因为普尔曼活跃的遗产社区在空间和种族上都存在严重分歧,这破坏了总统的整体愿景。在厂区和钟楼以南的普尔曼住宅区,著名的佛罗伦萨酒店和绿石教堂点缀着大约25个街区的红砖排屋。从20世纪60年代开始,几个中产阶级社区团体(主要是白人)形成了一种流行的说法,认为普尔曼是美国第一个专业设计的样板城镇。在普尔曼历史基金会和普尔曼公民组织的领导下,这些组织在20世纪70年代成功地将普尔曼历史街区列入了国家史迹名录,并获得了州和地方的指定。从那时起,他们一直积极参与历史保护工作。然而,在普尔曼的北部,一个不同的历史和保护故事盛行。国家A.菲利普·伦道夫·普尔曼·波特博物馆,成立于1995年,坐落在莎拉·费恩·斯卡利特和劳拉·沃克·艾宁·鲁洛的家中
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: Buildings & Landscapes is the leading source for scholarly work on vernacular architecture of North America and beyond. The journal continues VAF’s tradition of scholarly publication going back to the first Perspectives in Vernacular Architecture in 1982. Published through the University of Minnesota Press since 2007, the journal moved from one to two issues per year in 2009. Buildings & Landscapes examines the places that people build and experience every day: houses and cities, farmsteads and alleys, churches and courthouses, subdivisions and shopping malls. The journal’s contributorsundefinedhistorians and architectural historians, preservationists and architects, geographers, anthropologists and folklorists, and others whose work involves documenting, analyzing, and interpreting vernacular formsundefinedapproach the built environment as a windows into human life and culture, basing their scholarship on both fieldwork and archival research. The editors encourage submission of articles that explore the ways the built environment shapes everyday life within and beyond North America.
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