Difference between revisions of "John Peter Helleberg, Sr. (1890-1980), Architect"

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Clinic for Carl G. Amick (1945), Loup City, Nebraska.[[#References|[8]]]
 
Clinic for Carl G. Amick (1945), Loup City, Nebraska.[[#References|[8]]]
  
::''From 1946 on, Helleberg’s career continued in partnership with his son, John Peter Helleberg, Jr., and then later, with Rex Staal Helleberg. Listed below are some of his principal works from this period. See the buildings and projects of [[Helleberg & Helleberg, Architects#Buildings & Projects|Helleberg & Helleberg, Architects]] for more''.
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::''From 1946 on, Helleberg’s career continued in partnership with his son, John Peter Helleberg, Jr., and then later, his younger son Rex Staal Helleberg. Listed below are some of his principal works from this period. See the buildings and projects of '''[[Helleberg & Helleberg, Architects#Buildings & Projects|Helleberg & Helleberg, Architects]]''' for more''.
  
 
Consumers Headquarters Building (1947-1949), 2025 Ave A, Kearney, Nebraska.[[#References|[3][6]]][[#Notes|[a]]]
 
Consumers Headquarters Building (1947-1949), 2025 Ave A, Kearney, Nebraska.[[#References|[3][6]]][[#Notes|[a]]]

Revision as of 15:15, 6 March 2019

Columbus, 1914-1923, and Kearney, Nebraska, 1923-1969

DBA: John P. Helleberg, Architect


John P. Helleberg, Sr. was born in Thisted, Denmark on November 28, 1890.[1][3][4] He moved to the United States as a young man in 1909, becoming a draftsman for the firm of Wurdeman & Grabe in Columbus, from 1912-1914.[4] He was made a partner in the firm Grabe & Helleberg, also in Columbus, from 1914-1923. The partnership dissolved in 1923, and Helleberg moved to Kearney, Nebraska to establish his own practice there. In 1946 he took his son, John P. Helleberg, Jr., as a partner in the firm Helleberg & Helleberg. His younger son Rex S. became a partner in 1956. Helleberg died July 1, 1980.[1][3]

This page is a contribution to the publication, Place Makers of Nebraska: The Architects. See the format and contents page for more information on the compilation and page organization.

Compiled Nebraska Directory Listings

Kearney, Nebraska, 1924, 1937-1980

Educational & Professional Associations

1909: Teknisk Skole, Thisted, Denmark.[3]

1912-1914: draftsman and architect, Wurdeman & Grabe, Architects, Columbus, Nebraska.[2][3][4]

1914-1923: architect and partner, Grabe & Helleberg, Architects, Columbus, Nebraska.[2][3[4]]

1920-1921: studied in France, England, Scotland, Germany, Norway, and Denmark.[4]

1923-1946: architect and owner, John P. Helleberg, Architect, Kearney.[3]

1938: Registered Professional Architect, Nebraska, A-23.

1946-1967: architect and partner, Helleberg & Helleberg, Architects, Kearney, Nebraska.[3]

1968-1980: retired, Kearney, Nebraska.

Architectural Study Travel

Four trips to Europe.[3]

Buildings, Projects & Principal Works

1920s

Overton Grade and High School (1924), Overton, Nebraska.[9]

Alda Grade and High School (1924), Alda, Nebraska.[9]

Rockville Grade and High School (1925), Rockville, Nebraska.[9]

Odessa Grade and High School (1925), Odessa, Nebraska.[9]

Lexington High School (1926), Lexington, Nebraska.[9]

Poole Grade School (1927), Poole, Nebraska.[9]

Anselmo Grade School (1927), Anselmo, Nebraska.[9]

Ravenna Grade School (1928), Ravenna, Nebraska.[9] (BF11-004)

Public School (1928), Amherst, Nebraska. (BF01-001)

Amherst Grade and High School (1928), Amherst, Nebraska.[9]

Loomis Grade and High School (1928), Loomis, Nebraska.[9]

Litchfield Vocational School (1929), Litchfield, Nebraska.[9]

District 52 School (1929), St. Michael, Nebraska.[9]

Addition (1929), State of Nebraska Tuberculosis Hospital, U.S. Hwy 30, Kearney, Nebraska.[7]

1930s

Hayes County High School & Auditorium (1930), Hayes Center, Nebraska.[7][9] (HY02-017)

Farnam Grade School (1930), Farnam, Nebraska.[9]

Remodel (1930), Kearney High School, Kearney, Nebraska.[9]

Remodel (1930), Ravenna Grade School, Ravenna, Nebraska.[9]

Addition (1930), Merna Grade School, Merna, Nebraska.[9]

Addition and remodel (1930), Kenesaw School, Kenesaw, Nebraska.[9]

Addition (1933), Wauneta Grade School, Wauneta, Nebraska.[9]

District 12 School (1933), Overton, Nebraska.[9]

Auditorium and Gymnasium (1933), Henderson, Nebraska.[9]

District 21 School (1934), Overton, Nebraska.[9]

Addition (1934), Ravenna Vocational School, Ravenna, Nebraska.[9]

