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Detroit Architects: Alpheus William Chittenden (February 24, 1869-May 3, 1958)

Detroit Architects: Alpheus William Chittenden (February 24, 1869-May 3, 1958)

3 min read

Alpheus William Chittenden (1869 – 1958) was a prolific early-20th-century architect and Detroit native born in a house at 70 Fort St. in Detroit that is now the site of the Theodore J. Levin U.S. Courthouse. 

Born into a family of status, Alpheus (“Alf” as he was known in his youth) was the grandson of General Alpheus Starkey Williams, a Civil War veteran that would go on to become a congressman and the founder of the Detroit Boat Club.

A graduate of Detroit High School and later the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Alpheus then took his studies overseas to Charlottenburg, Germany, where he attended Technische Hochschule Charlottenburg (known today as the Technische Universität Berlin / the Technical University of Berlin) and spent the next two years traveling Europe gaining valuable design inspiration before returning to Detroit in his late 20s to start his architectural practice in 1898.

That said, Alpheus’s architectural career truly began just three years prior in 1895, when he helped with an interior addition on the Russell House owned by his father William Chittenden. 

His craftsmanship was impressive, and from there, he landed his next major project: the interior construction of the new Detroit Opera House in 1897 after a fire ravished the original structure.

He went on to work alongside other respected late 19th century architects like Mason & Rice and Col. J.M. Wood, gaining a knack for the well-designed Francis I–style interiors that would later cement his reputation as one of Detroit’s most promising rising architects.

Although most of Chittenden’s early catalog was interior heavy, with the mayor’s office in Old City Hall (1898), the Grosse Pointe Club (1898), and the Detroit Club (1899) some of his most iconic contributions of this kind, the Mary G. Harris House (1899) in Indian Village, followed by Belle Isle’s Detroit Boat Club (1902) would be what would catapult him into another league entirely: full scale building design.

This endeavor saw Chittenden joining forces with fellow Detroit architect Charles Kotting to form Chittenden & Kotting in 1903, and together they completed a remarkable 80 projects, the bulk of which were residential homes located in prestigious historic districts like Indian Village, Boston-Edison, Grosse Pointe, and Bloomfield Hills. As well as numerous Detroit firehouses, the Bloomfield Hills Country Club in 1915, and the Wayne Automobile Co. plant in 1905–06.

Over the course of his career, Chittenden helped mold the rich architectural footprint of some of Detroit’s most upscale enclaves with his stunning revival-style homes, but as far as his private life was concerned, the bulk of it was centered around his huge Bloomfield Hills estate, Brae Burn (constructed in 1909).

A respected early 20th century public figure, Chittenden served as secretary of the Michigan AIA and was heavily involved in a number of Detroit’s very best social clubs all the way until 1917, when he relocated to Colorado Springs to live out the rest of his life.

A well-traveled, cultured, free spirited man, Chittenden spent time in Egypt in 1928, never married, and died in 1958 at age 89 and was buried in Detroit’s Woodlawn Cemetery.

In Indian Village, his work includes two distinguished properties:

  • The Samuel S. Harris House at 771 Seminole
  • The Frederick K. Stearns House at 8109 East Jefferson

These residences represent Chittenden’s mastery of scale, proportion, and luxury — cornerstones of the refined architectural identity that continues to make Indian Village one of Detroit’s most admired historic neighborhoods.