The Papers of Charles Altfillisch, 1914-1995 | Luther College Archives
By Hayley Jackson, Evan Walker
Collection Overview
Title: The Papers of Charles Altfillisch, 1914-1995
ID: LCA/RG15/Altfillisch, C
Primary Creator: Altfillisch, Charles (1891-1978)
Extent: 4.4 Linear Feet. More info below.
Arrangement:
Loose records in Box 1 were arranged into appropriate categories, then placed in box alphabetically. The arrangement is as follows:
Box 1: Records
Boxes 2-5 and 7: Architectural Project Books, Date Books, and Journals
Boxes 6 and 7: Photographs and Photographic Slides
Box 8: Oversized Material
Box 9: Realia
Subjects: Luther College (Decorah, Iowa) - Buildings
Languages: English
Abstract
Scope and Contents of the Materials
Collection Historical Note
Charles Altfillisch was born on March 27, 1891 in Bellvue, Iowa. He graduated from the University of Iowa in 1914 with a degree in general engineering and worked for a few years before enlisting in the army during World War I. Altfillisch spent 1918-1919 in France as a member of the 29th Engineer Battalion. Upon returning home, Altfillisch moved to Decorah, Iowa. In 1921, Altfillisch married Leila Ervin Marsh; their only child, Gretchen, was born a year later.
Altfillisch’s interest in architecture developed slowly. In 1921, he joined his friend and former University of Iowa classmate A.N. Hanson, then the City Engineer of Decorah, in creating the architectural firm Hanson and Altfillisch. It was not until the summer of 1925 when Altfillisch traveled to Pittsburgh and enrolled in design courses at the School of Architecture at Carnegie Tech. A year later, Altfillisch and Hanson completed the plans for the Preus Gymnasium at Luther College, the firm’s first major project.
Hanson and Altfillisch continued their work together until Hanson’s sudden death in 1932; Altfillisch was subsequently appointed City Engineer of Decorah. He served in this position until 1955, notably overseeing Decorah's flood-control project.
Altfillisch continued his architectural work, expanding his firm over time to include architects Donald Gray, Roger M. Olson, Jack D. Thompson, and Allan R. Lynnes. Over the course of his career, Altfillisch and his firm designed several buildings on the Luther College campus including Brandt Hall (1950); Main (1952); Olson Hall (1955); Valders Hall of Science (1960); Centennial Union (1961); the Field House (now Regent’s Center, 1963); Ylvisaker Hall (1964); and Miller and Dieseth Towers (1965). He was awarded an honorary doctorate in 1952, and upon his retirement in 1964, the Luther College Board of Regents officially named Altfillisch the College Architectural Consultant. After his retirement, his firm went on to design Preus Library (1969) and the Center for Faith and Life (1977).
In addition to Luther’s campus, Altfillisch and his firm contributed several homes and commercial buildings in Decorah and across eastern Iowa, including Decorah City Hall, the Allamakee County Courthouse, and Postville City Hall. He was known for designing schools, building and renovating schools in Decorah, Waukon, Ridgeway, and Calmar among others. Altfillisch was active in the architectural profession, serving as president of the American Institute of Architects Iowa chapter in 1936, and was named a fellow of the American Institute of Architects in 1951 in recognition of his contributions to the profession.
Altfillisch passed away on March 17, 1978.
Biographical Note
Charles Altfillisch was born on March 27, 1891 in Bellvue, Iowa. He graduated from the University of Iowa in 1914 with a degree in general engineering and worked for a few years before enlisting in the army during World War I. Altfillisch spent 1918-1919 in France as a member of the 29 Engineer Battalion. Upon returning home, Altfillisch moved to Decorah, Iowa. In 1921, Altfillisch married Leila Ervin Marsh; their only child, Gretchen, was born a year later.
Altfillisch’s interest in architecture developed slowly. In 1921, he joined his friend and former University of Iowa classmate A.N. Hanson, then the City Engineer of Decorah, in creating the architectural firm Hanson and Altfillisch. It was not until the summer of 1925 when Altfillisch traveled to Pittsburgh and enrolled in design courses at the School of Architecture at Carnegie Tech. A year later, Altfillisch and Hanson completed the plans for the C.K. Preus Gymnasium at Luther College, the firm’s first major project.
