The Life and Times of Fred Wesley Wentworth: The Architect Who Shaped Paterson, NJ and Its People

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132 pages 2012

About This Book

"In 1888, a young Dartmouth College alumnus from a distinguished New Hampshire family arrived in Paterson, New Jersey to pursue his dream of becoming an architect. He settled in a dynamic and fast growing city where fortunes were being made in silk, commerce and heavy industry. His practice took root and within years he was designing homes, commercial buildings and institutions for the area's leading citizens. His buildings are thoughtful, well designed and typify the architecture of their time. As Paterson changed, Wentworth found an unlikely client who transformed his career. Jacob Fabian, a Jewish entrepreneur, engaged Wentworth to design elaborate and highly designed movie palaces throughout New Jersey. The buildings helped define the movie palace prototype. Fabian's success grew at a time of Jewish anxiety regarding their role in the city of Paterson and the nation at large. With the support from Fabian, Wentworth became the architect for the institutions of Jewish life in Paterson. These buildings shaped generations of immigrants and their children."--Page four of cover.

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