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Architect

“The cactus gets under the skin:” Timeline
of the life of Annie Graham Rockfellow
March 12, 1866
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born to Samuel and Julia Lucinda (Conkey) Rockfellow in Mt. Morris, NY. Lived
in Mt. Morris, NY, Rochester, NY, New York City, Washington, DC, Richmond
VA, Edenton, NC, and Saratoga Springs, NY. |
| 1875-1878 |
Family moved back to Rochester, where she attended private
schools and “roamed
the city.” Decided to become an Architect. |
| 1882-1885 |
Attended boarding school. |
1885
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Attended M.I.T., graduating in 1887 with a Diploma in Architecture. |
| 1887-1893 |
Worked as draftsman for architect William C. Walker in Rochester,
NY. |
| 1895-96 |
Faculty, University of Arizona, teaching English, Geography,
U.S. History, and possibly drafting. |
| 1897-1900 |
Moved back to NY again. |
1898
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Four-month tour of Great Britain and Europe on a bicycle, “studying
architecture and enjoying the scenery.” |
| 1898-1909 |
Private practice, in Mt. Morris, NY, Detroit, MI and Buffalo,
NY. |
1905
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Her father Samuel Rockfellow moved to Tombstone, AZ. |
1905
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Article in January issue of Good Housekeeping entitled “The
Nutshell.” |
1909-1910
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Moved to Tombstone, AZ to care for father. |
| 1911-1915 |
Practicing in Western NY and “assisting in several
offices.” |
| 1915 |
Attended Panama-California Exposition, San Diego, CA. |
| 1916-1938 |
Chief Architectural Designer for Henry O. Jaastad, Tucson
Arizona. |
| 1938 |
Retired and moved to Santa Barbara, CA. |
| 1954 |
Died in Santa Barbara, CA; buried in Mt. Morris, NY. |
In her own words:
written for the Archives of the Arizona Historical and Pioneer Society,
Tucson, Ariz. by Annie Graham Rockfellow
It was in the 19th century that I made a start towards being an Arizona Pioneer
and becoming eligible to the the Arizona Historical and Pioneer Society, but
no one, least of all my new-born self, knew on a certain March 12th that I
was headed that way. In fact, Arizona was nearly as much of a stranger as I,
at that time, having been organized only a few years before.
My birthplace was a thriving town in Western New York of about 3000 inhabitants,
called Mount Morris and organized in 1794. I remember that date because I rode
in the parade when the one hundredth anniversary was celebrated in 1894.
Perhaps the first concrete remembrance of my babyhood was, at the age of three,
a trip to New York with my parents to visit my Aunt Mary for whose daughter
I was named. My Aunt Mary was a sister-in-law of George Graham, the publisher
of Graham's Magazine, which accounts for the Graham in my cousin Annie's name
and mine. I never saw the cousin. She died before my advent in North America.
I dimly remember "Uncle George and Aunt Lizzie Graham" on that early visit,
also my cousin Col. Harry Rockefeller, who lost his right arm in the civil
war.
In my fifth year my father sold his mercantile establishment in Mount Morris
and engaged in the nursery business in rochester, N.Y., being advised to live
an outdoor like to strengthen his vitality.
I recall playing among the packing boxes in the nursery, wading in the creek
that ran through the nursery property, seeing father cut the yard grass with
a scythe, and my brother with a powder-blackened face caused by a Fourth-of-July
cannon. And SNOW! Real winters, when I was well wrapped and placed on my Christmas
sled and drawn by my father and brother to the Mission Sunday School Christmas
Tree.
When I was six we all went south for my mother's health. We stopped in New
York and Washington and Richmond. At the hotel in Washington I was much impressed
with seeing Tom Thumb and his theatrical company at special tables in the big
dining room.
Two occurrences stand uppermost in my memory of Edenton, N.C. where we stopped
during the winter months, -- starting in school and seeing a murderer hanged!
The school was kept by two of four maiden sisters. Their home was historically
interesting having been built for the bride of the first governor of the state.
The house was of Colonial design and the oak paneling in the main rooms was
brought from England in a sailing vessel.
The school room was one of the old slave houses, in the second story reached
by an outside stairway. there was much whitewash on the walls both outside
and in. The desks were placed against the walls with continuous benches. When
studying you faced the wall but turned around on your bench for recitations.
The study of arithmetic was started with "sums" in those days.
When the time came for our return to New York state a party was given me by
the teachers in their beautiful rose garden and supper was served in the large
paneled dining room. One little boy had to come to the party barefooted because
he had six toes on one foot and could not get shoes to fit. Of course I would
remember that!
Many, many years later some of our friends went to Edenton and there met the
two remaining sisters who, learning my address, sent me a box of roses from
this self-same garden.
