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BOOK OF THE SCHOOL
Bok Carillon Tower Lake Wales,
Florida
MILTON B. MEDARY, '94, Architect
Book of the School D E P A R T M E N T OF A R C H I T E C T U R E U N I V E R S I T Y OF P E N N S Y L V A N I A
1874-1934 -2T THE
Architectural Alumni Society
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA PRESS
Philadelphia 1934
Copyright 1934 UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA PRESS
Manufactured in the United States of America
The Editorial Board PAUL A . DAVIS, 3D., ' 9 4
Editor 1805 Walnut Street, Philadelphia CHAS. L . BORIE, JR., ' 9 2
Trustee Chairman of the Constituent Board of Fine Arts G E O . S. KOYL, ' 0 9
Dean of the School of Fine Arts SYDNEY E . MARTIN, ' 0 7
President of the General Alumni Society J O H N F . HARBESON, ' 1 0
Treasurer Architects Bldg., Philadelphia DONALD M . KIRKPATRICK, ' 1 1
WALTER T . KARCHER, ' 0 1 ROBERT R . MCGOODWIN, ' 0 7
Architectural Alumni Society UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
PAUL A . DAVIS, 3D.
President GEORGE W . PEPPER, JR.
Vice-President EDMUND R . PURVES
Secretary JOHN F . HARBESON
Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE G . EDWIN BRUMBAUGH
C. Louis BORIE, 3D. KENNETH DAY ROBERT R . MCGOODWIN C . C . ZANTZINGER, JR.
SECTIONAL REPRESENTATIVES GERALD A . HOLMES
New York City, N. Y. CARL A . ERIKSON
Chicago, Illinois EDWIN BATEMAN MORRIS
Washington, D. C. ALBERT SIMONS
Southern States
Trustees and Administrative Officers THE SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS
President of the University. Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D., L.H.D., Provost. GEORGE W I L L I A M MCCLELLAND, Ph.D., LL.D., Vice-President in charge of Undergraduate Schools. GEORGE A . BRAKELEY, M . A . , Administrative Vice-President. THOMAS SOVEREIGN GATES, P h . B . , L L . B . , L L . D . , JOSIAH HARMAR PENNIMAN,
TRUSTEES The Corporation, composed of the Governor of Pennsylvania and a Board of Trustees of forty members, functions in part through Constituent Boards, consisting of Trustees and others elected by them to Associate Membership. The Constituent Board of Fine Arts is formed as follows: TRUSTEES: Edward T. Stotesbury, LL.D., Honorary Chairman; Charles L. Borie, Jr., B.S., Chairman; T. Francis Cadwalader, A.B., LL.B.; C. Frederick C. Stout; Joseph Early Widener. ASSOCIATE T R U S T E E S : Caiy W . Bok, A.B.; Henry S. Drinker, Jr., A.B., LL.B.; Thomas Harlan Ellett, B.S. in Arch.; William Warner Harper; Robert Rodes McGoodwin, M.S. in Arch.; Alfred G. B. Steel. Ex-OFFiao: The President, the Provost and the Vice-President in charge of Undergraduate Schools. SECRETARY: Edward W . Mumford, Ph.B.
OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION in Arch., Dean of the School of Fine Arts, Chairman of Architecture and Acting Chairman of the Department
GEORGE SIMPSON K O Y L , M . S .
of the Department of Fine Arts.
ROBERT WHEELWRIGHT,
chitecture.
A.B., M.L.A., Chairman, Department
of Landscape
Ar-
A.M., Ph.D., Mus. Bac. (Oxon.) F.A.G.O., Chairman, r>f Music, Organist of th? Unherrty. WILLIAM TIDBALL, U. S. M. A., Assistant to the Dean. Miss DEBORAH MORRIS, Librarian of the School of Fine Arts. MORRISON COMEGYS BOYD,
Department
OFFICERS O F
INSTRUCTION
Professors WARREN POWERS LAIRD, SC.D., L L . D .
Emeritus Professor of Architecture. PAUL PHILIPPB CRET, A.D.G.F. (Atelier Pascal), Sc.D.
Professor of Design. GEORGE WALTER DAWSON, A . E . D .
Professor of Drawing. ALFRED HERMANN GUMAER, B . S . in A r c h .
Professor of the History of Art. PHILIP RICHARDSON WHITNEY, S . B . in A r c h .
Professor of Graphics. GEORGE HOWARD BICKLEY, B.S. in Arch., A . D . G . F . (Atelier R e d o n ) .
Professor of Design. HARRY STERNFELD, M.S. in Arch., École des Beaux Arts (Paris Prize, 1914), Atelier Jaussely Bernier. Professor of Design. ROBERT WHEELWRIGHT, A . B . , M . L . A .
Professor of Landscape Architecture. HARRY EWING PARKER, M . S . in A r c h .
Professor of Architectural Construction. LEICESTER BODINE HOLLAND, B . S . , B . S . in Arch., M . A . , P h . D .
Professor of Fine Arts. CHARLES MERRICK GAY, A.B., B.S. in Arch., École des Beaux Arts (Atelier Pascal). Professor of Architectural Construction. GEORGE SIMPSON KOYL, M.S. in Arch., Fellow American Academy in Rome, 1911-1914. Professor of Architecture. GBORGES DENGLER, A.D.G.F., Pupil of Tony Gamier ; Atelier Defrasse, Madeline and Aublet, Grand Prix de Rome, 1931. Professor of Design.
Associate Professors JOHN FREDERICK HARBESON, M . S . in A r c h .
Associate Professor of Design. HARL MCDONALD, M u s . B a c .
Associate Professor of Music; Director of Choral Societies and Extra Curricular Musical Activities.
Assistant Professors GEORGE HARDING, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts; Official Artist, A . E. F. Assistant Professor of Drawing. MORRISON COMEGYS BOYD, A.M., Ph.D., Mus. Bac. ( O x o n . ) , F.A.G.O. Assistant Professor of Music; Organist of the University. ALESSANDRO G . COLAROSSI, Cresson Fellow, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1920. Assistant Professor of Drawing. PAUL C. K . DOMVILLE, B.S. in Arch.
Assistant Professor of Freehand Drawing. PAUL KRUMMEICH, Cologne Conservatory. Assistant Professor of Music. JAMES PARKER M E T H E N Y , A . B .
Assistant Professor of Design. ROY RUHNKA, M.Arch. Assistant Professor of Design. F R A N K A N D R E W SCHREPFER, M . S . , B . S . i n L . A .
Assistant Professor of Landscape
Architecture.
HANS SCHUMANN, Conservatories of Strassburg and Leipzig; Academy of Music, Munich. Assistant Professor of Music.
Lecturers J E A N BAPTISTE B E C K , P h . D .
Lecturer on the Genesis and History of Music; Professor of Romanic Languages. RICHARD B E R N H E I M E R , P h . D .
Lecturer—Animals
in Sculpture and Architecture.
Instructors JAMES C . H O U S E , JR.
Instructor in Freehand
Drawing.
JOSEF MORRIS G E R S O N , A . B . , B . F . A . i n E d .
Instructor in Freehand
Drawing.
GEORGE W A L T E R BAUMEISTER, B . S . in A r c h .
Instructor in Graphics.
Contents Page GREETING
2
Warren Powers Laird, Hon. '11 THE POLICY OF THE SCHOOL
4
George Simpson Koyl, '09 HISTORY OF THE SCHOOL
11
Edwin Bateman Morris, '04 THE CULTURAL INFLUENCE OF THE STUDY OF ARCHITECTURE
19
Leicester B. Holland, '04 DESIGN
27
Paul P. Cret, Hon. '13 PRIZES AND AWARDS
33
Donald M. Kirkpatrick, '11 THE DRAUGHTING ROOM
40
Alfred Bendiner, '22 THE CAMPUS
45
Wm. J. H. Hough,'11 EXECUTED WORK BY ALUMNI ALUMNI RECORD
51 149
Greeting WARREN POWERS LAIRD, Hon. '11
N the last day of the year 1890 a cable message came to a youth, at work in a Paris atelier, calling him to take charge of the new School of Architecture at the University of Pennsylvania. It was the summons to high adventure for which, unknowingly, he had been preparing in school, office, and foreign study; a rare moment in life when opportunity spoke and the door opened toward a new vista, vague but alluring. That was for me the beginning of a journey which you and I, each for a time, have traveled together. And now, after a companionship with the men of forty-two classes I am privileged to salute you all in this Book that goes from the Alumni Society to the former students of the School. Never before have we all so nearly been assembled at one time, and in this way only is it possible to stretch out the hand of remembrance through past years and over many lands to you who, in the minds of those who taught you, always will remain "the old boys." And will you not accept this greeting as from all your former instructors, although it be written by only one of them? The years we have spent together hold vivid and cherished memories: of hard work and relaxations; of success under grilling competition and of failures which yet brought their saving grace of benefit; of friendships formed and characters developed, and of the sum total of gain between the beginning and the ending of the course of study. The preparation for any calling needs must be serious, for life is serious and makes stern demands upon those who would assume professional responsibilities.
