Lilian Jeannette Rice

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Lilian Jeannette Rice
Lilian-Jeannette-Rice-1910.jpg
Lilian Jeannette Rice circa 1910
Born (1889-06-12)June 12, 1889
National City, California
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Rancho Santa Fe, California
Occupation architect
Nationality American
Period 1911-1938
Genre California Spanish Colonial Revival
Notable works design of Rancho Santa Fe, California
Website
http://pcad.lib.washington.edu/person/1669/

Lilian Jeannette Rice (June 12, 1889 – December 22, 1938) was an eco-conscious, early 20th-century American architect working primarily in the California Spanish colonial style. Several of her works are listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places under spelling variation Lilian Jenette Rice.[1][2]

Biography

Rice was the daughter of Julius Augustus Rice (1854-1933) and Laura (Steele) Rice (1854-1939) and was born in National City, California, ten miles north of the Mexican border in South Bay, San Diego County.[3] She was a direct patrilineal descendant of Edmund Rice an early immigrant to Massachusetts Bay Colony.[4] In 1906, she entered the University of California and successfully completed her Bachelor of Letters Degree in Social Science with a major in architecture in 1910. In 1911 she completed a course in teaching there. She returned to National City, where she worked for several years in the office of San Diego architect Hazel Wood Waterman. She later taught geometric drawing at Russ High School (now San Diego High School) and then at San Diego State Teacher's College (now San Diego State University).

In 1921, Rice was chosen by Richard Requa, of the firm of Requa and Jackson, to be the lead planner on the new development at Rancho Santa Fe in San Diego County. From 1922 until 1927 this project consumed much of her time. After her association with Requa and Jackson, Rice opened her own architectural firm in 1928, having gained her architect's license the previous year. In 1931 she became a member of the San Diego Chapter of the American Institute of Architecture, one of only a few women admitted up to that time.

In July 1938 Rice was diagnosed with ovarian cancer by La Jolla physician Ross Paull, and on December 22 of the same year she died of the disease. At the time she was a permanent resident of Rancho Santa Fe. She was cremated and her remains were interred at La Vista Memorial Park Cemetery in National City. In later years the Rice family headstones were vandalized, but well-meaning volunteers replaced the violated headstones. It was at this time that Lilian J. Rice's birth date was incorrectly assigned. While the current headstone notes 1888 as Rice's birth date, this is inaccurate. Contemporaneous birth announcements in the National City Record and the San Diego Union, plus Lilian Rice's birth certificate, prove unequivocally that she was born on June 12, 1889.

The Lilian J. Rice Elementary School in Chula Vista, California is named for her.

A number of her buildings, especially in Rancho Santa Fe, are on the National Register of Historic Places (NHRP).

Partial list of buildings

Rancho Santa Fe, CA

  • Charles A. Shaffer House, 5610 La Crescenta (NRHP listed)
  • Claude and Florence Terwilliger House, 5880 San Elijo (NRHP listed)
  • George A. C. Christiancy House, 17078 El Mirador (NRHP listed)
  • Inn at Rancho Santa Fe (1922)
  • Lilian Jenette Rice House, 16780 La Gracia (NRHP listed)
  • Norman and Florence B. Carmichael House, 6855 La Valle Plateada (NRHP listed)
  • Pearl Baker Row House, 6122 Paseo Delicias (NRHP listed)
  • Rancho Santa Fe Garden Club (1937)
  • Rancho Santa Fe Land and Improvement Company Office, 16915 Avenida de Acacias (NRHP listed)
  • Reginald M. and Constance Clotfelter Row House, 6112 Paseo Delicias (NRHP listed)
  • Samuel Bingham House, 6427 La Plateada (NRHP listed)

Other sites

  • Fleet-Rice-Hoyt House (1936–1937)
  • Martha Kinsey House, 1624 Ludington Ln., La Jolla, CA (1936; NRHP listed)
  • ZLAC Rowing Club clubhouse, Mission Bay, CA (1932) [Rice was a member of the club and its president in 1915-1916.]

References

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  4. Edmund Rice (1638) Association, 2014. Descendants of Edmund Rice: The First Nine Generations. (CD-ROM)
  1. https://www.sandiegohistory.org/journal/83fall/rice.htm
  2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_San_Diego_Historical_Landmarks_in_La_Jolla,_California
  3. Wallace, Helen Wetzell. A History of the ZLAC Rowing Club, 1892-1992. San Diego, CA: 1992.
  4. https://www.sandiegohistory.org/journal/v53-3/index.htm
  5. http://www.cvesd.org/rice/default.aspx
  6. http://www.rsf.com/area_history-lilian.htm
  7. http://www.lilianjrice.com
  8. http://lumiere.lib.vt.edu/iawa_db/view_all.php3?person_pk=30&region=&table=edu&cSel=
  9. http://www.zlac.org/rentals.htm
  10. http://www.rsfgardenclub.org/pages/about.htm

Further reading

  • "Lilian J. Rice: Architect of Rancho Santa Fe, California", Diane Y. Welch; May, 2010; Schiffer Books [1]

External links