Part of the trip home was by boat, from Norfolk to New York, and I recall
my brother talking me, at Norfolk, to see men fishing for oysters.
Back in Rochester I attended private schools, roamed about the city and on
the beaches of Lake Ontario, in summer; skated, and built snow "igloos" in
winter.
The fall of '76 my father took me to the Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia
and not a thing escaped me from the making of pins to the big Corliss engine,
at the time the largest engine in the world.
In 1878 I spent a summer in Saratoga Springs where my mother went for the
benefits of the spring waters, and that autumn we returned to live in Mount
Morris in the beautiful valley of the Genesee. Followed three years of hotel
life, six years of boarding school and Boston Tech, -- this for the study of
architecture, -- and six years of architectural business in rochester.
In the meantime, we began to know Arizona, and rather better than the average
easterner. My brother, seeking health and adventure, introduced us by letter
and description. His life there is taken care of in Pioneer Archives and in
his book "The Log of an Arizona Trail Blazer." While he was acting as "professor"
at the University of Arizona he obtained an appointment for me on the faculty,
and I came in 1895, but even then I did not realize that it would be the beginning
of my eligibility for the Historical and Pioneer Society.
After two years my life was in the east again, "architecting" traveling by
bicycle in Continental Europe and Great Britain, and keeping house for my father
after my mother's death in 1900. I might mention that my trip abroad was aided
by revenue from cattle investments in Arizona, at the N.Y. Ranch in Cochise
County.
Father at the age of 79 retired from business and went to Tombstone to be
with my brother and his family, and I was in an architect's offices and my
own in Detroit and Buffalo, but arrived in Tombstone in 1909, and remained
until my father's release from months of physical failure. His funeral and
burial were in Mount Morris in 1911.
You know "The cactus gets under the skin", and I was happy, after four winters
of sleet and ice and sore-throat, to arrive once more in sunny Tucson. It seemed
that I might stay two months to visit my brother and his wife and my two young
nieces and nephew, but the months stretched into years, nine of them, before
I went east to sell all but the cemetery lot and return.
In the meantime I visited California during the winter of 1915-16, and in
the spring became connected with the office at Architect H.O. Jaastad in Tucson,
and, at the time of writing, December 1933, I am still in that office, principally
as designer.
Some of the buildings in Tucson with which I have had the most personal touch
are the Safford School, Southern Arizona Bank and Trust Co. building, Christian
Science church, the first buildings of the Desert Sanatorium, El Conquistador
Hotel, La Fonda Buen Provecho Inn, The Young Women's Christian Association
building, and many residences within and without the city limits.
In other parts of the state and New Mexico are more designs, mostly schools,
The Allison-James school in Santa Fe, the Menaul School in Albuquerque. In
Safford, Arizona, a hotel, church, and bank building. In Miami Ariz., a school,
church, and Y.M.C.A., etc.
As a resident of Tucson I am an interested member of several clubs besides
the Historical and Pioneer Society, among then The Archeological society, The
Natural History society, The Fine Arts, The Daughters of the American Revolution,
The business and Professional Women's Club, The Tucson branch of the National
League of American Pen women, and a long time board member of the Y.W.C.A.
and at present sponsor for their business girls group, the Otonka Circle.
When business permits I spend some time each year with my brother and sister-in-law
in cochise Stronghold, riding their horses, and climbing the mountains, and
a part of the summers "doing something different" each year, but always including
happy contacts with my nieces and nephews and their children in California,
and when possible with those in Massachusetts.
In the last ten or fifteen years I have visited Alaska, Hawaii, Panama, Cuba,
Grand Canyon, Ariz.; Mesa Verde, Colorado; Santa Fe and Indian villages and
ruins in New Mexico; Zion National Park and Bryce Canyon; Mexico; and have
traveled by horse, rail, bus, boat, auto, and airplane, yet so far I have
missed Roosevelt Dam, The Apache Trail. and a few other places. Here's Hoping!
-- Also that the searcher in Pioneer archives will find more profitable reading
than this.