O
So our School had its rigors as well as its smiling moments; disciplines no less than pleasures, and often, no doubt, professors who rather fancied themselves as your friends seemed to you to be little better than slave drivers. But now, in retrospect, when all we tried to do for you is done 2
GREETING and ended and all you tried to get has been had and put to the test, because or in spite of it all something fine and enduring remains, and that something, as I think of you, is affection. W e share together the memories of a school of great achievement, in which we all had part. And when we contemplate the genuine spirit of devotion in its new management and in its Architectural Alumni Society, we may confidently expect a future for the School in which increasingly greater service will be rendered to American Architecture. This personal greeting is written just two years after retirement, at the age limit fixed by the University statutes. As Emeritus Professor of Architecture, relieved of University duties, I have enjoyed the freedom to engage in forms of architectural work for which in the past there had been too little time. Life has entered upon a new phase, no less interesting than that which went before but invested with its own charm. What may lie ahead, who can say? But so long as it lies in the realm of Architecture it will be good. Therefore this message is written, not in the spirit of the Roman gladiators, addressing their Emperor: " W e who are about to die, salute you!" but rather as from one who has entered upon "the last of life for which the first was made" and finds it a period both gracious and attractive. For more than fifty years Architecture has given me increasing pleasure; therefore, in all sincerity, I can say to you, less fortunate than I only in having had fewer years of contact with the Mother Art: Congratulations upon your choice of a profession! May I close with the hope, for you, of every well-deserved success in life and, for myself, that I may see you personally as your individual journeyings shall bring you back to Pennsylvania.
Greengate, Merion, Pennsylvania, June 30,1934. 3
The Policy of the School GEORGE SIMPSON KOYL, 09, DEAN
ORTY-FOUR years ago the School of Architecture was established. It was the vision of a few leaders and their faith in the Profession that gave the impetus. The policy then, whose soundness is attested by the achievement of its graduates, is the fundamental policy today—the training of young men to take their places in that profession as cultured, free-thinking, self-reliant architects and leaders. The attainment of this objective now under vastly changed conditions is the problem around which discussions as to means and methods revolve. Underlying a policy there must be a sound educational philosophy. Such philosophy must result from an unbiased appraisal of the values of Architecture, past and present; and equally important are educational methods. No great University should attempt to keep up with the styles at the expense of fundamentals. It must be cognizant of all and study all, but should stress the principles which underlie any new formula for construction or aesthetics which prove to be sound. New theories of Architecture are influencing design in many parts of the world. That this influence will be lasting and beneficial is certain, but whether or not we are arriving at a satisfactory new aesthetic philosophy is still to be questioned. W e need to realize that a new social or economic order does not of itself justify new constructions, excepting as emergency measures, unless there is in them beauty, governed not alone by sociological or economical conditions, but by psychological deductions and the philosophy of aesthetics.
F
Time must be allowed the graduate to orientate himself in the business world before he may be expected to make worthwhile contributions to Architecture. Remember! that the Architects of our "latest modern" buildings were nursed to professional manhood in the good old days when the cartouche and Mansard roof dominated academic design. Let us believe that, through a broad cultural and technical education including the excit-
4
POLICY ing experience of so-called "modern design" in school and in "modern" offices, our students must eventually add their share of good to the Architecture of the future. The youth of today will be the leaders of tomorrow. Education is one of the essentials to a life of distinguished creation. It involves the absorption of facts, the study of theories and tried methods of procedure under the guidance of a teacher or apart, the development of thinking powers, and the direction of will in creative work. Creative ability varies in intensity with the individual, and therefore the student is original and creative in direct proportion to his endowment. Education simply gives direction to that energy which otherwise would find employment in some other form. However, the individual success of any educational system is dependent upon the faculty plus an intelligent student body. The function of the teacher is not only to present facts and theories but to guide toward objectives approved by the school. The first objective of a policy is the maintenance of a "superlative technical school"; in other words "quality before quantity." A limited number of students will be accepted in order that we may operate effectively. It is more and more evident that each student should be able to demonstrate that quality of aesthetic conception and of imagination which is essential to the successful Architect. The school is the "gate" to the Profession, and we are responsible to it for the type of men we graduate. The second objective is the maintenance of an "inspired teaching staff." Education is largely self-education through individual effort under guidance; but the school is morally responsible for the type of instruction it offers. The time has passed when the teacher, through coercion and penalties, may with complacency force the student to absorb knowledge. The student's natural aptitude and attitude of inquiry must be satisfied by teachers who are themselves students, constant in their research for old truths and new developments, alive to the progress of civilization, and forceful in the presentation of information. The majority of students are not only hungry for knowledge but appreciate the importance of its presentation. The third objective is the maintenance of a "completely rounded curricu5
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL lum." We must continue to provide a broad background of selected cultural subjects and a full complement of up-to-date technical courses. The education of an Architect is not complete without an understanding of the elementary scientific principles involved in every building erected. We are forced more and more to depend upon the high and preparatory schools for general scientific courses in physics and chemistry as well as for such social and political history as they give, and we should be able to rely upon them for elementary courses in mechanical and freehand drawing, that our time may be reserved for advanced liberal arts and professional courses. The fourth objective is "coordination of instruction." In the practice of Architecture, specialization is imperative that excellence in all departments may be achieved. While the conception of Architecture must be as a unity, that unity is realized through proper coordination and administration. It is so with the school; for though we particularize in instruction, a logical conception of the whole profession of Architecture as a unity must result even before the student leaves college, through the cooperation of the entire faculty. The fifth item of policy is the "stressing of fundamentals." To understand form in light is fundamental and is achieved by training the mind through the eye to perceive. Perception is the basis for knowledge, and through knowledge and will is creation possible. It is in the courses of freehand drawing, water color, and modeling that the student acquires the understanding of the effects of light on form and gains thereby the powers of representation either interpretative or creative. As a result of this careful training, Architects may and do enter the fields of painting with the type of fundamental knowledge which Matisse demanded of his own pupils before he allowed them to attempt modern stylism. Beauty must be realized not accidentally but through a knowledge of what it is and how it can be achieved. We believe that we are in the thralls of a new age. Novelty and originality are at a premium. New styles, simplifications of old styles, new techniques, new theories are developing. It is certain that only through the knowledge of fundamental truths may we emerge at the end of this age with an art worthy of our aspirations. 6
POLICY "Fundamentals" must be stressed again in the teaching of Graphics and the Elements. Not to dwell upon the evident value of thorough courses in Descriptive Geometry, Shades and Shadows and Perspective, or of the value of training in the use of the pencil as a technical medium, the study of the Greek and Roman Orders in the Elements, provides a perfect exemplification of the oneness of construction and design in Architecture. Every graduate should have the opportunity to develop a mature conception of Architecture—his own philosophy through continuous exhaustive courses in Theory, since without it he is certain to founder on the rocks of indecision. Running through the whole gamut of architectural achievement, theory rounds out that analytical, critical conception of Architecture as a craft, to the end that the student upon graduation will be equipped with a realization of the vitality of Architecture as an Art and Science. We maintain three curricula to meet varying needs of students: The Three Year Special Course is the shortest of these leading to the award of a professional certificate. It is recognized that a young man may acquire many of the prerequisites for individual practice through long years of experience in the offices of practising architects. Limited in funds or because of age, perhaps, he aspires to the briefest available course in the University to round out what is in many respects an excellent training. Registration laws emphasize the importance of systematic study, and we therefore feel the necessity of continuing the three year course to meet his needs; including much of the technical work of a full course, and some opportunity through electives for purely cultural subjects. This course is frankly abbreviated. The Five Year curriculum provides an education in the fundamentals of Architecture leading to the degree of Bachelor of Architecture. With a number of cultural subjects taken in the College of Liberal Arts as a background, it affords the student opportunities of inspiration and development in those qualities of mind and body which lead eventually to distinctive achievement. History of Architecture, Painting and Sculpture and all divisions of Practice are introduced in a series of courses so arranged that there is a logical growth of knowledge and of technical expression. 7
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL He acquires a wealth of information concerning the theories of Architecture, a conception of it as a unity, and the skill to create in proportion to his natural abilities. The Seven Year curriculum is equivalent to a course in the College followed by a full technical course in the Architectural School. It leads to the degree of Bachelor of Arts at the end of the fourth, and Bachelor of Architecture at the end of the seventh year. The elementary technical courses, the history of Architecture and of the Fine Arts, are taken as a Fine Arts major along with prescribed college courses in the first four years; the last three being devoted entirely to advanced professional training. The broadest cultural background for an understanding of life in the social and business world is a distinct advantage to young men who seek the clearest vision with which to cope successfully with modern problems. Our postgraduate work in Architecture is increasingly advantageous to the student year by year. In that additional period of study a more mature concept of Architecture is realized and in many cases is equal in value to the whole of the undergraduate course. Fellowships and scholarships are offered to provide the ablest students with this opportunity; but to all graduates of the School the importance of graduate work must be emphasized. Permit me to reprint an excerpt from Antioch College, quoted in the July number of the Pennsylvania Gazette: "The leader is he who most fully understands the nature of things, so that his plans are not doomed to ultimate failure; who possesses an active, far-ranging imagination which can see many possibilities; who has a sense of values, so that among possibilities he is able to choose the most excellent; who has a sense of order, to give form, design, and program to the values and purposes he elects; who has practical sense and judgment, and so uses the most feasible means to accomplish his ends; and who has the energy and enthusiasm to carry his plans persistently towards fruition." Design occupies the place of greatest value in the technical curriculum because it develops the powers of original thought and creative expression in terms of Architectural Composition or pattern. Imagination, conception, 8
POLICY expression are here exercised in the solution of problems having simple use-requirements in the first year, and becoming progressively more important as the student's skill develops. Architecture is incipient with construction, the broader aspects of which are most appropriately coordinated with the teaching of design. There remains however an important field dealing with the purely scientific aspects of practice. These courses must synthesize the realities of construction to design, while analyzing the action of the elements of nature on buildings and calculating the magnitude of forces acting through various materials —the relative strength, appropriate and economic use of such materials. That the Architect may not in actual practice personally make analyses or calculations, is entirely aside from the point. He is the responsible party— the designer, the coordinator, the supervisor; and such knowledge is a prime factor in the design as well as in the economic success of any building enterprise. We, therefore, give the student a thorough grounding in the principles of construction, mechanical equipment, and specifications. To the Architect the story of human achievement in Architecture, Painting, and Sculpture takes on values—more important than mere appreciation, since it is the only way that he may orientate himself in relation to his own times. The study of the history of Architecture is a wonderfully exciting adventure covering the whole range of human endeavor. It depicts, as does Architecture, the intimate life of peoples, their thoughts, emotions, aspirations, and every varying experience; and it is only when Architecture is studied from the point of view of cause and effect, action and reaction, that a reasonable conception of the meaning of the so-called styles may be realized. But since Architecture is, of all the Arts, the most exact plastic interpretation of a civilization, its historical examples must be analyzed critically in the light of the social, economical, and political circumstances of the periods from which examples are taken. In conclusion permit me to say that it will be our policy to make the study of Architecture not only a great opportunity, but a joyful experience. We must consider each student as a separate entity, having individual characteristics which must be taken into account in his intellectual and 9
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL physical growth. We must teach the student that he must think and act for himself; that to try to be different is time wasted—originality being a spontaneous natural growth from within to without. We must maintain the highest standards, intellectual and technical, and to that end content of established courses will always be studied and modified where necessary to achieve that result. We must encourage the realization of the oneness of all the Fine Arts, Architecture, Landscape Architecture, Painting, Sculpture, Music, and the Drama, by offering opportunities for collaborative study. We will avoid the establishment of courses which may seem momentarily essential, but which as broad educational factors are unessential; and we will give every opportunity to our students to become experts in any of the divisions of office practice in which they may show special interest. We will avoid all tendencies toward the development of a "trade school," through specializations which narrow their conception of Architecture or produce results of only immediate pecuniary value to the graduate. Our objective is the universal rather than the particular. In reaching this goal our men will qualify as able artists in their Profession, capable of understanding and achieving the ultimate.
