He was born Frank Morris Riley in Madison, Wisconsin, on September 10, 1875.[1] His father, Edward F. Riley (1847–1927) was secretary of the University of Wisconsin Board of Regents from 1888 to 1906 and was a prominent member of business and real estate circles in Madison.
Career
Riley started studying civil engineering at the University of Wisconsin in 1894. In 1897 he relocated to Boston to study architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he remained until 1900. From 1900 to 1908, Riley worked for architectural firms in Boston, and then in his own practice until 1911. He lived in London from 1911 until 1913, and in Italy and Germany from 1913 to 1914. In Germany, he worked for an architect in Munich for a year. In 1914, he returned to Madison, where he remained for the rest of his life.[2]
Riley's return to Madison coincided with a time when the city's economic and social elite were moving from the congested downtown to new suburbs on the outskirts of the city. From 1914 to 1941, Riley designed houses in Madison suburbs such as Nakoma, University Heights, and the Highlands, and in neighboring Shorewood Hills and Maple Bluff. He also designed a number of fraternity and sorority houses on Langdon Street and some important nonresidential and institutional buildings in Madison. Toward the end of his career, he was also associated with Lewis A. Siberz, a former draftsman in his office, in the firm of Riley & Siberz.[2][3]
Prof. Gustave L. & Marion Larson House 1213, Sweetbriar Rd. (1914)
Mark & Beatrice Goldberg House, 2802 Colgate Rd. (1936)
G. Frederick & Elizabeth Wolff Jr. House, 3006 Harvard Dr. (1936)
Leslie A. Yolton House, 2915 Colgate Rd. (1939).[1]
Lawrence P. & Catherine M. (Leisz) Rudd building (residences), 1423 - 1425 East Johnson Street, Madison Wisconsin. (1923)
Madison East High School, 2222 E Washington Ave Madison, Wisconsin, an example of the Collegiate Gothic style (1922)
The Wisconsin state Governor's Executive Residence (Mansion), 99 Cambridge Road in the Village of Maple Bluff, Wisconsin, designed in the southern Classical Revival style (1920)
Otto and Louise Schroeder House, 4811 Tonyawatha Trail, Monona, WI, Tudor Revival (1932)[18]