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Lakewood Cemetery Memorial Chapel, Minneapolis

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Lakewood Chapel exterior, ca. 1996

Lakewood Chapel exterior, ca. 1996. Photograph by BBS Architects I Engineers; used with the permission of BBS Architects I Engineers.

The Memorial Chapel at Lakewood Cemetery (3600 Hennepin Avenue) in Minneapolis is one of the few buildings that can claim to be modeled after two World Heritage Sites. Its exterior, designed by architect Harry Wild Jones, was inspired by the Hagia Sophia in Istanbul. Its interior was designed by J&R Lamb Studios of New York and drew inspiration from St. Mark’s Basilica in Venice.

In 1908, Lakewood Cemetery Association hired local architect Harry Wild Jones to design a chapel for its grounds. A graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Jones had already designed buildings around the world in various styles. Because the chapel needed to house a crematorium and a columbarium (urn storage room), which were relatively new building types, Jones visited crematoria in five Western cities as part of his planning process.

Lakewood Association members took the fairly unusual approach of awarding a separate design contract for the building’s interior finishes. They chose J&R Lamb Studios, a decorative arts company that specialized in ecclesiastical architecture as well as furnishings, metalwork, stained glass, mosaic, and sculpture. The studio was headed by Charles R. Lamb, a well-known architect, city planner, and decorative designer. Its creative team included Ella Condie Lamb (Lamb’s wife), who was herself a highly accomplished designer of murals and mosaic tile installations.

Lamb recruited six skilled mosaic artisans from Italy to fabricate over ten million pieces of marble, colored stone, and glass for the chapel. These were placed on gummed cloth and brought to Minneapolis for installation, a process that took nearly three years. An arts journal later declared that Lamb’s work at Lakewood “shows quite conclusively that Byzantine vaulting and Byzantine decoration constitute the best treatment for a chapel.” Another writer described the chapel as having “the most perfect example of Byzantine mosaic art in the United States.” Credit for the project was variously ascribed to its architect (Jones) and its interior designer (Lamb). Although critics praised the work by Lamb Studios, they often overlooked Ella’s significant contribution. She did receive recognition, however, from the New York Herald, which in 1911 dubbed her “The Mistress of Mosaic.”

Jones based the architecture of the chapel on a Greek cross plan, modified at the crossing with transept-like extensions running north (and, later, south). At the center of the crossing is a floor panel that can be opened to lower a casket by hydraulic lift to the crematorium in the basement. The chapel is topped with a double dome consisting of an exterior structural roof and an interior decorative ceiling suspended approximately three feet below the exterior shell. As was the tradition with Byzantine architecture, the apse (the section behind the altar) is located on the east side of the building. Light from the clerestory windows in the dome streams across the colorful mosaics throughout the day, creating a shimmering and glowing effect described as “a sundial of masterful proportions.”

Every part of the building’s design is layered with symbolism. The dome rests on four arches sitting on a base that forms a square. The circle has historically been seen as a symbol of heaven, particularly when found in a dome; the square has traditionally represented earth. Combining the two symbolically creates a sacred space. The dome is decorated with twelve angel figures representing departing spirits. Four of the angels, located at the four points of the compass, hold red roses symbolizing the four corners of the earth.

The transition from the circular dome to the square floor area was completed with curved triangular wall sections at the four corners, known as pendentives. Here, the Lambs placed four circular mosaic portraits of seated women representing Faith, Hope, Memory, and Love. Mosaic geometric patterns adorn most of the other surfaces of the Chapel.

Because of the working crematorium in the basement, the architect opted for fire-safety reasons to use virtually no wood, nails, varnish or paint. The building exterior is constructed with pink ashlar granite layered in alternating widths, and features a red tile dome. Brick segmental arches support the interior floors and roof. There are virtually no flat ceilings in the building, as all horizontal surfaces are vaulted.

A 1996 renovation updated the chapel’s mechanical systems and added an expanded crematory designed by the architects Brooks Borg Skiles of Des Moines, Iowa. These additions are located below grade and covered with landscaping. The building, which can seat two hundred visitors, continues to be used for funeral and memorial services. It also hosts musical performances and other cultural activities for the general public.

Editor’s note: The writer of this entry thanks George F. Cook III (the great-grandson of the original contractor of the Lakewood Chapel, George Cook), Julie Carpenter, and the staff of Lakewood Cemetery for their assistance.

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“Angels and the Outfield: How Minneapolis Architect Harry Wild Jones Brought Beauty to the Masses.” Lakewood News and Stories, August 30, 2019.
https://www.lakewoodcemetery.org/2019-08-30-angels-and-the-outfield-how-minneapolis-architect-harry-wild-jones-brought-beauty-to-th

Astakhova, E. “Architectural Symbolism in Tradition and Modernity.” Institute of Physics (IOP) Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering 913 (2020).
https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1757-899X/913/3/032024

Calter, Paul. Squaring the Circle: Geometry in Art & Architecture. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 2008.