10
History of the School EDWIN BATEMAN MORRIS, '04
A WHILE ago I, as one of the most venerable of Architectural Alumni, Z A was asked to write a history of the University of Pennsylvania JL, A . School of Architecture for use in this volume. I address myself to this task with particular edification. First, because I am, as I hinted above, old enough to remember all of the period during which the School has existed without being too old to hold a pencil to write about it; second, because I was the inspiration for Paul Cret's great success as an architectural critic, he having spent his first year with me among the students, and thereafter not having to spend any years with me among the students, so that he felt a perpetual sense of release; and third, because when I think of Pennsylvania and the Architectural School, I am young again, wooing the muse of Architecture by dropping chairs down the stair wells, studying the theory of corridor circulation by playing shinny in the long third-floor hall, and learning design amidst the good architecture of Franklin Field and the Dormitories. So I take my history pencil in hand and plunge with enthusiasm into the subject. I know that I should come steaming through the decades, loaded with dates and footnotes and comments by contemporary writers, and statistics from the Engineering News. But actually I shall be more interested as to what was their procedure in 1897 in connection with duckings in the sink, smocks, sleeping during stereopticon lectures, and other paramount undergraduate issues. As everybody knows, the first beginnings of an architectural school at Pennsylvania were shortly after the Civil War, almost coincident with the advent of the Great Depression of 1873. Though why anyone should have the inspiration to found a course in Architecture upon the eve of a depression is difficult to reconcile. There must have been a rather blue lot of students during the six years of the hard times from 1873 to 1879. Down the 11
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL dim corridors of time we can still hear their whisperings that the architectural profession was dead and would never come back after the Depression. At this time instruction in Architecture occurred during the last two years of a four year course, the first two years being devoted to academic studies—a sort of here's-a-chance-to-change-your-mind period. The instructor in Architecture was Thomas W . Richards, who had the title of "Professor of Drawing and Architecture." Richards was the architect of College Hall and Logan Hall, then in process of building. A glance at these architectural achievements will show that Richards, were he in harmony with the buildings, must have been an exact, earnest, painstaking, and meticulous professor. We can image that many students, uplifted by the architectural example of College Hall and others of the type, went out into the world with the stern and firm determination to even surpass them in their peculiar effects. Mr. Richards, all in all, appears to have been a person of considerable zeal and devotion to the cause of Architecture, instilling into his pupils an understanding of the principles of design as he understood them. There hangs in the University a portrait of him with the fine inscription, "Thomas Webb Richards, A. M., 1836-1911; First Professor of Architecture 18741891 and Architect of College Hall and of contemporary buildings; his precept and practice placed him in that honored company whose enthusiasm for their art preserved its spirit through an age distraught by Civil War." In 1890 the Philadelphia Chapter of the American Institute of Architects, inspired by the forward strides Architecture had taken, and feeling that the phase of design represented by the serpentine era in Philadelphia had come to a logical end, convinced Dr. William Pepper, then Provost, that there should be a separate school of Architecture at Pennsylvania, broader in scope and freer in idea. Theophilus P. Chandler, Jr., at the time president of the Philadelphia chapter agreed to organize such a school and to act as temporary head of it until a permanent organization could be effected. 12
HISTORY The School of Architecture, therefore, opened on October 7,1890, under the guidance of Mr. Chandler, who continued to be its executive head until the end of the academic year. During this period William L. Bailey was instructor. It is comforting to know that a professor with that cognomen did not have to endure the comments it would have occasioned had his régime been just a decade later when the adventures of the oft-sung "Bill Bailey," joyously thrown out of one residence after another with no personal effects but a fine-tooth comb, had become a matter of national interest. Mr. Chandler's work for the School was a labor of love. He had the vision to see the future of usefulness, of inspiration, of uplift that lay before an architectural school founded at just that time. He had the instinct which told him America was ready to start upon a spectacular architectural epoch, if the proper impetus were given. He and his confreres in the Philadelphia chapter of the American Institute seem to have been thinking in terms of Philadelphia—to have been interested in the bursting forth of the seed of Art and Understanding in the City of Brotherly Love alone, and therefore to have urged the School of Architecture with a purely local interest. Yet they must have known that, if successful, its influence would be very far reaching. It is interesting to speculate as to just how great an influence in our national architectural awakening the schools at Pennsylvania, Technology, Columbia, and Cornell wielded. It was doubtless the inspired understanding of the McKims, the Hastingses, the Crams and the Rogerses who imported the European idea as a starting point that caused Architecture to burst into flower. But it was certainly the cohorts of trained young men from the schools, with the example of the McKims before them, that spread the flowering until the arid architectural period through which the United States had struggled for half a century became an oasis indeed. It seemed almost impossible that that epitome of baleful ugliness through which the country floundered previous to the nineties should have graciously and easily turned into an era capable of producing Columbia Library, the New York 13
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL Public library, the University of Pennsylvania Museum, the Bureau of American Republics, the Chicago Tribune Building, the Empire State Building, and hundreds more worthy of equal admiration. When, therefore, they placed in 1930 a tablet in the School to Theophilus Parsons Chandler, in which appears the citation, "able administrator, inspiring teacher," we may add in our own minds the thought that to those two be added the far-seeing vision that made him willing to give up a part of his life to being that able administrator, that inspiring teacher. Yet while he had the vision, he was fortunate in being succeeded, in 1891, by an able young man who had the energy and the untiring driving power to grasp that evanescent vision and make it into a powerful and concrete reality. We all know Dr. Laird. We all know that shyness, that reticence that made it seem impossible that he had actually accomplished the things he did accomplish. There could be no one more modest, less given to tooting of horns. Yet under his firm, gentle hand, the School marched, so that one might say with pride at any time over a period of years, "I graduated from Pennsylvania in Architecture." While he was a genial and tactful and pleasant person, his earnestness was such that it pushed aside any wish he may have had for personal popularity. It is a pity that most of the friendships his students had for him began after graduation. But that was doubtless a studied part of his program—to keep a stern seriousness upon architectural education—to make certain, above all things, that no student would look upon that education lightly, or frivolously, or as a thing he could step into the Dean's office and wise-crack about. At any rate as a pilot Dr. Laird kept his eye well on the course. In the first decade he found difficulty in maintaining a definite policy of instruction in architectural design. The School seemed to carry on by sheer organization and natural ability of the individual students. The highest advice and criticism available were obtained but, being offered by changing persons, lacked uniformity and continuity. 14
HISTORY The difficulty lay in the fact that the lure of actual outside practice had crippled the instruction of design. The brilliant Edgar Seeler, head of design from 1894 to 1897, left the school for an enviable career as a practising architect. Pilcher in 1901 left because of a similar beckoning from the field without. It was through Dr. Laird's (I should like to call him Popsy for the sake of auld lang syne) efforts that in 1903 Paul Cret was brought from Paris. That would appear to be the Dean's greatest accomplishment for the School. For Cret turned out to be the ideal preceptor. He is so forever and eternally modest that I know that however strong the superlatives I use in connection with his work, he would not, if he read them, be at all convinced. He is a man uniting strangely in one person those two great qualities which usually occur separately in separate individuals. He has, first, that sure instinct as to good design, and he has, secondly, that ability to explain with sharp-shooting directness why it is good design. It always seemed to me, and this may be just a fancy, that an idea was an idea to Cret, irrespective of its medium of expression. The tradition, which I assume to be true, was that he could speak no English prior to three months before assuming charge of architectural design at Pennsylvania. He said when he first arrived that he would speak no French. Language seemed unimportant to him. He was so certain of his ideas that he knew he would find a method to express them. The first speech of his that I remember was, "They say at Ecole when you do not know what ornament to use, you will arrive to put a round in a square." All his talk was as quaint as that, but no one seemed to miss any of his points. Of course much of his criticism could be expressed by the coveted expression, "It can go," or the very much less coveted expression, " 'Ave you a sponge?" He was so sure of his ideas that he did not seek many words to express 15
