August 28, 2013 will
mark the one-hundredth anniversary of the death of Clarence Buckingham. Were it not for the fountain in Grant Park
that was given in his memory he would be largely forgotten today.
Clarence Buckingham
was born on November 2, 18 54 in Zanesville, Ohio, the eldest
of three children born to Ebenezer and Lucy (Sturges) Buckingham. The family moved to Chicago when Clarence was
a young boy, and it was from here that his father rapidly expanded his
successful business building and operating grain elevators.
2000 block of Prairie Avenue looking north
Buckingham house at far left
The family’s North
side home was destroyed in the Great Chicago Fire, and in 1875 they moved into
their new home at 2036 S. Prairie Avenue.
The new residence housed a valuable collection of art which in time
became one of the finest private collections in the city. An article in the Chicago Tribune dated May 6, 18 83 entitled “Some of the Notable
Pictures in the Collection of Mr. E. Buckingham, of This City” described in
detail a number of the works, many of which were watercolors. The Buckinghams instilled a love and
appreciation of art upon their three children, which would have a profound
effect upon those children later in life.
Ebenezer Buckingham
died in 1912, leaving a $4 million estate to his three unmarried children (his
wife had died in 1889). By that time,
Clarence had become a successful businessman in his own right. Starting out in his father’s company, he
later became a broker and a director of both the Corn Exchange National Bank
and the Illinois Trust and Savings Company.
He also served as president of the Northwestern Elevated Railroad
Company, and was involved in insurance, steel and real estate.
Clarence
Buckingham’s strong interest in art blossomed in the 1890s when he began
assembling a collection of Japanese woodblock prints of exceptional quality and
range, assisted by Art Institute curator Frederick W. Gookin and architect
Frank Lloyd Wright.
The Obelisk by Hubert Robert
Gift of Clarence Buckingham, 1900
Courtesy of the Art Institute of Chicago
Currently on display in Gallery 218
A director of the
Art Institute for more than a decade, he frequently loaned items from his
personal collection for exhibition. He also purchased and gave artworks directly
to the Art Institute.
Buckingham died on August 28, 19 13, one week after returning to Chicago from his
new summer residence at Lennox, Massachusetts.
He had been in good health up to within a few weeks of his death, so his
sudden demise at the age of 58 was a shock to his family and friends. He was interred at Woodlawn Cemetery in
Zanesville, Ohio.
Evening Glow by Katsushika Hokusai
Clarence Buckingham Collection, 1925.3201
Courtesy of the Art Institute of Chicago
Currently on display in Gallery 107
Portrait of Edouard Manet by Henri Fantin-Latour
Clarence Buckingham Collection, 1967.595
Courtesy of the Art Institute of Chicago
Currently on display as part of the exhibition
"Impressionism, Fashion, and Modernity"
In 1914, his sister
Kate loaned his entire art collection to the Art Institute. She continued to acquire additional works and
in 1925 she formally gave the prints to the museum, along with an endowment to
maintain and expand the collection.
The Clarence Buckingham Collection originally contained about 2,500 works
and has grown through purchases and gifts to more than 16,000. (It was also in 1925 that Kate Buckingham
razed the old family home on Prairie Avenue when she relocated to a spacious
apartment on Lakeview Avenue on the North side.)
The lasting legacy
of Clarence Buckingham, of course, is the fountain that bears his name in Grant
Park. Officially called the “Clarence
Buckingham Memorial Fountain,” the project was announced in January 1924, when
the South Park board of commissioners voted to accept the gift of $250,000 from
Kate Buckingham for the fountain’s construction, along with an additional
$135,000 for a maintenance fund. The
design of the fountain, twice the size of that of Latona at Versailles, was
overseen by Edward H. Bennett of the firm of Bennett, Parsons & Frost.
Work commenced in
August 1925 by which time the cost had increased to nearly $700,000. It would take two years to complete. The fountain was officially dedicated on August 26, 19 27. An
estimated 50,000 people attended the ceremonies and watched the inaugural
performance of the fountain’s water jets and colored lights, set to a live
performance of the “Stars and Stripes Forever” performed by John Philip Sousa’s
band.
James O’Donnell
Bennett, a columnist for the Chicago
Tribune, writing about the fountain just a week after its dedication, said
in part:
“In a week the
Buckingham fountain has captured the imagination of the town, enlarged its
aesthetic sense, and done it spiritual good.
The gift is more than a memorial to Clarence Buckingham. It is an expression of the lake by which it
is fed and which it extols. As such,
Chicago has comprehended it and as such loves it. It is the lyric of the lake. It will never grow old or commonplace. Sunlight and shadow, mounting and waning
breeze will ever renew and ever vary its spectacle and its song. It will go on forever.”