Benjamin Howard Marshall (May 5, 1874 â June 19, 1944) was an American architect based in Chicago, Illinois. He is known for his designs of luxury hotels, apartment buildings, and country estates. His firm, Marshall and Fox, was responsible for many of ChicagoâÂÂs landmark buildings, including the Drake Hotel and the Edgewater Beach Hotel, and was known for its pioneering work in poured concrete construction.
Marshall was born in Chicago to Caleb H. and Celia F. Marshall. He attended the Harvard School for Boys in Kenwood, but did not pursue formal architectural education.
At the age of 19, he became an apprentice in the firm of Marble and Wilson and two years later, at the time of Marble's death, he was named a full-fledged partner. One of his earliest commissions was destroyed a month after its completion in an event remembered as one of Chicago's worst disasters, the Iroquois Theater Fire of 1903.
In 1905, Marshall co-founded the firm Marshall and Fox with Charles E. Fox, a graduate of MIT. Their firm specialized in designing opulent hotels and apartment buildings in classical revival styles.
His work was also part of the architecture event in the art competition at the 1928 Summer Olympics.
Some of Marshall's most important buildings include:
MarshallâÂÂs work incorporated Beaux-Arts and revivalist styles with modern amenities. He favored French-inspired designs, and some of his apartment buildings featured floorplans labeled in French. His projects often included entire floors dedicated to a single residence, with separate rooms for staff.
Following the 1903 Iroquois Theatre fireâÂÂin which flawed design contributed to hundreds of deathsâÂÂMarshall shifted toward safer poured concrete construction.
Marshall married Elizabeth Walton in 1905 and had three children.
Marshall continued to design buildings and interiors after his partner Charles FoxâÂÂs death in 1926. He lived at the Drake Hotel, one of his firm's own commissions, until his death in 1944. Financial hardship during the Great Depression curtailed his later career.
In 2002, the Benjamin Marshall Society was founded to preserve his legacy. In 2024, Chicago declared May 5 âÂÂBenjamin Marshall Dayâ to celebrate his 150th birthday. The 2015 book Benjamin H. Marshall: Chicago Architect by John Zukowsky and Jean Guarino further advanced his scholarly recognition.