Hanson and Altfillisch continued their work together until Hanson’s sudden death in 1932; Altfillisch was subsequently appointed City Engineer of Decorah. He served in this position until 1955, notably overseeing Decorah's flood-control project.
Altfillisch continued his architectural work, expanding his firm over time to include architects Donald Gray, Roger M. Olson, Jack D. Thompson, and Allan R. Lynnes. Over the course of his career, Altfillisch and his firm designed several buildings on the Luther College campus including Brandt Hall (1950); Main (1952); Olson Hall (1955); Valders Hall of Science (1960); Centennial Union (1961); the Field House (now Regent’s Center, 1963); Ylvisaker Hall (1964); and Miller and Dieseth Towers (1965). He was awarded an honorary doctorate in 1952, and upon his retirement in 1964, the Luther College Board of Regents officially named Altfillisch the College Architectural Consultant. After his retirement, his firm went on to design Preus Library (1969) and the Center for Faith and Life (1977).
In addition to Luther’s campus, Altfillisch and his firm contributed several homes and commercial buildings in Decorah and across eastern Iowa, including Decorah City Hall, the Allamakee County Courthouse, and Postville City Hall. He was known for designing schools, building and renovating schools in Decorah, Waukon, Ridgeway, and Calmar among others. Altfillisch was active in the architectural profession, serving as president of the American Institute of Architects Iowa chapter in 1936, and was named a fellow of the American Institute of Architects in 1951 in recognition of his contributions to the profession.
Altfillisch passed away on March 17, 1978.
Subject/Index Terms
Administrative Information
Repository: Luther College Archives
Alternate Extent Statement: 9 boxes
Use Restrictions: Though we may hold the property rights, Luther College Archives does not hold the copyrights for all materials. Individuals may use materials for non-commercial, private use, but commercial users must secure permissions from the copyright holders and/or Luther College Archives to reproduce, publish, or quote protected materials and photographs. For more information about the Luther College copyright and fair use policy, please visit https://www.luther.edu/library/copyright
Acquisition Source: Collection donated by Susan Tone Pierce, Michael Tone, and Jeffery Tone in 2018.
Preferred Citation: Cite unpublished materials: Charles Altfillisch Papers RG15 Manuscripts, Luther College Archives, Decorah, Iowa
Finding Aid Revision History:
6/10/24: Abby Bates updated copyright policy link.
11/14/19: EC updated the preferred citation.
Box and Folder Listing
Browse by Box:
[Box 1: Academic and Biographical Records, Correspondence, Honors, and Property Records, 1914-1978],
[Box 2: Ledgers and Project Books, 1921-1962],
[Box 3: Datebooks, 1924-1963],
[Box 4: Datebooks, 1967-1977],
[Box 5: Journals, 1959-1976],
[Box 6: Photographs and Photo Slides, 1912-2001],
[Box 7: Photographs and Project Books, 1925-1995, n.d.],
[Box 8: Oversized Materials, 1914-1969],
[Box 9: Artifacts],
[All]
- Box 2: Ledgers and Project Books, 1921-1962
- Folder 1: Project Book, n.d.
- Folder 2: Project Book, 1921
- Folder 3: Ledger/Project Book, 1923-1935
- Folder 4: Project Book, 1921-1933
- Also known as "Project Sheets"
- Folder 5: Project Book, 1930-1940
- Folder 6: Project Book, 1943-1951
- Folder 7: Ledger/Project Book, 1945-1953
- Folder 8: Project Book, 1952-1962
Browse by Box:
[Box 1: Academic and Biographical Records, Correspondence, Honors, and Property Records, 1914-1978],
[Box 2: Ledgers and Project Books, 1921-1962],
[Box 3: Datebooks, 1924-1963],
[Box 4: Datebooks, 1967-1977],
[Box 5: Journals, 1959-1976],
[Box 6: Photographs and Photo Slides, 1912-2001],
[Box 7: Photographs and Project Books, 1925-1995, n.d.],
[Box 8: Oversized Materials, 1914-1969],
[Box 9: Artifacts],
[All]