Horner
Architectural Photography Collection contains 307 vintage, black and white mounted photographs taken by Benjamin Bean
Horner
(1893-1971), an architect who practiced in Southern California, primarily Los Angeles and Santa Barbara. The photographs
are from the 1920s; the majority of the images are of historic structures in England and California.
Restrictions on Use and Reproduction
Horner
Architectural Photography Collection, Special Collections, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo.
Horner
(1893-1971) was an architect who practiced in Southern California, primarily Los Angeles and Santa Barbara.
Horner
, a drafter for a furniture factory, and his wife, Emily, both natives of England. The family also lived in Indiana when Benjamin
was a teen. He graduated from Purdue University and belonged to the Tau Beta Pi Association, a national engineering honor
society.
Horner
then served in World War I with the Army Engineering Corps.
Horner's
second wife, Esther Ruth Vanrossum (1901-1985), was from his home state of Michigan. They were married in the 1930s, with
three sons born to them (William, Benjamin Harold, and Peter). The Horners lived in Santa Barbara until 1948 when they moved
to Ojai.
Horner
photographed the historic buildings, manor houses, and villages found in this collection. The images include elevations as
well as close-ups; his keen eye for architectural detail is reflected in these photographic studies.
Horner's
travels throughout California during the 1920s led him to explore the state's romantic past. His photos of historic adobe
structures from the Spanish and Mexican periods of history strongly evoke this bygone era.
Horner
Architectural Photography Collection contains 307 vintage, black and white mounted photographs taken by Benjamin Bean
Horner
(1893-1971), an architect who practiced in Southern California, primarily Los Angeles and Santa Barbara. While the size of
the photos themselves varies somewhat, they are generally about 9 ½ x 7 ½ or 7 ½ x 9 ½; with the mounts they are all 12 ½
x 19. The photos are mounted on watercolor stock.
Horner
Architectural Photography Collection is housed in 10 boxes, with subseries A. California Adobes and B. England containing
the most extensive (3 boxes and 7 boxes respectively) portions of the collection.
Horner
photographed them during the 1920s; today many of them have since either been restored or destroyed.