Awards
Preservation Awards
Every year, the Victorian Society accepts nominations for the preservation or restoration of historically-important structures, as well as for not-for-profit organizations whose mission includes the preservation or restoration of historic building and places. The nominated structure must have been created during the period 1837 to 1917 and be listed or eligible for listing on the National Register of Historic Places.
Book Awards
The Victorian Society in America presents up to three book awards annually to books that best advance an understanding or appreciation of the decorative arts or architecture of the 19th Century. Apart from the prestige of the Society’s respected award, winners receive an illuminated manuscript presented at a dinner during the Society’s Annual Meeting. The Society also publicizes its award winners and their books on this web site.
President’s Awards
Since 1986, the Victorian Society’s National Board President periodically gives awards at her or his discretion to honor outstanding service or contribution to the mission of the organization. Recent recipients include Tina Strauss, John Waters, Gavin Stamp, Bruce Davies, and Pauline Metcalf.
Previous Book Awards
2016 |
HENRY-RUSSELL HITCHCOCK AWARD – Henry Howard: Louisiana’s Architect by Robert S. Brantley with Victor McGee |
W.E. FISCHELIS AWARD – Sargent: Portraits of Artists and Friends by Richard Ormond, Elaine Kilmurray, Trevor Fairbrother, Marc Simpson, Erica Hirshler, Barbara Weinberg, and Barbara Gallati. |
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RUTH EMERY AWARD – The Dakota: A History of the World’s Best-Known Apartment Building by Andrew Alpern. |
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2015 |
HENRY-RUSSELL HITCHCOCK AWARD – American Gothic Art and Architecture in the Age of Romantic Literature by Kerry Dean Carso. To induce a thrill, Victorians read British Gothic literature. Carso shows how these experiences were catalysts for a Gothic sensibility in American painting, architecture, garden design and literature. |
W. E. Fischelis Award – Beyond Grief: Sculpture and Wonder in the Gilded Age Cemetery by Cynthia Mills. This beautiful, thoughtful book discusses high-style memorial sculpture and the functions it served for its patrons and in the public realm of the cemetery, in exhibitions, and in the media. |
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RUTH EMERY AWARD – Cincinnati Silver 1788-1940 by Amy Miller Dehan, with contributions by Janet C. Haartz and Nora Kohl. This volume thoroughly demonstrates that Cincinnati was a consumer and producer of luxury silver for its own use, and for the nation. |
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2014 |
HENRY-RUSSELL HITCHCOCK AWARD – Becoming Tom Thumb: Charles P. Stratton, P. T. Barnum, and the Dawn of American Celebrity by Eric D. Lehman. Deeply humane and splendidly researched, the book is the first to do justice to Charles Stratton, better known as General Tom Thumb. It shows him to be a charming and dynamic entrepreneur who shrewdly exploited his international celebrity, by no means a hapless victim, and it does so with great insight and sympathy. |
WILLIAM E. FISCHELIS AWARD – Tell it with Pride: The 54th Massachusetts Regiment and Augustus Saint-Gaudens’ Shaw Memorial by Nancy K. Anderson and Sara Greenough. This beautiful catalogue casts new light on one of America’s finest sculptures, Saint-Gaudens’ memorial to the 54th Massachusetts Regiment. Besides showing the sculptor’s extraordinary preparatory studies, it provides the first comprehensive examination of the soldiers who comprised that all-black regiment, along with a poignant inventory of their names, ages and occupations. The volume is a magnificent study of the art and the soldiers it memorializes. |
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RUTH EMERY AWARD – Community by Design: The Olmsted Firm and the Development of Brookline, Massachusetts by Keith N. Morgan, Elizabeth Hope Cushing and Roger G. Reed. Whether or not Brookline was “the richest town in the world,” as was sometimes claimed, it was remarkably beautiful and influential. That this was largely the achievement of Frederick Law Olmsted is persuasively demonstrated by this superbly researched and well-written account. |
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2013 |
HENRY-RUSSELL HITCHCOCK AWARD – Inventing the Modern World: Decorative Arts and the World’s Fairs 1851-1939 by lead authors Jason T. Busch and Catherine L. Futter. |
WILLIAM E. FISCHELIS AWARD – Angels & Tomboys: Girlhood in 19th Century American Art by lead author Holly Pyne Connor. |
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RUTH EMERY AWARD – Sanctified Landscape: Writers, Artists and the Hudson River Valley, 1820-1909 – by David Schuyler. |
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Citation for Excellence – Capricious Fancy: Draping and Curtaining the Historic Interior 1800-1930 by Gail Caskey Winkler, in recognition of its contribution to the design history of the 19th century. |
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2012 |
HENRY-RUSSELL HITCHCOCK AWARD – Denman Ross and American Design Theory by Marie Frank. |
WILLIAM E. FISCHELIS AWARD – The Weir Family 1820-1920: Expanding the Traditions of American Art by Marian Wardle. |
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RUTH EMERY AWARD – James Riely Gordon: His Courthouses and Other Public Architecture by Chris Meister. |
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2011 |
HENRY-RUSSELL HITCHCOCK AWARD – Peabody and Stearns: Country Houses and Seaside Cottages by Annie Robinson. |
RUTH EMERY AWARD – See and Be Seen: Saratoga in the Victorian Era by Hollis Palmer. |
