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Current view of the Hoover House, and several historic images--one,
without trees, taken in 1920 shortly after completion of the
house. The other historic images are c1928
Color photograph by Jack Boucher, courtesy of Library of
Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Historic American
Buildings Survey or Historic American Engineering Record,
Reproduction Number HABS, CAL,43-STANF,7- 23. Historic images
from National Register collection. |
The Lou Henry and Herbert Hoover House, a National Historic Landmark,
is a large, rambling International style house, resembling "blocks
piled up." It was designed by Lou Henry Hoover, wife of Herbert
Hoover, 31st President of the United States. Herbert Hoover's
contribution was to order that the home be fireproof, and the
walls were constructed of hollow tiles. Built from 1919 to 1920,
the house was the couple's first and only permanent residence,
and it was here that Hoover awaited the Presidential election
returns in 1928, when he won against Alfred E. Smith, and 1932,
when he lost the election to Franklin Delano Roosevelt. After
Lou's death in 1944, her husband deeded the house to Stanford
University to serve as a home for university professors.
![[photo] [photo]](buildings/H00_herbert.jpg)
Portrait of Herbert Hoover, taken
c1928
Courtesy of Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs
Division [reproduction number, LC-USZ62-24155 DLC]
Portrait of Lou Henry Hoover,
taken between 1928 and 1933.
Courtesy of Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs
Division [reproduction number, LC-USZ62-25811 DLC] |
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Herbert Hoover, born in West Branch, Iowa in 1874, was a member
of the first class of Leland Stanford, Jr. University. Opened in
1891 by former California Governor Leland Stanford and his wife
in memory of their son, the University was located in Palo Alto,
California, 30 miles south of San Francisco. Studying geology, Hoover
met fellow student Lou Henry in a geology lab. Lou Henry, also born
in Iowa in 1874, had moved to Monterey, California, with her family
in 1884. She entered Stanford University in 1894. After graduation,
Herbert Hoover worked for a while in the California gold mines and
then in Western Australia, returning in 1899 to marry the recently
graduated Lou Henry. For the rest of their lives the Hoovers would
retain a strong affinity for their alma mater, maintaining residences
on the campus despite travels and residences abroad in China, Ceylon,
Burma, Siberia, Australia, Egypt, Japan, England, most of Europe,
and finally Washington, D.C. Hoover played a highly publicized and
praised role in relief efforts for some 33 million displaced and
starving civilian victims of the First World War in Europe and was
appointed Director General of Post War Relief and Rehabilitation
in 1919 by President Woodrow Wilson.
Prior to the end of World War I the Hoovers had commissioned architect
Louis Mulgardt to design their Stanford Home; however Mulgardt publicized
his appointment prior to the end of the war. Angering the Hoovers,
who felt that it was an inopportune time in the waning months of
a terrible conflict to announce the construction of a large home,
Mulgardt was dismissed. After several consultations the Hoovers
convinced Arthur B. Clark, a Stanford art professor who practiced
freelance architecture during the summer, to be their architect.
Clark agreed on the condition that Mrs. Hoover design the house
and that Clark, aided by architectural draftsman Charles Davus and
Clark's architect son, Birge, would serve in an advisory capacity.
Mrs. Hoover sketched ideas, watching construction, but when anyone
told her that any of her architectural ideas weren't done, she responded,
"Well, it's time someone did." The problem of size (Mrs. Hoover
not wanting the house to appear too large or ostentatious) was solved
by the hillside site with the house disappearing into the slope
of San Juan Hill and hence appearing much smaller. The irregularly
shaped house was built on a reinforced concrete slab foundation
and rises two stories in the front and three stories in the rear.
Resembling early International style homes, it was the opinion of
the architects that Mrs. Hoover's designs were modeled after North
African Algerian homes she had seen.
Completed in June 1920, the Hoovers lived there only a short
time before Herbert was appointed Secretary of Commerce by President
Warren G. Harding in 1921, a role he continued under President
Calvin Coolidge. During Hoover's presidency (1929-32), the Hoover
family only made brief visits to their Stanford home. They returned
to this house after 1932, while maintaining a New York apartment
as a second residence.
The Lou Henry and Herbert Hoover House is located on the
Stanford University Campus in Palo Alto. It now serves as a residence
for Stanford University professors, and is not open to the public.
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