Remodel (1934) Kearney Senior High School, Kearney, Nebraska.[9][b]

Eddyville Grade and High School (1934), Eddyville, Nebraska.[9][b]

Lexington Community Hospital (1935), 17th & Washington, Lexington, Nebraska.[7]

Mason City Grade and High School (1935-1936), Mason City, Nebraska.[9][b]

Gibbon Grade School and Auditorium (1936), Gibbon, Nebraska.[7][9][b]

Proposed Kearney City Hall Building (1936), Kearney, Nebraska.[5]

Security State Bank (1937), Broken Bow, Nebraska.[8]

Consolidated School District 23 (1937), Gates, Nebraska.[8][9]

Auditorium and Shop (1938), Shelton, Nebraska.[8][9]

Auditorium (1938), Farnam, Nebraska.[8][9]

Steven Building (1938), Broken Bow, Nebraska.[8]

Building for J. A. Christiansen (1938), Kearney, Nebraska.[8]

Spaulding Municipal Auditorium (1938), Spaulding, Nebraska.[8]

Young House (1938), Lexington, Nebraska.[8]

Axtell Grade and High School (1939), Axtell, Nebraska.[9][b]

Home Economics Addition (1939), Wauneta School, Wauneta, Nebraska.[8][9]

Grade School (1939), Hayes Center, Nebraska.[8][9][b]

Wauneta Falls Bank (1939), Wauneta, Nebraska.[8]

1940s

Blue Bell Dairy (1940), Kearney, Nebraska.[8]

B. A. Winquest house (1940), Holdrege, Nebraska.[8]

Charles K. Niehaus house (1940), Holdrege, Nebraska.[8]

Addition (1940), St. Catherine of Sienna Hospital, McCook, Nebraska.[8]

Alda School (1940), Alda, Nebraska.[8]

Safeway Store (1940), Kearney, Nebraska.[8]

Buffalo Grove Church (1940), rural Lexington, Nebraska.[8]

F. C. Gumprecht house (1940), Kearney (?), Nebraska.[8]

Elementary School (1940), Kearney, Nebraska.[8]

Black Building (ca. 1940), Broken Bow, Nebraska.[8]

Safeway Store (1941), Grand Island, Nebraska.[8]

Clinic for Carl G. Amick (1945), Loup City, Nebraska.[8]

From 1946 on, Helleberg’s career continued in partnership with his son, John Peter Helleberg, Jr., and then later, his younger son Rex Staal Helleberg. Listed below are some of his principal works from this period. See the buildings and projects of Helleberg & Helleberg, Architects for more.

Consumers Headquarters Building (1947-1949), 2025 Ave A, Kearney, Nebraska.[3][6][a]

Three Elementary Schools (1952), Kearney, Nebraska.[3][a]

Elementary School and Auditorium (1953), St. Paul, Nebraska.[3][a]

Sacred Heart Hospital (1953), Loup City, Nebraska.[3][a]

Jensen Memorial Library (1954), Minden, Nebraska.[3][a]

Methodist Church (1954), Oxford, Nebraska.[3][a]

Notes

a. Architects of record, Helleberg & Helleberg.

b. A Public Works Administration project.[9]

References

1. Social Security Death Index.

2. Columbus Telegram (July 24, 1914), 1.

3. AIA Historical Directory of American Architects, s.v. "Helleberg, John P.," (ahd1019225) Accessed May 20, 2010. http://public.aia.org/sites/hdoaa/wiki

4. “Helleberg, John P,” Ancestry.com. Accessed July 24, 2009. http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~nebuffal/whoswho/whoswhoh.htm

5. “Vote for the Future of Kearney,” Kearney Daily Hub (April 4, 1936), 10. Accessed through Olive Software. http://digital.olivesoftware.com/olive/apa/kearney/?href=KDH%2F1936%2F04%2F04&page=10&entityId=Ar01002#panel=document

6. "Consumers Has Spotlight a Chamber Meet," Kearney Daily Hub (September 12, 1949): 1.

7. Tom Kaspar, comp. Inventory of architectural records in the archives of Davis Fenton Stange Darling, Architects, Lincoln, Nebraska. 1996. Nebraska State Historical Society, RG3748, Box 16.

8. “Project Listings,” TS ([Kearney, NE]: Rex S. Helleberg, Architect, [1985]). Copy in Nebraska State Historical Society, Historic Preservation Division, Architect files.

9. “Helleberg & Helleberg, Architects & Engineers,” TS ([Kearney, NE]: The firm, [1985]). Copy in Nebraska State Historical Society, Historic Preservation Division, Architect files.

Page Citation

D. Murphy, “John Peter Helleberg, Sr. (1890-1980), Architect,” in David Murphy, Edward F. Zimmer, and Lynn Meyer, comps. Place Makers of Nebraska: The Architects. Lincoln: Nebraska State Historical Society, April 18, 2017. http://www.e-nebraskahistory.org/index.php?title=Place_Makers_of_Nebraska:_The_Architects Accessed, March 29, 2024.


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