Clarence W. Wigington


Clarence Wesley Cap Wigington was an AfricanAmerican architect who grew up in Omaha, Nebraska. After winning three first prizes in charcoal, pencil, and pen and ink at an art competition during the TransMississippi Exposition in 1899, Wigington went on to become a renowned architect across the Midwestern United States, at a time when AfricanAmerican architects were few. Wigington was the nations first black municipal architect, servingyears as senior designer for the City of Saint Paul, Minnesotas architectural office when the city had an ambitious building program. Sixty of his buildings still stand in St. Paul, with several recognized on the National Register of Historic Places. Wigingtons architectural legacy is one of the most significant bodies of work by an AfricanAmerican architect.

Clarence Wesley Wigington was born in Lawrence, Kansas, in 1883, but his family soon moved to Omaha, where he was raised in North Omahas Walnut Hill neighborhood. After graduating from Omaha High School at the age of 15, Wigington left an Omaha art school in 1902 to work for Thomas R. Kimball, then president of the American Institute of Architects. After six years he started his own office. In 1910 Wigington was listed by the U.S. Census as one of only 59 AfricanAmerican architects, artists and draftsmen in the country. While in Omaha, Wigington designed the Broomfield Rowhouse, Zion Baptist Church, and the second St. Johns African Methodist Episcopal Church building, along with several other single and multiple family dwellings.

Source: Wikipedia


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