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL them. His criticisms, therefore, were easy to remember. He was an oftquoted man, before he had even partly achieved a mastery of English. In my day at college all architectural criticism began, "Cret says . . . " That is a proof, I think, of the statement that whether he expressed the architectural idea with his pencil, or in French or in English, it was always a clear-cut thing. An idea was always a definite matter. It has been marveled at and laughed at, that in his own designing, he could take a Renaissance example as an inspiration and produce an Elizabethan design, or a thought from Viollet-le-Duc and bob up with a sketch one-hundred-percent modern. It was that clear insight, that ability to grasp the essential that made the School under his guidance respond and go forward with leaps and bounds. There was a comforting certainty about him. In 1929 Cret found the urge of private practice so great that he was compelled to give up full-time participation in the teaching of architecture. He still continues to give certain criticisms and to advise on matters of design, but the full-time burden has had to be assumed by others. Prominent among these is Bickley, who is Chairman of the Design Staff. It is now felt that another dominant leader in design is needed, and a brilliant young Frenchman, Georges Dengler, Grand Prix de Rome, 1931, has been secured. His selection was made with the greatest care; and high hopes for the future center about him. In writing of an architectural school, the history of design-teaching naturally occupies one first. But affectionate memory centers about others. Charles E. Dana was the earliest instructor in art, one of America's most gifted water-colorists. His short period at the school represented a fine, uplifting influence. Herbert E. Everett! A fine, gentle soul. Many a time at his stereopticon lectures right after luncheon I have dozed (it's many years too late for the Department to give me D's for it now), but that was just the effervescent spirits of youth and not because of any lack of message upon the part of the professor. His history of painting and historic ornament I felt at the 16
HISTORY time was too all-fired thorough, but I have been grateful for it many times since. Dr. Everett had the distinction of serving, beginning with 1892, for thirty-eight years as professor in these subjects. We shall, I think, be grateful always for the presence at the School of George Walter Dawson. A person of marvelous water-color ability, that ability was rivaled by his fine personality, his perennial enthusiasm, his enduring good humor. There were the beautiful sets he designed for Viola Allen's Twelfth Night in 1904. Charming pictures just like his water-colors—a stage full of George Walter Dawson through which pleasant Viola walked, reading lines from Shakespeare. No architectural school should really be considered complete without a George Walter Dawson. My thought is also that the School has been greatly helped by the earnest and scholarly efforts of John Harbeson. Harbeson's sly sense of humor, his understanding of undergraduate character, his appreciation of the problems and the aims of an architectural school, have furnished much additional momentum. With interest one also remembers among the faculty Frederick M. Mann, "Tommy" Nolan, and, with unusual pleasure, Charles Francis Osborne, who managed to make his courses in architectural history interesting and memorable. Osborne's successor, upon his death in 1913, was Alfred H. Gumaer, who has held the place ever since and has brought to this chair a cultured and scholarly viewpoint. Philip R. Whitney from 1904 has been instructor in Geometry, Shades and Shadows and Perspective—subjects absorbed by the budding architectural mind with difficulty. No architect ever really learns perspective and shades and shadows—he is satisfied with a general idea and a trust in Providence. Teaching these subjects over that period to the resisting architectural mentality has been therefore a real task. In reviewing the events concerned with the School from its founding to the present, there is a feeling that the events themselves, put together in 17
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL proper sequence and so on, make a rather dull and unexciting history. The School floats on from decade to decade with no dramatic climax—no breath-taking occurrence. But there is one thing. When the old grad goes back, he feels it. Though he remembers the School as occupying a part of the top floor of College Hall and finds it in rather snooty quarters in the Dental Building, though the boys seem younger than he recalls the mature undergrads of his day, though they may be touting Modern a little and raising an inquiring eyebrow at the Orders, yet there is this same pleasant comfort about it. The place feels the same. It has an individuality, a personal character, an honored dignity, as having presented inspiration to many. As one passes down the aisles, taking care, as of yore, not to gesticulate against the heads of T-squares, he sees youths in the same ungainly attitudes, water containers of the same nondescript character, boards burned with cigarettes, carelessness disguising feverish energy, set expressions as of men who knew where they were going. It is the spirit of the School. Perhaps it may be found to exist at other schools. But however that may be, there exists the confidence that architectural tradition abides within those walls and that its blessing is falling upon those who attend. That spirit and tradition are now in strong hands. The promise is very bright that both will be carried on and grow in strength and power. The new dean, George Simpson Koyl, is a person of understanding and virile enthusiasm, who stands with his feet firmly upon the ground, yet who sees far. In addition to this valued personality of his, it is auspicious and seemingly a repetition of history that there will be at the School in charge of design Georges Dengler, winner of the Grand Prix de Rome in 1931, who comes preceded by very much the same phrases that preceded Paul Cret thirty-one years ago. Therefore we have every reason to be encouraged and to feel enthusiasm. It is clear that there is in the School power and renewed youth, which bid fair to carry it on to even more distinguished heights than it has ever attained before. 18
The Cultural Influence of the Study of Architecture LEICESTER B. HOLLAND, '04
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O ancient Greeks the aim of education was the training of youth for those activities wherein the adult citizen should pass his life. And such, in a general way, has been the ideal of education in every age, the changing programs of the different centuries responding to the varying patterns of adult life. Thus, to the Athenian, the chief function of manhood was citizenship. He exercised to be an able soldier; he studied politics, government, and philosophy that he might comprehend the bases of human action, and oratory that his reasoning might prevail among his fellows. The ideals of the eighteenth-century England were much the same: the gentleman went either into politics or became a soldier, rarely did he combine the two; and sometimes, departing in this from the Greek ideal, he was simply a landlord, doing nothing at all of consequence, and often doing it very well. His education prepared him for all these careers without distinction. In this country, the forthright conquest of the wilderness developed its own ideals; industry and material success were the virtues of the progressive individual. Politics became a specialized business of somewhat doubtful repute, and leisure a vice. Consequently, educational policy inherited from eighteenth-century England fitted awry upon these young ideals, and throughout the last century we have been refashioning it. The older disciplines of philosophy, oratory, and ancient literature, admirable training for the ruling class of England, have been giving way before the logical demands for studies which are of practical utility here and now, vocational courses in law, medicine, engineering, architecture, and business administration. But the older training has not wholly died. As a rule the 19
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL young man is not in general expected to chart his adult career and begin to prepare for his specialized life-work before he goes to college, so that the training of the preparatory school may dally with liberal courses of the older type—language, literature, history, and cultural mathematics. Those free from financial pressure to earn a living at the earliest moment may well continue such courses through four collegiate years before concentrating on some professional training. Since the turn of the century, too, the feeling has been growing that industry and material success should not make up the whole of life in a community which had passed beyond the pioneering state, but that the citizen's mental horizons should include the world around him, present and past, in its varied activities, and that a profound enjoyment of leisure was an important goal of social progress. Whence there is now a growing tendency among educational institutions to insist on four years of liberal training—as if for politics and leisure— before the young man's professional studies are begun. There results an intellectual dichotomy, perhaps characteristically American, but none the less unfortunate, which tends to preach that work and leisure are distinct, not only in activity but in thought. And as nobody who works with undivided interest for any portion of the day can wholly rid his mind of professional thoughts as soon as the office door is locked, it follows that the hours which should be theoretically devoted to thefloweringof intellectual and aesthetic individuality are spent chiefly in mechanical efforts to escape the workaday obsessions of the mind. Education, planned thus, as a sequence of distinct phases in preparation for adult life, inevitably creates a tendency to look on all of life as a spasmodic sequence of diverse interests. The formula runs like this: (1) a liberal or cultural education in school and college to prepare for a broad life of intellectual and aesthetic interests; (2) professional education to prepare for intense activity in a specialized and limited field; (3) professional life of intense activity in a specialized and limited field, looking to the amassing of wealth, so that in time professionalism may be laid aside for ( 4 ) a broad life of intellectual and aesthetic interests. As a rule, in the practical workings of our society, the fourth state proves to be an illusory dream, and the early cultural edu20
CULTURAL INFLUENCE cation profits little save to make the busy professional man more tolerant of the intellectual and aesthetic interests of his wife. In any case, it may be questioned whether the long period, during which the schooltime conversance with the liberal arts must lie dormant, would not almost inevitably prevent its ever bearing fruit at all. What then would be the ideal education for the young man planning for a professional career? This would depend, of course, on what is held to be an ideal professional life. To me, it would seem to be one in which interest in office and community life and intellectual and aesthetic enjoyment all formed a closely interwoven fabric. The education which prepares for it should then be of a quite similar pattern. In school days, when the specialized professional interest has not yet appeared, there are the universal professional skills of all civilized men to acquire, the three R's, the languages that serve as gateways to continuous study and lifelong enjoyment, and the "creative" work of a literary and graphic nature that plays a growing part in modern education. With these there are certain intellectual exercises called by the Greek educator Isocrates a "gymnastic of the mind," as a preparation for philosophy. "While we are occupied with the subtlety and exactness of astronomy and geometry," he says, "and are forced to apply our minds to difficult problems, and are, in addition, being habituated to speak and apply ourselves to what is said and shown to us, and not to let our wits go woolgathering, we gain the power, after being exercised and sharpened on these disciplines, of grasping and learning more easily and more quickly those subjects which are of more importance and of greater value." At some stage in the development of every child the power of speculative reason comes to life, in some it withers before the college course is done. It is the most valuable asset that man can have, seed and root and trunk of philosophy. "For since it is not in the nature of man to attain a science by the possession of which we can know positively what we should do or what we should say, in the next resort I hold that man to be wise who is able by his powers of conjecture to arrive generally at the best course, and I hold that man to be a philosopher who occupies himself with 21