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WILLIAM E. FISCHELIS AWARD – John S. Sargent: Portraits in Praise of Women by Patricia Hills and Helen Lefkowitz Horowitz. |
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2010 |
HENRY-RUSSELL HITCHCOCK AWARD – Henry Austin: In Every Variety of Architectural Style by James F. O’Gorman. The first full-length study of an architect who embodies the eclectic spirit of the America nineteenth century, this book makes a significant contribution to the study of the architecture of the period and should serve as an important reference on its subject for years to come. |
RUTH EMERY AWARD – The Captain Frederick Pabst Mansion by John C. Eastberg. This exacting study of a single historic home captures a microcosm of the social, historical, architectural and decorative currents of the period. |
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W.E. FISCHELIS AWARD – The Fischelis Award was not presented in 2010. |
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2009 |
HENRY-RUSSELL HITCHCOCK AWARD – The Artistic Furniture of Charles Rohlfs by Joseph Cunningham. With its groundbreaking work on one of the most innovative furniture makers of the early twentieth century, this book makes a significant contribution to the study of decorative arts. |
RUTH EMERY AWARD – Harbor Hill: Portrait of a House by Richard Guy Wilson. As a study of the social, cultural and economic implications of the great house in America, this book expands the meaning of a single architectural masterpiece to explore its broader context. |
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WILLIAM E. FISCHELIS AWARD – Like Breath on Glass: Whistler, Inness and the Art of Painting Softly by Mark Simpson, Wanda Corn, Cody Hartley, and Michael Lewis. By creating a dialogue between two artists not normally associated with one another, this beautifully-produced catalog provides illuminating and innovative perspectives on a unique approach to painting. |
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2008 |
HENRY-RUSSELL HITCHCOCK AWARD – George Inness: A Catalogue Raisonné by Michael Quick. For its thorough treatment of a highly influential figure in nineteenth century landscape painting, this beautifully presented book will serve as an important reference on its subject for years to come. |
RUTH EMERY AWARD – Jacob Weidenmann: Pioneer Landscape Architect by Rudy J. Favretti. Thoroughly researched and beautifully illustrated, this book fills a gap in the literature on landscape architecture. |
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W.E. FISCHELIS AWARD – Cecilia Beaux: American Figure Painter by Sylvia Yount, Kevin Sharp, Nina Auerbach, and Mark Bockrath. This catalogue thoughtfully and beautifully reassesses one of the greatest painters of the American Renaissance. |
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2007 |
HENRY-RUSSELL HITCHCOCK AWARD – Owen Jones: Design, Ornament, Architecture and Theory in an Age of Transition by Carol A. Hrvol Flores. For its groundbreaking treatment of a highly influential figure in nineteenth century architecture and design, this beautiful book should serve as an important reference on its subject for years to come. |
RUTH EMERY AWARD – Temple of Invention: History of a National Landmark by Charles J. Robertson. For providing social, cultural and political context to a national landmark, this book is an elegant model of the architectural monograph. |
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W.E. FISCHELIS AWARD – Americans in Paris 1860-1900 by Kathleen Adler, Erica E. Hirshler and H. Barbara Weinberg. A model of international collaboration and innovative scholarship, this catalog beautifully illustrates cross-cultural influences at a transformative time in American history and culture. |
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2006 |
HENRY-RUSSELL HITCHCOCK AWARD – Adolph Cluss, Architect: From Germany to America, Co-edited by Alan Lessoff and Christof Mauch. For its international collaboration as well as its introduction of an important architect to the national canon, this book should serve as a model for future scholarship in the field of architecture in the United States. |
RUTH EMERY AWARD – A Brass Menagerie: Metalwork of the Aesthetic Movement by Anna Tobin D’Ambrosio. With its elegant presentation of a dazzling assemblage of American decorative metalwork, this catalog will doubtless serve as a reference for years to come. |
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W.E. FISCHELIS AWARD – The Shipcarvers’ Art: Figureheads and Cigar-Store Indians in Nineteenth-Century America by Ralph Sessions, for creating a new standard reference for the uniquely American art of wood-carving. |
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2004 |
HENRY-RUSSELL HITCHCOCK AWARD – Thomas Jeckyll Architect and Designer, 1827-1881 by Susan W. Soros and Catherine Arbuthnott for “a comprehensive, lucidly written exhibition catalogue that is a pioneering study which illuminates the career of this brilliant and unjustly forgotten Aesthetic Movement designer.” |
RUTH EMERY AWARD – A Separate Sphere: Dressmakers in Cincinnati’s Golden Age, 1877-1922 by Cynthia Amneus, Marla R. Miller, Anne Bissonnette and Shirley Teresa Wajda for “a beautifully photographed, thoroughly researched and compellingly written book, innovative in its integrated approach, that presents the oft-neglected products of women artisans as a subject worthy of careful consideration.” |
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W. E. Fischelis Award – Whistler, Women, & Fashion by Margaret F. MacDonald, Susan Grace Galassi & Aileen Ribeiro, with Patricia de Montfort for “a work whose authors have explored the painter’s lifelong fascination with the world of fashion and have produced a delightful book with an intelligence and elegance that is a worthy match for its formidable subject.” |
