E. Chester Nelson


E. Chester Nelson was an American architect in practice in Fort Smith, Arkansas from 1919 until his death in 1970. The firm he established in 1935 is still in business as of 2024 as Studio 6 Architects.

Life and career

Elmer Chester Nelson was born July 26, 1894, in Minneapolis to Carl Oskar Nelson and Bessie Nelson, née Peterson. His parents were Swedish immigrants. His family moved to Birmingham, Alabama, when he was still a child. He was educated at the Alabama Polytechnic Institute, now Auburn University, where he studied from 1913 to 1915. He then worked for architects Miller & Martin in Birmingham and Frederick Ausfeld in Montgomery until the outbreak of World War I, during which he served at an army depot at Newport News, Virginia. In 1919 he returned to Ausfeld, but within a few months was invited by a classmate, Joe J. Haralson, to come to Fort Smith. Haralson was working for Fort Smith architect Alonzo Klingensmith, who was looking to sell his firm. Klingensmith had been previously responsible for the Logan County Courthouse, Eastern District in Paris and the First [Methodist Episcopal Church, South |First Methodist Episcopal Church, South] in Ozark. Together, they bought the firm and in November 1919 formed the partnership of Haralson & Nelson. Major works of the partnership include the Logan County Courthouse, Southern Judicial District in Booneville, the Dodson Avenue [Methodist Episcopal Church] in Fort Smith and the Johnson County Courthouse in Clarksville.
In 1935 the partnership was dissolved. Haralson continued the firm as Haralson & Mott in partnership with Ralph O. Mott, an employee since 1931, and Nelson established an independent practice. Nelson's independent works include the Sebastian County Courthouse-Fort Smith City Hall in Fort Smith and the Madison County Courthouse in Huntsville and Our Lady of the Ozarks Shrine near Winslow. The firm was reorganized in 1957 as E. Chester Nelson & Associates to include Robert S. Laser, his nephew, and James G. Cheyne Jr. as associates. In 1962 they became partners in the reorganized Nelson, Laser & Cheyne. Nelson was senior partner of the firm until his death in 1970.

Personal life

Nelson was married in 1930 to Minnie Laser. They had two children. He was a member of the American Institute of Architects, local fraternal organizations and the First Presbyterian Church. He died April 9, 1970, in Fort Smith at the age of 75.

Legacy

The firm Nelson had established in 1935 outlived him. It was renamed first to Laser, Knight, Hathaway & Guest, second to Laser, Knight, Hendrix & Guest, third to Laser, Guest, Hendrix & Reddick and fourth to Guest Reddick Architects. Most recently, in 2016 it was renamed Studio 6 Architects.
At least twelve buildings designed by Nelson, independently and with others, have been listed on the United States National Register of Historic Places.

Architectural works

Dates are date of completion where known; other dates are approximate.

Haralson & Nelson, 1919–1935