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL the studies from which he will most quickly gain that kind of insight." Good teaching is that which fosters the power of reason, whatever the subject under consideration, in school or in college. Educationally, nothing is in the least comparable to it, the "gymnastic" studies exercise the mind for it, those of language open gates that its activities may fare afield, the factual studies offer a vocabulary, but, except as professional tools, are of the least value of all. For nothing is more fugitive than dogmatic fact; all but a skeleton of what is learned at school is quickly forgotten or overthrown by later investigation. The ability and will to reason, the consciousness that the world is very varied and that men have said and done most various things, and the curiosity to explore these many worlds, is all there is to a liberal education. Educationally, there is no logical break between school and college. The same catholic current of general courses flows along from childhood until maturity brings a desire to pursue some specialized line of work in the world of men. Such a determination may come before school is left, it may still delay after four years of college, it may take a lifetime to appear. It is wholly a matter of individual make-up and environmental influence. At any rate, once the path is chosen, there is no longer any reason for delay in leaving the three R's for more intensive professional work, provided always that such professional studies be not allowed to distort a balanced attention to community life and to intellectual and aesthetic activity. How this balance may be held with the study of Law or Medicine, it is not our business to inquire, but with Architecture the trick is easy. For Architecture is the most unspecialized, or rather, polyspecialized, of the professions. It is an art and a science, its practice demands imagination, organization, administration, and diplomacy. The design of a building requires some knowledge of engineering, familiarity with the crafts of wood, metal, stone, glass, and many other materials, an understanding of the ways of life in many circles, and an adaptability to the idiosyncrasies of clients. Added to this the architect is expected to be something of an archaeologist and is assumed to be a creative artist in form and color. How could a thorough training for all these arts and sciences be anything but a liberal 22
CULTURAL INFLUENCE education? Actually, it is far more liberal in the variety of its interests than the ordinary collegiate course in arts. It is true that it involves no study of ancient languages, nor wide reading in English or other literature, nor political history. But it does involve a general study of artistic history, the archaeology of all peoples, which can evoke a far truer appreciation of the aspirations and achievements of mankind than any chronicle of wars and dynasties. And above all, there is no academic course that gives such unremitting attention to the practice of speculative reason as does the study of Architectural Design. For the teaching of this subject proceeds in a manner differing from that of most collegiate work, but closely resembling the method of training of the ancient Athenian youth. Isocrates describes it thus: "When they take their pupils in hand, the physical trainers instruct their followers in the postures which have been devised for bodily contests, while the teachers of philosophy impart all the forms of discourse in which the mind expresses itself. Then, when they have made them familiar and thoroughly conversant with these lessons, they set them at exercises, habituate them to work, and require them to combine in practice the particular things which they have learned, in order that they may grasp them more firmly and bring their theories into closer touch with the occasions for applying them—I say 'theories,' for no system of knowledge can possibly cover these occasions, since in all cases they elude our science. Yet those who most apply their minds to them and are able to discern the consequences which for the most part grow out of them, will most often meet these occasions in the right way." In exact parallel, the first step in the teaching of Architectural Design, is to familiarize the student with an architectural vocabulary of forms and construction, and then promptly to set him at exercises, architectural problems, to be solved in friendly competition with his fellows, so as to bring his "theories into closer touch with the occasions for applying them." As the problems increase in complexity, the proper solutions demand increasingly close analysis and critical reasoning, together with free play of the imagination. The study and solution of a problem resolves itself, ideally, into a logi23
BOOK O F THE SCHOOL cal sequence of steps; first the careful reading and rereading of the program until the conditions and intentions are clearly understood; second, an analysis of the various elements that are required to satisfy the intention, and a grouping of them in the order of their importance and interdependence; third, an imaginative experimentation with every combination of these elements that seems to offer any promise, and a rigid criticism of each to see wherein it is good or bad. Then finally, having by investigation, experiment, and reason, decided which scheme offers the best solution, the student consults authorities to see how his conception can be most pleasingly presented. Here is a procedure valid for every problem in life. One who has mastered it by long practice is truly a philosopher. He has developed a mental skill far more important than any accumulation of facts could be. There are, of course, certain subjects regularly included in the architectural curriculum of the University of Pennsylvania which are considered more or less purely "cultural" rather than professional. There is English and there is French and History and so forth. But to my mind such courses, common to high-school and academic training, have far less cultural value than these two broad divisions of architectural training—History of A n and Architectural Design. For the study of Design inculcates an orderly intellectual technique of investigation, apprehension, analysis, logical deduction, and imaginative synthesis, in the solution of all sorts of unfamiliar problems; it provides a repeated drill in philosophic exercise such as is not offered by any other field of study, academic or professional, in our undergraduate curricula today. And the History of Art provides a vivid background for all social history, and a broad emotional sympathy with the cultures of the past. To some extent, of course, both courses are technical and factual, but to a far greater extent they are cultural, in that the student wins from them not so much a certificate of work accomplished, as a passport and compass to guide him along a path of cultural achievement throughout life. They are the primers of studies never to be completed, and when properly taught, do actually assure that culture shall not stop with college days. 24
CULTURAL INFLUENCE There is a world of difference between the mind that has once been cultivated and then allowed to revert to grass, and the mind that is continuously under cultivation. The average business or professional man in America who looks back on four years of liberal collegiate study is all too apt to have a mind whose promising garden has been overgrown with weeds; conversely there is no group in our society—with the possible exception of the better grade of teachers—which, as a whole, shows such broad and enduring interest in art and science and "impractical" fields outside its professional milieu as do the architects. What counts is not that one has studied Greek or Latin in the past, but that one has a continuing interest in the classics, even if they must be read in translation. Such interest, or ones more esoteric, are common among architects. I know of one who has picked up Japanese, because of a consuming interest in Japanese swords, and one who studies Gaelic, and one who last year read Athenaeus with delight. Such minds are cultured and are undergoing culture. It is true, of course, that practice of the profession, because of its varied contacts, tends in itself to foster such intellectual activity. But the seeds are best laid in the architectural school. The broad survey of past ages of the world is given there, the sensitivity to beauty of all sorts, the hard analysis of reason that engenders a philosophy, are inculcated there by practical experience. That the transition from this cultural training of the school to the daily interests of professional life is so easy, so continuous, makes it possible for the architect to carry his culture beyond the school with singularly little strain. As with the Greeks, the school prepares for life in its fulness, not by the facts that are taught but by the practical development of mind and senses. Not long ago I heard a very eminent professor of Fine Arts, who was not an architect, comment with great approval on the tendency to precede architectural studies by four years of academic work. If he had been talking to me instead of to others, I should have taken issue with him, and perhaps—for he is very intelligent—I could have convinced him that he had the cart before the horse. My argument would have run like this. Four years of college is undoubtedly good, if one has the time and money for it, but the actual studies that one pursues there are of superficial value only, 25
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL except where they lead directly to postgraduate work and a continuing life of study. As they are broad so they are often shallow and, to the man whose life's activities lie in other lines, they form in after years, for the most part a dim, not always rosy, memory of a bygone incarnation. An occasional student may get much from an academic course, and he as a rule becomes a college professor. But the majority know not, and care little to know, what it is all about. Facts slide off from them like water from ducklings, leaving no trace, and this because the collegian has not learned to apprehend and appreciate what he sees and hears, and has no idea at all of the technique of reason. Without previous practice in these matters, he gets little training therein in undergraduate instruction. It is rare if by commencement time he has reached the stage where he could profit properly by his freshman courses. The value of such years to the student of Architecture is largely one of snobbery. The architectural student learns what the academic undergradute should learn but rarely does, for his is truly a creative education. If the four year academic course could follow that in Architecture it would be fine indeed, for the architectural graduate has usually acquired an uncommon capacity for it. But if architects are not yet accustomed to enroll as college freshmen when they graduate, they can and do enter into the free world of culture around them, as freshmen in an endless continuity of student days.