President’s Awards
2016 |
To Tina Strauss and John Waters, for jointly creating and ultimately leading the Chicago Summer School, a long-held goal of the Society – all the while exhibiting patience, perseverance and attention to every detail, thereby creating a course which has elicited rave reviews from both their colleagues and their students. Presented with our thanks and gratitude on April 30, 2016 by John Simonelli, President. |
2014 |
To Gavin Stamp, for his longstanding commitment to the Victorian Society in America’s Summer Schools and in honor of his many years of leadership with the London Summer School Program, particularly the exceptional trips to the Midlands. Given with our gratitude in the 40th anniversary year of the London program. |
2012 |
To Bruce Davies, for his five years of dedicated service to the Victorian Society in America as President of the Board; for his patience, perseverance and compassion while serving in this position; for his continued support of his colleagues and his unfailing good humor; and for being the Canadian representative of and to the Victorian Society in America. |
To Pauline Metcalf for her longstanding commitment to the Victorian Society in America; for her continued support of the Summer Schools; for the expertise and guidance she shares with the students and her colleagues; and for her generosity which touches so many lives. Presented by President Tina Strauss at San Antonio, TX. |
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2011 |
To Richard Guy Wilson, director of the Society’s Newport Summer School, received a special President’s Award for his tremendous contribution to the success of the Society’s Newport Summer School, for his excellence in teaching, guiding, coordinating, and creating camaraderie among the Newport students, and for his unfailing dedication, grace, support and commitment to the Society for over 31 years. The award was presented by VSA President Tina Strauss at a reception held for this year’s Newport scholars at the home of Pauline Metcalf on June 8, 2011. |
2010 |
To Charles Robertson for distinguished service in conserving and interpreting America’s artistic and architectural heritage, and to William Ayres for distinguished service in conserving and interpreting America’s material culture, at Albany, NY by President Bruce Davies. |
2007 |
To Gwen Koch for her long-time love and support of the Society, especially her warm and endearing dedication to its Summer Schools, having actively served on its Summer Schools Committee for many years. Presented at Mobile, AL by President Bruce Davies. |
2006 |
To John J. Simonelli for his extraordinary generosity of spirit, time and expertise during many years of distinguished service to the Society and for his continuous commitment to preserving and sharing the 19th Century heritage of America. Presented at St. Louis, MO by President Bruce Davies. |
2005 |
To William Dane, who from the earliest days of the founding of the VSA in Margot Gayle’s kitchen right down to the present day has been consistently involved with and actively supported many aspects of the Society, including serving on the Summer Schools Committee for many years as both member and co-chair, serving as president of the NY Metro Chapter, and serving as an officer of the Summer Schools Alumni Association. |
To C. Dudley Brown, who from our earliest days has worked selflessly to promote and further the aims of the Society, serving nationally as Director, Secretary and Historian on the Board of Directors as well as locally as President of the Washington, DC Chapter, who helped initiate the silent auction, licensing and endowment programs to ensure the Society’s survival, and who consistently has promoted preservation of and education about our Victorian heritage. Presented at San Juan, PR by President Pat Pixley. |
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2001 |
To Sallie R. Wadswort |
2000 |
To Mike Leigh, Director of “Topsy-Turvy” for a motion picture portraying the creation of Gilbert and Sullivan’s The Mikado which evokes the cultural and social world of late Victorian London with surpassing wit, insight and sympathy, and which contains some of the most striking depictions of Victorian interiors ever captured on film, by President John J. Simonelli. |
1999 |
To Margot Gayle, Preservationist, Author, Founder of Societies, Friend of Cast Iron, Intractable Foe of Vandals and Rapacious Developers, by President John J. Simonelli. |
1998 |
To Mills Lane upon the completion of his diligent endeavor to provide a readily available compilation of photographs, prints, plans, and historical background in his ten-volume series “Architecture of the Old South” by President Billie S. Britz. |
1994 |
To William E. Fischelis for outstanding service. Presented at San Francisco, CA by President Billie S. Britz. |
1993 |
To Richard E. Slavin for outstanding service. Presented at Jekyll Island, GA by President Billie S. Britz.. |
1990 |
To Samuel J. Dornsife for outstanding service. Presented at Natchez, MS by President Billie S. Britz. |
1989 |
1989: To C. Dudley Brown for outstanding service. Presented at St. Louis, MO by President Guy Lacy Schless. |
1988 |
To Christopher Forbes and Sibyl McCormac Groff for outstanding service. Presented at Charleston, SC by President Guy Lacy Schless. |
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1987 |
To Richard H. Howland and Helen Tucker for outstanding service. Presented at Toronto, ON by President Guy Lacy Schless. |
1986 |
To Brendan Gill and Margot Gayle for outstanding service. Presented at Philadelphia, PA by President Guy Lacy Schless. To George Vaux and Ruth Emery for outstanding service. Presented at Des Moines, IA by President Guy Lacy Schless. |