Turney Mansion Becomes Work of Art
By Dominique A. Esparza
William Ward Turney. Henry C. Trost.
Samuel H.
Kress. Although these are not household names in El Paso,
each man contributed to our city in a special way. El Paso
received a huge gift from these men, each from an entirely
different walk of life.
In 1892, W.W. Turney moved to El Paso from Alpine, Texas. In
1907, Henry C. Trost designed a house for W.W. Turney, and in
1929, Samuel H. Kress started the Kress Foundation to promote
his love of art. These three events helped to establish the
basis for the El Paso Museum of Art, located at 1205 Montana
Avenue, which opened in December 1961.
William Ward Turney accomplished a great deal in El Paso. Born
in Marshall, Texas, in 1861, he received his license to practice
law in 1887. He moved to Fort Davis, where he briefly practiced
law, then to Alpine, where he married Iva Guthrie in 1892,
before moving to El Paso. This was also the year that Turney was
elected to the lower house of the Texas Legislature.
Turney specialized in corporate law. He was associated with
several companies in El Paso, including the Rio Grande Oil
Company, and represented the Southwestern Telegraph and
Telephone Company. Turney served two terms in the Texas house
and was elected to the senate in 1896, where he served until he
retired in 1902.
In El Paso, Turney was on the committee to conduct the carnival
queen election in 1900, similar to today's Sun Carnival contest.
He served on the Board of Directors for the Chamber of Commerce
and was on the Business Men's Committee of the YMCA, which
helped organize and build the YMCA.
Turney was one of the organizers of the Cattle Raisers
Association, leading a delegation in 1902 from El Paso to the
convention in Fort Worth to bring the next gathering to El Paso.
During two separate terms, Turney served as president of the
Texas Cattle
Raisers Association, from 1903-1906 and again from
1919-1921.
In 1903, the great architect Henry Trost came to El Paso. Over the next three
decades, he designed over
200 buildings, both residences and major offices. His designs were
influenced by Louis Sullivan and Frank Lloyd Wright, as well as by Pueblo
and Spanish architecture. In 1907, he designed a home for W.W. Turney. The
mansion on Montana was Colonial in style and, at a cost of $50,000, was one
of the largest private homes that Trost ever built.
The two-story home featured wooden Corinthian columns and
pilasters to support the porch roofs. Inside were ten rooms,
among them a library, dining room, three bathrooms and a
basement. Accents included white enamel, mahogany trim, beamed
ceilings and tile floors in the bathrooms.
The Turneys lived in the mansion for several years. W.W. Turney
died in 1939 at the age of 78, and his wife moved into an
apartment at the downtown Paso Del Norte Hotel, which rented
apartments to several of the elite in the city. She continued to
live in the style she was accustomed to for another 21 years
until her death in April 1960.
Samuel H. Kress did some great things of his own during this
period. The wealthy Kress made his money from a chain of
stores by the same name. He bought several pieces of art
from the Renaissance and Baroque periods for himself and for
American galleries, forming the cornerstones of many art
museums. To promote art, Kress established the
Samuel H.
Kress Foundation in 1929. In so doing, Kress said he would
be able to "promote the moral, physical, and mental welfare of
the human race."
In the 1940s, the El Paso Museum Association showed interest in
the Turney mansion. The museum offered Mrs. Turney $5,000 for
her interest, in exchange for the title of the property .The
Museum Association asked that the city take over the title.
Commissioners Court voted to allow the city to take tax
foreclosure proceedings against the property for conversion of
the home to a municipal museum. The city and county then
purchased the home for $11,860 at a tax auction.
In 1947, the Turney house was made into the International Museum
and housed collections of historical interest. In 1959, Robert
McKee, a member of the Museum Association, had an idea to turn
the building into a museum for the Kress Collection. McKee was a
close friend of the Kress family and helped make the home into a
building that would be acceptable to house the Kress Collection.
The east and west wings were added to the original house in
1960. The detailed interior was preserved as much as possible
when the additions were made. The wooden staircase with a leaded
glass art nouveau window at the landing was left in place, and
the grand sitting room remained intact, complete with French
provincial furnishings in blue with gold trim.
Raymond L. Telles, mayor of El Paso at the time, handled the
transactions and developments with the Kress Foundation to bring
the collection to El Paso. Ralph E. Seitsinger, mayor protem
during Telles' administration, was mayor when the museum
opened.
After completion of the museum, the Kress Foundation made a
donation of European art works. The collection arrived on April
20, 1961, in an unscheduled van, in order to minimize the danger
of hijacking. Consisting of 57 paintings and two sculptures, the
collection featured three time periods of art history: Early
Renaissance 1300-1500, High Renaissance 1500-1600 and Baroque
Rococo 1600-1800. With this donation, the International Museum
closed and the
El Paso Museum of Art opened, using a municipal fund of the
City of El Paso to pay for operating costs.
Guy Emmerson, Director of the Kress Collection at the time, said
that the Kress Collection in El Paso was surpassed in quality
only by the art in the National
Art Gallery in Washington. El Paso had arrived on the art
scene with its connection to the Kress Foundation.
A 1993 El Paso Herald-Post article says the foundation ensures
that preservation by routine care is given to the art by some of
the best conservation experts. The foundation also helps protect
and preserve the integrity of the artwork that it sponsors by
insisting that restorative measures are reversible, including
any repairs or additions of frames to the paintings. Another
aspect of preservation is documentation of the collection by
discovering the significance of the art through history and
research of each piece of work that the foundation sponsors.
El Pasoan Bertha Ruiz remembers the museum of that era fondly.
When she was a fourth-grader at the original Lamar Elementary
School on Montana Avenue, her class went on a trip to the
museum. In a recent interview, Ruiz said, "My class went on a
walking field trip. It was my first exposure to art and I feel
that the interest and appreciation of art was instilled in me
even if I did not know it at the time," an idea the museum
fosters even today.
When Trost designed the home for W. W. Turney, neither knew that
50 years later it would be an outlet for art for the El Paso
area and house a famous collection. The home is now used for
entirely different things from what it was originally planned
for. The living room is now called the Members' Room and
features antique furnishings and the treasures of the month. The
second floor houses business offices and the reference library.
The museum also contains an educational gallery, gift shop,
auditorium and classrooms.
The museum is scheduled to move
downtown into the former Greyhound Bus Terminal on the
corner of Santa Fe Street. Although a new facility is needed, it
will not seem quite the same to have the museum at a different
location. According to Becky Duval Reese, current Director of
the museum, construction is scheduled to begin in April 1996 and
will take about 10 months to complete. The move is planned for
April of 1997.
Now on exhibit at the Montana street museum through June 30 is a
major exhibition of Auguste Rodin's 19th century French
sculpture. El Pasoans have less than a year to enjoy a landmark
art museum touched by the actions of three great men.
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