Trade Mark Designed by HARVEY HOPKINS DUNN, '02 26
Design PAUL P. CRET, Hon. '13
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HERE is an architecture achieved by instinct; it is exemplified in the beehive, ant hill, spider's web, and bird's nest. The arrangement, economy of space, judicious use of material, ingenious defensive features found in these structures have always been the wonder of those who considered them. What sets them apart from man's architecture is chiefly this: each type of instinctive construction is as invariable as the structure of the biological species producing it. Countless generations of bees faithfully reproduce the same hive, countless generations of birds the same nest. Human architecture, on the other hand, shows a perpetual transformation. Even if man had invented the perfect "living machine," we know that this would not have stood in the way of his desire for change, of his unceasing quest for something new. This is because human architecture is the work of intelligence instead of instinct, and for this reason must always reflect the discontent an intelligent mind experiences in reviewing its past achievements. The ultimate nature of this discontent may be itself obscure, but nowhere does its working make itself more forcibly felt than in the restlessness of art. Some indeed have attempted to explain the ever-changing forms in which the architect's art expresses itself by the development of constructive methods or the necessity of adapting buildings to new conditions. These rationalist or functionalist theories have undoubtedly a sound basis in the fact that architecture is conditioned by needs and by available materials. They fail, however, to explain why man perpetually discovers new needs, and why, even if his materials change but little through the centuries, he shows a constant urge to use them in new ways and force them into new combinations. The satisfaction of physical needs is not the only spring of human in27
BOOK OF T H E SCHOOL genuity, and man has never been content with merely devising a shelter. What he seems to seek in all his artistry is to give concrete form to his dreams: dreams that vary greatly from race to race, and from generation to generation. To reflect ideas, beliefs, aesthetic creeds, goes much beyond constructional logic or functionalism. The true functionalist would have stopped at the beehive, so admirably adapted to its purpose, and not bothered with "unprofitable" experiments in form and decoration. Instead of this, man went into plastic research and applied himself to creating forms for the sake of giving an outlet to his creative impulse, and for the pleasure there is in the pursuit of a something called "beauty." As far bade as we can follow the trace of our ancestors, this "useless" pursuit, and not the urge of necessity, has been the active yeast in the ferment of art, differentiating the architecture of intelligence from the architecture of instinct. That constructive methods and new needs also had their influence is not questioned, but their part is far from being the most important of all. While they were changing but little in the course of centuries, plastic research was unceasingly at work. The program of the church, for instance, has been the same from the beginning of the Christian era to our day; the buildings answering to this program are, on the contrary, of infinite variety. The extent of form-creation here involved may be realized by a walk through any old, and many a modern town. The work of students in our architectural schools manifests this perpetual desire for the New, and the search for personal expression. There is in them all a primordial urge to create, far more powerful than any outside agency entering into the result: it alone explains the appeal of architectural design—appeal to the imagination, to the love of making new things, to the sense of aesthetic pleasure. Is it not enough to inspire a life's work? It is the everlasting transformation of an architecture responsive to this need that makes its study as attractive to us who came late, as to those who came early into the world of builders. Designing architecture calls for a wide range of collateral studies: applied sciences and techniques teach us how to build soundly, sociology informs us of the customs and economics of our time, drawing introduces us to the world of forms, and archaeology to the vast repertory of archi28
DESIGN tectural expressions. Finally, a theoretical study of the best solutions achieved in the various types of buildings lays before us the results of contemporary practice. The field is vast, and each of these subjects has many ramifications. To consider, as students are wont, each one of these studies to be a task disposed of when a passing mark has been received, is a sad mistake. In design, worthwhile solutions can be achieved only by careful consideration of all conditions affecting the problem. We may sometimes find the limitations set by these non-aesthetic conditions irksome; we cannot ignore them. Design which disregards the requirements of engineering, economics, the social conditions of contemporary life, stultifies itself and produces no more than a sort of inadequate scenery. From the point of view of pure form composition, the architect's aim is not to produce two-dimensional pictures ; he has, therefore, to visualize his work as a volume, instead of a combination of lines. He cannot confine his attention to any one view of his building, the façade for instance, but must constantly foresee the hundreds of successive aspects which will unfold themselves to the visitor from the outside as he makes his way through its rooms. These aspects are revealed to the designer through the various sections of his drawings. Students are all too prone to look upon the sections requested as part of their design problems as unavoidable evils to be disposed of in the shortest possible time and as afterthoughts. The fact is, a plan is of little merit if it is merely a pleasing image. A good plan is one from which may rise good rooms in a good sequence; its test, therefore, lies in the sections resulting from its lines. The sections are the diagram of the whole composition, and ought to be its source. To design is to foresee these interior and exterior aspects of a building and the facilities it will give to those who have to live in it or make use of it; it is also to select the simplest and most adequate means to achieve these ends. There is a perennial joke told of an architect who in planning a house of several stories, forgot to provide a staircase. Even a stale pleasantry may carry a warning. The moral of this story is that the quality most essential to an architect is foresight. He must put himself in the place of the future occupant of the building, as the actor on the stage tries to live 29
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL the character he is called on to impersonate. He must also foresee the fight against the elements which measures the life of his building. All this is something more than composing a clever picture, and shows that to study design is first of all to learn how to think clearly. A "patron" of one of the ateliers of the School in Paris used to urge his pupils to make the preliminary studies of a project as unattractive as possible, exaggerating, for instance, the contrasts between various materials or painting in black the windows and openings in the walls. His object was to induce his pupils to know the worst about any composition, and not to be deceived by the specious. The first victim of those presentations which glide over faults by artifices of the pencil and brush, is not the Jury, but the Student himself. Architectural drawings are not an end in themselves. Their purpose is, after assisting the designer to visualize the future work, to convey to the various trades such information as is needed to erect the building. After this is done, they have served their purpose. Too much effort is spent on presentation in our schools. When it is not a deliberate attempt to deceive the judges of a competition, it is still as much a waste of time as it would be for a musician to spend weeks on the calligraphy of a score. Of the importance of that historical training which gives us a summary of the experiences of man as a builder, it would be unnecessary to speak at all, were it not for the fashion developed in recent years of denouncing such scholarship as a thing likely to spoil original thought and bound to burden the young with an antiquated vocabulary. An originality so easily withered cannot have been deep rooted; and on the other hand, the pretension that the greatest genius could discover in the course of a lifetime what generations of artists have laboriously acquired, is more optimistic than well founded. Let us dismiss this fear of not being original, and comfort ourselves with the thought that the really great men have always been those most eager to profit from the lessons of the past. It is by comparison with standards that we are able to judge our own progress, and this implies some familiarity with standards. These considerations are sufficient to show that design can be mastered 30
DESIGN through practice only, that is, by designing. It is this method which has been consistently followed in this School. We learn through our own mistakes much more than through the best advice of others. "C'est en forgeant qt/on devient forgeron." All education in Fine Arts (and it is not out of place here to reaffirm one's belief that architecture is primarily a fine art, and not a branch of engineering, of real estate, or of a more or less hazy sociology) has for its main object the development of the artist's personality. A consequence is that such a result can be accomplished only through personal effort and not through a perusal of textbooks. Whatever the science of the instructor, his part cannot be more than that of an experienced fellow traveler who may at times warn of pitfalls ahead, and now and then show a short cut. But each of us has to travel the road on his own two feet. Design is the training of creative intelligence, of imagination, of good taste, of the sense of harmony in proportions. It is, by its nature, a matter of slow learning, for which the five years of a university course are barely adequate. It involves not the memorizing of data, but the creation of reactions from principles which have to become part of the subconscious. For this reason, its study has to start early. There is fortunately such a wide range of problems to propose to the young designer, that an instructor can easily find those which do not exact a mastery of associate subjects, and design can progress at the same pace as other studies, leaving for the advanced student the themes requiring a more comprehensive knowledge of the whole curriculum. These notes have possibly placed too great emphasis on the difficulties of the task and not insisted on its compensations. These are soon found by the student, if we may take as proof the earnestness he brings to his work. What is easily acquired is seldom worth having, and to aim high is what gives value to life.
