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Gridley House



Fermi National
Accelerator Laboratory

More about Batavia, Illinois
Aurora Bannockburn Barrington Batavia Bloomingdale Chicago Dwight Evanston Geneva Glencoe Highland Park Hinsdale Kankakee La Grange Lake Bluff Lake Forest Libertyville Oak Park River Forest Riverside Springfield
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Listed
in the National Register of Historic Places...
Homes built in the United States during the Victorian Era
(from 1837 to 1901, the length of the rule of Britain's Queen Victoria) were
overly ornate and the rooms were boxed in and confining... at least
according to Frank Lloyd Wright -- and he did not like them.
As a result, he began to design homes with low, horizontal
lines and open interior spaces. They became known as "prairie style"
houses after a floor plan that was published in a 1901 Ladies Home Journal
titled "A Home in a Prairie Town." Perhaps the best known -- and
possibly the finest example -- of Wright's Prairie Style homes is the
Robie Residence (built in
1909), located in the Hyde Park neighborhood of Chicago.
However, there are numerous other structures that exhibit the
same long and low lines, constructed with native materials and having a
unique connection with the surrounding terrain: they blended into and became
one with it. One of these structures -- the A. W. Gridley house -- is
located in Batavia, Illinois.
One of three projects all built within a mile of one another
in 1906 and 1907, Wright named it "Ravine House," because of the gently
sloping wildflower ravine on the south side of the original 15-acre site
(now only 2.3 acres in size). Typical of Wright's Prairie style, the
5,100 square-foot, fourteen-room home is defined by a low-pitched,
cantilevered roof and three massive, roman brick fireplaces. Testament
to the wide open feel of the style, current owner Mary Kane states: "You can
stand in the center of the house and see every room." Also distinctive
on the exterior of the stucco and cypress home are the uninterrupted cedar
trim and casement windows that are grouped into horizontal bands.
Wright's original plan included a stucco wall surrounding the front wing
which has since been removed, and a barn that was never built.
Unfortunately, Gridley had financial problems and only lived
in the home for a short time; it was sold to Frank Snow (president of
Batavia's Challenge Feed Mill and Wind Mill Company) in 1912; members of the
family lived in the house until 1981.
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