⸻ . “The Circle, The Wheel of Fortune & The Rose.” Dartmouth College course curriculum, 1998.
https://math.dartmouth.edu/~matc/math5.geometry/unit9/unit9.html

J&R Lamb Studios.
https://lambstudios.com

Kudzia, Camille. Lakewood Memorial Chapel. National Register of Historic Places nomination file, February 1982. State Historic Preservation Office, St. Paul.
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/93201917

Lakewood Cemetery. “Art Styles, Sculptures, & Symbolism.” https://web.archive.org/web/20200921193836/https://www.lakewoodcemetery.org/styles-sculptures-symbolism

Lakewood Cemetery. Lakewood Memorial Chapel: A Visitor’s Guide. Undated.
https://www.lakewoodcemetery.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/LakewoodCemetery_MemorialChapel_Guide.pdf

Lethaby, W. R. Architecture, Mysticism and Myth. Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, 2004. Facsimile of 1892 edition.
https://archive.org/details/cu31924008729349/page/n3/mode/2up

Minneapolis Heritage Preservation Commission. Lakewood Memorial Chapel.
https://www2.minneapolismn.gov/resident-services/property-housing/landmarks/alphabetical/lakewood-memorial-chapel

Monardo, Clare Ave. "Lakewood Memorial Chapel." Archipedia, undated. Society of Architectural Historians (SAH).
http://sah-archipedia.org/buildings/MN-01-053-0047

Nelson, Tim. “Lakewood Cemetery’s Memorial Chapel Marks 100 Years.” Minnesota Public Radio, May 28, 2010.
https://minnesota.publicradio.org/features/2010/05/28-lakewood-cemetery

Osteen, Mame. Haven in the Heart of the City: The History of Lakewood Cemetery. Minneapolis: Lakewood Cemetery, 1992.
https://archive.org/details/haveninheartofci0000oste/page/n5/mode/2up

Seeley, Barea Lamb. Ella’s Certain Window: An Illustrated Biography of Ella Condie Lamb, An American Artist. United States: BLS Corporation, 1998.
https://archive.org/details/ellascertainwind0000seel/page/336/mode/2up

Vandam, Elizabeth A. Harry Wild Jones, American Architect. Minneapolis: Nodin Press, 2008.

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Related Images

Lakewood Chapel exterior, ca. 1996
Lakewood Chapel exterior, ca. 1996
Lakewood Chapel dome interior, facing rear, ca. 1910
Lakewood Chapel dome interior, facing rear, ca. 1910
Lakewood Chapel floor plan
Lakewood Chapel floor plan
Lakewood Chapel dome interior, facing entrance
Lakewood Chapel dome interior, facing entrance
Lakewood Chapel front façade
Lakewood Chapel front façade
Lakewood Chapel rear façade
Lakewood Chapel rear façade
Lakewood Chapel front and side façade
Lakewood Chapel front and side façade
Mosaic inside Lakewood Chapel
Mosaic inside Lakewood Chapel
Funeral decorations inside Lakewood Chapel
Funeral decorations inside Lakewood Chapel
Lakewood Chapel exterior, ca. 1948
Lakewood Chapel exterior, ca. 1948
Repairing the roof of Lakewood Chapel
Repairing the roof of Lakewood Chapel
Harry Wild Jones: American Architect (book cover)
Harry Wild Jones: American Architect (book cover)
Dome and chandelier
Dome and chandelier
Lakewood Chapel arched doorway
Lakewood Chapel arched doorway
Lakewood Chapel lobby interior
Lakewood Chapel lobby interior
Illuminated interior of Lakewood Chapel
Illuminated interior of Lakewood Chapel
Lakewood Chapel exterior, 2012
Lakewood Chapel exterior, 2012
Lakewood Chapel dome interior, 2012
Lakewood Chapel dome interior, 2012
Lakewood Chapel dome interior, 2014
Lakewood Chapel dome interior, 2014
Chair inside Lakewood Chapel
Chair inside Lakewood Chapel
Columbarium in Lakewood Chapel
Columbarium in Lakewood Chapel

Turning Point

The Lakewood Chapel Building Committee commissions the design services of local architect Harry Wild Jones for the chapel’s structure and exterior. Separately, it commissions J&R Lamb Studios, a national firm based in New York, for the interior decorative finishes. By bringing these two firms together by 1909, the committee creates a fruitful collaboration that maximizes the individual talents of Harry Wild Jones, Charles R. Lamb, and Ella Condie Lamb, and results in an extraordinary building.

Chronology

1857

Brothers Joseph and Richard Lamb found J&R Lamb Studios in New York.

1876

Charles R. Lamb joins the family design studio at the age of sixteen.

1883

Harry Wild Jones marries Bertha Julliet Tucker in Boston. His father, a Baptist minister, officiates at their wedding in a church designed by H. H. Richardson.

1884

Harry and Bertha move to Minneapolis.

1888

Ella Condie and Charles R. Lamb marry in New York City. They would have four children.

1891

Harry Wild Jones becomes the first professor at the newly established program in architecture at the University of Minnesota.

1906

Jones wins a competition for the design of the Lakewood Cemetery Memorial Chapel.

1907

Jones is seriously injured in a car accident that fractures his skull and leaves him in a coma.

1908

Jones receives the contract to design the Lakewood Chapel building, and travels to five western cities to study crematoria at the request of the Lakewood Building Committee.

1908

Construction starts on the Lakewood Memorial Chapel in August.

1909

The first phase of construction of the crematory is completed.

1909

Charles R. Lamb is commissioned to design the chapel’s interior finishes. He travels to Rome to enlist the services of six mosaic artists to fabricate materials for the chapel according to the designs of Ella Condie Lamb.

1910

Lakewood Chapel is dedicated and opens to the public.

1935

Harry Wild Jones dies in Minneapolis, leaving behind an architectural legacy of over three hundred buildings.

1996

BBS Architects I Engineers restore the chapel’s exterior and interior features, including an expanded crematory designed by Brooks Borg Skiles.