31
Church of Notre Dame Albi, France
Etching by DONALD M. KIRKPATRICK, '11
Prizes and Awards DONALD M. KIRKPATRICK, '11
I S an army marches on its stomach, according to an undisputed auZ A thority on armies, so also do individuals, and such disciplined I % groups as schools, colleges, and universities march forward, and are largely cheered, nourished, and sustained, by what they have consumed. The knowledge that similar sustenance is, and will be, at hand for the taking of the effort to grasp it, is sufficient. Now such things as prizes, scholarships, and medals are not and cannot become a constant and essential diet for our institutions of learning. Rich food of this kind, in excess, promotes sluggishness. The stimulating effort to seize it, which is the real tonic, is lost. No, the architectural training table is composed of far hardier and simpler dishes. Prizes and awards become merely the spice and stimulant. Their addition, in proper proportion to the ordinary bill of fare, is a thing to be desired. They are an essential necessity to be reckoned with and understood, and to be clearly understood it must be accepted that in the division of benefit reaped by the individual and the university, the far greater proportion of benefit accrues to the former. The individual alone profits, or has the opportunity to truly profit. Intrinsically, the school or university gains or loses nothing, directly. Its budget is unaffected, its teaching staff remains intact, its problems unaltered. It boasts continuous stability. The meteoric opportunity is for the individual. However, if enough fireworks rise from one particular spot, it is perhaps well to consider whether by any chance they are of wholly spontaneous origin, or whether perhaps others have not had a hand in their proper priming, alignment, and care. Genius does not burst into an abrupt effulgence of flame, although it has been correctly argued that you cannot shoot off a cannon a little bit at a 33
BOOK OF T H E SCHOOL time. Nevertheless there can be meticulous care in the loading of the piece, considerable study as to the quality of the metal it is made of, diligent consideration as to the amount of pressure it will stand, and numerous trial rounds before the final test. Therefore we must consider these final tests which are, of course, the higher awards and scholarships, from both the double angle of the gun itself, and the gun crew standing back of it. The University of Pennsylvania has, we remember always, an excellent gun crew. The caliber of the pieces it has handled through the years have ranged in size. True, there have been certain carefully chosen projectiles hurled at the target which have proven duds. But there have also been obliterating salvos which have left such marks that each year the objective has been moved a little farther away, made more difficult of attainment; more guns from other quarters have been brought into action, with their crews laboring furiously, so the shells have had to fly higher and truer year by year, which after all is the essence of the test. I believe the glamour of the larger prizes casts its spell over the lowliest beginner, even as he fumbles painfully with dubious washes in Chinese ink. It is all about him. Perhaps a Roman Prize once stretched its awful breadth and complexity of line on the very board that leans against the wall by him. Tattered preliminaries of the Paris Prize that hang in dark corners become ikons. Names of mythical beings who have gone before to choke in the dust of ateliers and breathe deeply of the cool of the Boulevards are mentioned with casual familiarity by the janitor, and paternal affection by the elders of the faculty. Occasionally these beings appear, wander about the school and disappear. They do not wear beards; more often derby hats. There is no torrent of French or Italian, no slow motion with graceful wrist and hand before half-closed eyes. They appear substantially human, and the beginner, if he is a good lad—and there are many such—smells the battle from afar, and cries, Ha! Ha! Girding his loins, he bends closer over the board, and reversing the accepted order of things, as all good architects should do, mutters, "There by the Grace of God, go I!" This, then, for the individual is the stimulus, the birth of the competitive
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PRIZES AND AWARDS sense, the craving for inspiration. A spark has been struck, possibly to die out—often to be rekindled and fanned into a blaze. That he may never win a large award, is perhaps of minor importance. This may be heresy. I doubt it. The thing of overshadowing significance is the creation of the urge to excel; not of necessity others, but himself, to feel the growth of logic, power, and the faculty of expression in his brain and fingers, to know how and when to guide, curb, or give imagination full rein. Such an end and such a purpose lie back of all prizes. But there are also other things more important to be gained, for which the actual award is necessary, where a certain sum of money must pass. Whether they are tremendous or trivial to the individual they can but be illusive, intangible. Travel—a wash of color, of history, of climate, of people and houses springing from a different soil under a different sun. Incense under soaring arches, solemn colonnades ranged along a square, tumbled sunny villages, fluttering flags and music, battlements and spires under the moon, the puffing of tugs through the mist over the Seine, the pavilion of the Louvre through the dust of the atelier windows; details, complex traceries, balustrades, avenues of clipped trees in the twilight, ghostly statues and the splash of fountains, breathed in, absorbed, impalpably being assimilated as a soothing background for the desperate routine of sketching, measuring, drawing, comparing, and studying, for the weary days of struggling through endless buildings and past a maze of interminable pictures. Truly the profit is to the individual. The school or university is older, and wiser. It sits quietly in its appointed place smiling with kindly pride and interest at its children as they fare forth on their quests. Does it shine more brilliantly in the reflected glory of these achievements? I wonder. Heresy again, perhaps. I admit that the schools themselves, their teaching staffs, develop also, thank God, the same competitive urge and are therefore gainers. But the winning of awards cannot and should not become a medium of propaganda or advertising. Were the schools, their existence and progress, contingent upon awards received, they would immediately become soulless machines, sacrificing 35
BOOK OF T H E SCHOOL wisdom, kindly understanding, and inspiration to the process of grinding out prize winners. I like to think that a school should and does take such things in its stride onward, stimulated by successes but swerving no whit from its course. For there are many years of patient study to be accomplished, and scholarships are rare. They come at the end—a kind of decorative appendage—and the tail may be gracefully spectacular, and wave proudly in the breeze, but it must not be permitted to wag the dog. I suppose that, ranking high in the list of winners, our own school may perhaps be allowed a certain philosophic calm in regarding such matters. This may not be possible for those still struggling furiously to first break into the charmed circle of the initiate and nail the Roman Prize, Paris Prize or Stewardson Scholarship or Fontainebleau Prize or Emerson Prize or countless others on their lintels. But, after all, philosophy is one thing and marked and continued success in awards is another, not to be taken too lightly. Nor do we, for philosophy is not always proof against the mellowing influences of justifiable pride. And so the balance is unconsciously kept. Except for matters of record the mere listing of winners of awards serves little purpose. Statistics are depressing things at best. They are also impersonal, inhuman, and to a degree inaccurate in their interpretation. They do not, as is so often asserted, speak for themselves. On the contrary, they are entirely mute, for you cannot codify and tabulate vision and effort, and the size of the check attached to a certain prize need bear no relation to the inspiration developed. Dollars cannot form an arbitrary gauge of genius. And is the student who is placed second, or even further down the line, whose name passes, for the moment, quietly into oblivion, so lacking in profit? Is his spark utterly extinguished by such a thin margin? I therefore resist the temptation to insert here the long and honorable list of awards won, and I am certain that if the official list were appended there would be startling and appalling omissions. For who are the real winners, after all? And if they are winners, must we accept the corollary that all others are losers? Ah no! That would place too heavy a premium upon awards. And yet prizes are
36
PRIZES AND AWARDS desirable, pleasant things and turn life, for a time, into pleasant and desirable channels. Those who have trod that path have, against later and more distressing times, buttressed themselves with ineffaceable memories. The babel of the atelier, dust, smoke, wagging beards over drawing boards, and the unforgettable and unending roar of "Les pompiers," "On dit quelquefois . . . " over and over again till the door opens and the Patron appears and the shouting and the tumult die. Patrons, strangely enough, as do doctors and clergymen, often run true to type. Immaculate, gloves, silk hat and stick and the inevitable decoration in the lapel, calm, unruffled, ruddy, shining. It would be pleasant in these desperate and mechanistic days to be such a Patron. I like their gentle pouring of oil on the troubled waters, the pervasive sense of serene judgment they exude. The cane, the hat, the gloves, and the sudden silence that attends their unexpected—and perhaps infrequent—visits, remain to me as symbols of tranquil and courteous guidance and wisdom. Regardless of the progress of one's own project, these Patrons leave a pleasant conviction that "God's in his heaven, all's right with the world." Or else, of course they don't! There are inevitable Gallic explosions, strange mouth-filling oaths from beneath bristling mustaches, which leave crushed and mangled forms sagging weakly over defaced drawings, shocked, sometimes penitent—always in the end recalcitrant and rebellious. Now this is the moment when wise Americans pull in their heads and crawl into dark corners, for there will be a boire to be paid. Such emotional crises require liquidating, and who but the Americans will finance the wassail? There is a café hard by. Several, many, up and down the quai, around the corner and stretching in unbroken ranks up the Rue Bonaparte to St. Germain des Prés, where they scatter in all directions to continue their ordered march through the streets of the Quartier. The problem of finding a suitable spot is therefore a simple one, as they range from the lowliest bistrot to the more elegant, more modern and therefore less genuine cafés of the Boulevards. And so the battle is joined. But enough. For there are other things, things of infinite variety, un37
BOOK OF T H E SCHOOL forgettable things: nights of thoughtful work in a quiet corner by the window. Outside, an endless line of lights penciled in the black waters of the Seine. Perhaps a windy moon sailing above the chimneys of the Louvre. Quiet—the unceasing mixture of wooden rumblings, cries, tooting of horns, puffing of tugs, far-off piping whistles of trains over the tumbled roofs, laughter and bells, the breath of the city becomes muted. Like the cry of the locust, repetition obliterates it, and small thoughts creep out of the shadows about you. Visions spin webs. Ambition wakes, stretches itself, and stands by your shoulder. There are also solemn things, made up of old stones, incense, light, and kneeling forms. And things gay, with sun on dusty leaves, sun dancing on little flashes of wind on water. And serious things springing from seeds sown in the university back home. The competitive urge which raised its head timidly above ground has flourished until a great tree stands anchored to the solid earth, bending to the wind, if you will, but rooted at last and drawing nourishment from this rich soil. Prizes and Awards! Without doubt, there is something to be said in their favor!
