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Parker House (Oak Park, Illinois) : ウィキペディア英語版
Robert P. Parker House

The Robert P. Parker House is a house located in the Chicago suburb of Oak Park, Illinois, United States. The house was designed by American architect Frank Lloyd Wright in 1892 and is an example of his early work. Real-estate agent Thomas H. Gale had it built and sold it to Robert P. Parker later that year. The house was designed by Wright independently while he was still employed by Adler and Sullivan, something architect Louis Sullivan forbade. The Parker House is listed as a contributing property to a U.S. federally Registered Historic District.
==History==
The Robert P. Parker House is one of three houses along Chicago Avenue in Oak Park which have come to be known as American architect Frank Lloyd Wright's "Bootleg Houses."〔"(Robert P. Parker House )," ''Oak Park Tourist'', excerpted from: Sprague, Paul E. ''Guide to Frank Lloyd Wright & Prairie School Architecture in Oak Park'' Oak Park Bicentennial Commission of the American Revolution and Oak Park Landmarks Commission, Village of Oak Park: 1986, (ISBN 0961691506). Retrieved 9 June 2007.〕〔 The triplet of houses includes the Thomas H. Gale House and the Walter Gale House as well as the Parker House and they were designed by Wright independently while he was still employed by Adler and Sullivan. Architect Louis Sullivan loaned Wright money during the construction of his own home and studio and Wright was working it off at the firm. Independent work was forbidden by Sullivan.〔〔Lockwood, Charles. "(The houses Wright built )," ''The New York Times'', 8 June 1986. Retrieved 9 June 2007.〕 The Parker house is especially similar to the Thomas H. Gale House.〔 The houses were designed on a speculative basis for Wright neighbor Walter Gale in 1892.〔 In all, Wright designed nine "bootleg houses" moonlighting while still under contract with Sullivan.〔 When Sullivan found out about the side projects, in late 1892 or early 1893, Wright was dismissed.〔 The Parker House is one of four that still stand.
They were built later that same year, 1892, by real-estate agent Thomas Gale, who sold the Parker House to attorney Robert Parker.〔 The three houses were part of a series of homes that had nearly identical plans with only small differences. They include the aforementioned Walter Gale House and Thomas H. Gale House, the Francis Woolley House, also located in Oak Park, and the Robert G. Emmond House in LaGrange, Illinois.〔 Parker, an attorney, bought the house from the Gales early on in the building process as his name appears on the plans.〔Heinz, Thomas A. ''The Vision of Frank Lloyd Wright'', Chartwell Books, Inc., Edison, New Jersey: 2006, pp. 55-56, (ISBN 0785821457).〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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