Buildings believed to be designed by Anne Graham Rockfellow
- YMCA, 38 Miami Ave., Miami, AZ, 1915 [for
sale notice with photos]
- Safford School, 300 S. Fifth Ave., Tucson, AZ, 1918 [photo]
- Inspiration Grammar School, 929 Rose Rd., Miami, AZ, 1919
- Menaul School, Albuquerque, NM, 1919-1920 [photo]
[photo]
- Residence, Mr. Eric Wick, Tucson, AZ, 1920
- Allison-James School, 433 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe, NM, 1922-24 [photo]
[photo]
[photo]
- Residence, George Martin, 202 E. Speedway, Tucson, AZ, 1923 [demolished]
- High School, Superior, AZ, 1924 [photo]
- Hospital, Apache Powder Co., Sixth St., Benson, AZ, 1924
- Girl’s School, Lutheran Apache Mission, White River, AZ, 1924
- School for Lone Star District #20, Graham County, AZ, 1925
- Residence, W.E. Rudasill, Tucson, AZ, 1926
- First buildings of the Desert Sanatorium (now TMC), Tucson, AZ, 1926-1929
- Grade School, Benson, AZ, 1926
- St. Helen's Chapel, Oracle, AZ, 1927 [AHS PC 172 #96007] [website]
- Residence, Mr. J.C. Wright, Safford, AZ 1927
- El Conquistador Hotel, Tucson, AZ, 1928 [postcard]
- Residence, Caroline Marshall, east Broadway, Tucson, AZ, 1928
[AHS PC 172 #7069]
- Double residence, Mr. E.S. Jackson, Tucson, AZ 1928
- Young Women’s Christian Association (YWCA) building, Tucson, AZ 1929-1936
[postcard]
- Mortuary Chapel, Reilly Undertaking, 102 E. Pennington, Tucson, AZ, 1929
and 1935 [photo]
- Residence, Hayward Hoyt, Broadway and Wilmot, Tucson, AZ, 1929 [photo]
- Residence, Mrs. A.W. Erickson, at the Desert Sanitarium (TMC), Tucson,
AZ, 1929 and 1936
- Hotel, Safford, AZ, 1929
- La Fonda Buen Provecho Inn, 1325 E. Speedway, Tucson, AZ, 1931
- Residence, R.P. Bass, Tanque Verde Rd., Tucson, AZ, 1932
[AHS PC 172 F12]
- Inspiration Home, Tucson, AZ, 1935
No date known
- Arizona Children’s Home, Tucson, AZ [organization
history]
- Bank building, Safford, AZ
- Casa Grande Women’s Club, Casa Grande, AZ
- Church, Miami, AZ
- Elementary school, St. David, AZ
- First Church of Christ Scientist, 904 N. Stone Ave., Tucson, AZ [demolished]
- Four residences on Lee St., Tucson, AZ
- Indian Hospital at Sells, AZ
- Methodist Episcopal Church, Safford, AZ
- Pinal County Hospital, Florence, AZ
- Residence, Dr. V.G. Presson [Preston?], 1317 N. Stone, Tucson, AZ [demolished]
- Residence, Mrs. Hobart [Herbert?] Johnson, Erickson Dr. north of Grant
Road, Tucson, AZ [possibly part of the Desert Sanatorium, see above] [AHS
PC 172 #7066]
- Residence, Mrs. William P. Haynes, Tucson, AZ
- Residence, Warren Grossetta, 1645 E. Speedway, Tucson, AZ [demolished]
[AHS PC 172 #95961]
- Southern Arizona Bank and Trust Co. building, downtown Tucson, AZ
- University Heights Elementary School, Tucson, AZ
Memberships
- Member League of American Pen Women (pres., Tucson branch, 1933-35)
- Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society (vice pres., 1934-35)
- Tucson Natural History Society (civic relations com., 1934-35)
- Tucson Fine Arts Association
- Arizona Historical and Pioneer Society
- Daughters of the American Revolution
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology Women’s Association
- Y.W.C.A. (Tucson dir.)
Exhibit
"Looking Back/Influencing the Future: Three Women Architects"
November 21, 2003 through January 16, 2004
University of Arizona Library Special Collections
- Plan for “Log Bungalow,” 1913. Onionskin.
- Drafting tools of Anne Graham Rockfellow.
- Photograph: Rockfellow “on the mesa north of Tucson, Ariz.,” n.d.
- Postcard: El Conquistador Hotel, built in 1928.
- Scrapbook of news clippings kept by Annie Graham Rockfellow.
- Photo: “Old Town Tucson,” 1929.
- Portrait of Anne Graham Rockfellow, c. 1930.
- Rockfellow’s childhood notebook collecting historic architectural
ornament, n.d.
- Rockfellow’s personal diaries, 1895-1938, selection.
- Architect's record of Safford Middle School, an album of photographs documenting
the building as finished:
- West façade
- Entrance
- Corridor on second floor
- Music room
- Auditorium
- Boiler room
- Plan of Safford School, National School Building Journal,
1923.
- Tucson buildings: Rockfellow took numerous photographs of older Tucson
buildings, Native American villages, and archaeological sites, possibly in
an effort to document indigenous architectural forms “typical” of
Tucson.
- “Typical Papago Indian houses, oven, and dog, near
Tucson,” n.d.
- “Old Occidental Hotel, Meyer St., Tucson, 1929.”
- “Indian and firewood, Meyer St., Tucson,” n.d.
- “Old Adobe in old town Tucson, 1929.”
- “Old town Tucson, 1929.”
- “Papago Indian home near Tucson, 1921.”
Research Resources
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