The unusual house at 2133 R Street, NW often attracts onlookers,
curious about the history of the house with a door that could be straight out
of a nursery rhyme illustration. Upon
closer inspection you might notice that the massive door hinges have the initials
ELM – for Edward Lind Morse.
The building was built in 1902 as an art studio for Morse. It was
designed by the noted architectural firm of Hornblower & Marshall in the Arts
and Crafts style. And if you think the
artists last name seems familiar, he was the youngest son of inventor and
artist himself, Samuel F. B. Morse.
Samuel Finley Breese Morse was a graduate of Yale University in 1810,
after which he studied art in England under Benjamin West. He returned to America, and for several years
was a portrait painter. In 1832 Morse
began working on apparatus that eventually resulted in the invention of the
Telegraph, for which he received a patent in 1840. The first message sent over
the wire, from Baltimore to Washington, on March 24, 1844, was "What God
hath wrought!"
Edward Lind Morse was the youngest son of Samuel Morse (1791-1872) and
his second wife, the former Sarah Griswold.
He was born on March 28, 1957 in Poughkeepsie, New York. He married Charlotte Dunning Wood on July 24,
1884, and following her death in 1898, married Clara Lounsberry on October 16,
1899.
Morse was both an accomplished painter and writer, and had graduated
from Yale University in 1878. He painted
the portrait of his famous father, seen here.
The interiors of his studio were photographed by Frances Benjamin
Johnson.
Samuel Morse by Edward Morse |
The studio was converted into a residence in 1910. It was owned by Thomas Raymond Ball, and
later by Franklin D. Roosevelt’s oldest son James Roosevelt – Franklin &
Eleanor lived next door at 2131 R Street.
It currently serves as the headquarters of the Delphi Film Foundation.
Exterior Pictures courtesy of Flickr user “AgnosticPreachersKid” Interior pictures courtesy Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs
Division. Copyright Paul K. Williams.
Very cool post and great photos ... Good find Paul.
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