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Tí QsOíleyCourtesy of Art Alliance of
Philadelphia
The Draughting Room ALFRED BENDINER, '22
T
HE Student! The outside world regards him as one not entirely sane, certainly irresponsible, and leading a life which often appears senseless. None but the most patient layman has appreciation and sympathy for the young genius. His personal habits, appearance, and approaches are hard to understand and his attitude toward life seems gay and free. Taking great delight in his work, he spends most of his time in the draughting room or bent over a board in the privacy of his quarters. When other students are finished for the day, his work seems to continue, and he "grouches" because the lights are not kept on all night. He learns that, beside his teachers, he is dependent upon the more advanced students. Teachers come to his board, criticize, and disappear. Upperclassmen are always around to help him; in return, he helps them. This is called "niggering." It consists of anything the upperclassman may want him to do, from the menial task of scraping the waste of an old drawing from a board, to the "inking" of a final project. Time is allotted to each project, usually a period of five or six weeks. Most time is spent in study, drawing various schemes, selecting one of them, and proceeding to analyze it. A few days before the problem is due, presentation drawings must be made for judgment. The problem is drawn, inked, and rendered. It is the labor of painstaking accuracy for hours into the night, sometimes all night. This is called "charrette." The designer is in charge, the "niggers" work with him, the critic sees that things are being presented to the best advantage. The younger students help with the minor tasks. Everyone works in harmony.
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THE DRAUGHTING ROOM After his problem goes in for judgment, he will have the haircut he has been putting off for weeks. He works with the least physical effort. Comfort is uppermost in his mind. He needs a board large enough to accommodate his project, a large uncarpeted floor area, a convenient library, a few agreeable "niggers," peace, and no interference from the outside world. The walls of his room are covered with his water colors or past projects. The floor is littered with the accumulated waste of study. Sketches on tracing paper rolled into little packs lie there with the shavings from pencils. The corners of his board are scarred by unfinished cigarettes allowed to burn themselves to ash. Over everything, a mantle of rubber scrapings and charcoal dust. The bed also serves as a place to pile books and magazine
plates. The wash bowl is littered with pots and pans filled with concoctions of water color. The walls are spattered with waves of color thrown from overloaded brushes. This is home life to the architectural student. He sits bleareyed and weary, monarch of all he surveys. If, for the past few days, he has not slept, except in snatches, what is going on around him matters not at all. To his 41
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL family he looks and acts like an ass; to his landlady he is an impossible creature. Professors think of him as a "white hope," and to his colleagues and to himself he is an individual with a lot of ability which the world will soon recognize and appreciate. The student likes to sit and draw, but he likes sitting better. Good music is balm to his soul. He likes to see fine paintings and visit museums, the theatre, and the movies. Parks, gardens, and river banks are in demand if he is not bothered with school but wants to go off somewhere and sketch. The School. Running the full length of the second floor of the building is the main draughting room. One enters it in the center of its length through two wide doors, plastered with advertisements for lost instruments. Flanking the entrance are banks of padlocked lockers surmounted by the latest charcoal studies of models who pose for the life class. Beyond, the seemingly endless floor, crowded with drawing tables. Individual lights for each board are strung from wires running the breadth of the room and give it the appearance of a "Tom Thumb Golf Course." Three-quarters of the wall space is glazed. The windows afford freedom in drawing figures through the dust on them. The wall space above the doors and lockers is devoted to full-size plaster casts of the sculptured metopes from the Parthenon. Nobody but a freshman ever looks at them. A man who has studied in this room returns to it with a tear in his eye and a crick in his back. At one time or another he has occupied a table in the corner. From his stool he has visioned the things he is going to create. The world comes to his desk, looks, criticizes, and passes. His board changes from a clean yellow to a dirty gray, the waste of past problems sticks tightly pasted to its edges, despite scrubbings and scrapings. Under his board is the dusty accumulation of his period of study—notes, letters from the Dean, unfiled plates, and the solution for future problems, which may never be called for. His drawer is his castle and holds most things which never will be needed and few which he needs on the spur of the moment. As a freshman, he starts with a shiny new set of instruments in a beautiful leather case. As he reaches for his diploma and comes to an office, he can rarely find more than a ruling pen and a compass. 42
T H E DRAUGHTING ROOM One flight below is the library, a spacious room holding a wonderful collection. In the center is a memorial tablet to Theophilus Parsons Chandler, founder of the School. Above the bookcases, which line the walls, are paintings of the "Old Guard," a fine likeness of "Popsy" Laird in his high collar and cast-iron suit, bad portraits of Cret, Everett, and Dawson. The remaining space is hung with acquisitions which molder on the walls of every architectural school. The library is presided over by Miss Deborah Morris, who seems to spend a beautiful youth keeping the younger generation in line. Leaving the library, we descend to the main hall. The sides are lined with bulletin boards, ruled over by Colonel Tidball, a fine gentleman who has grown to love architects and watches over them. The basement contains a freshman draughting room for the Graphics Department, a well-stocked store, the life-class room, loges, the sink room, and the hide-out of Tommy Hassell. The room where the janitor washes out the buckets and where the boards are scraped after a problem is dedicated to sink parties. Here punishment is meted out to the younger generation. In an adjoining room is Tommy Hassell, janitor extraordinary, who has been in the service of the University fifty years, and remembers all men who studied at the School. He is definitely a part of the building. At the far corner of the Campus stands the studio, a large wooden building which houses the classes in free-hand drawing and water color. The monotony of painting from ancient objects is relieved by the presence of the great teacher, Dawson, whose personality, ability, taste, and good judgment have been an inspiration to all students. The first two years of the student's life are spent in what is now known as the Lower School, and they are the most disheartening years of his career. Nothing he ever does will be right the first time and he is tortured with subjects which seem of little value at the moment and are as uncomfortable as growing pains.
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BOOK OF THE SCHOOL Having drudged and sweated his way through many preliminary courses, with the coming of April the much harassed and badly scared Freshman is allowed the privilege of fighting the Sophomores for the honor of wearing a smock in the draughting room. This fight remains, the last of a series of boyish brutalities. He emerges blue, but victorious, the proud possessor of rights and privileges sacred to men above the level of a freshman. In the spring the annual ball takes place. A moral copy of the bal des quafz arts given by students in Paris, it supplants an annual play formerly given by the students in the "Studio." The "old timers" insist that it was far, far better than these modern outbursts. In former years, this occasion was designed around one of the periods of glory in the history of architecture and was preceded by an historical pageant. For this occasion, the draughting room was stripped and the decorations designed and executed by the student body. Costumes were made for the pageant and by the time the hour for the party arrived, everybody would be too sleepy to get much more than a hazy thrill for the effort entailed. Two orchestras would blare continuously all night, and in the early morning light everyone would adjourn for breakfast, faded and badly worn historical personages. After five years are spent within these walls, the student joins the academic procession, wilts as he is presented with his diploma, and goes out to look for a job.
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The Campus WILLIAM J. H. HOUGH, '11
ASARI tells us that Michelangelo when a child was put to nurse with a stonecutter's wife, and he once remarked jestingly, "What good I have comes from the pure air of your native Arezzo and also because I sucked in chisels and hammers with my nurse's milk." In this well-known quotation, we find a genius modestly attributing his success to his environment, and admitting that he had received valuable assistance in his development.
V
Later on, however, Vasari has this to say of the same artist: "Let no one marvel that Michelangelo loved solitude, for he was devoted to Art, which demands man to itself; and because those who study must avoid society, the minds of those who study Art are constantly preoccupied; and those who consider this to be eccentricity are wrong, for he who would do well must avoid cares and vexations, since genius demands thought, solitude, and comfort and a steadfast mind. Nevertheless he loved the friendship of many great and learned men at seasonable times. . . . " Here we have Michelangelo's biographer telling us the contrary. Apparently Vasari felt that Michelangelo through his own will power and with his mind "constantly preoccupied" developed his own genius, and pictures for us a solitary worker—a rugged individualist. These utterances of two great men who lived in the Golden Age of Art, though at variance, are of value to one attempting to discuss a college campus, for they bring to mind an issue that exists today in our architectural schools which, though rarely touched on, is of paramount importance. Situated as most of our American architectural schools are in large universities, and subjected to many influences, it might well be questioned whether or not the conditions are proper for true artistic development. Two opinions, at least, present themselves,—one that the student should be influenced by the proper environment, and be forced to breathe in the
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BOOK OF THE SCHOOL "pure air" of a campus and drink the proper kind of artistic milk; the other, that as much as possible he should be freed from all campus or worldly "cares and vexations," and except for a few well-chosen contacts at "seasonable times," be left to work out his own salvation in solitude and comfort. It is not our present intention to discuss the merits of either brief, but rather to picture an existing condition. Schools that would fit the former description exist a-plenty; in fact, to a more or less degree, all architectural schools fall in that category. Of the other type, based on the Vasari thought that those who study An "must avoid society," probably none exists excepting, perhaps, a few "artist colonies." Therefore we cannot make a comparison based on factual experience. It is true that there are successful architects who, with no school training, have graced the profession, but that is irrelevant, for to point to them simply brings up the threadbare discussion of whether or not architectural schools are necessary at all. A controversy on all these matters could be extended ad infinitum, and would take up space which is supposed to be devoted to a description of the Campus. If the campus be defined as a field or a setting, then all schools have a campus of one sort or other. Considered as a matter of walks shaded by elm trees, with "college spirit" in the air where one meets the right sort of people, the list is limited, and a description becomes poor and narrow. It would be better to turn to blueprints and photographs for enlightenment. If, on the other hand, human contacts, spiritual stimulation, and powerful influences on the mind and character are included, the term broadens, and a description begins to deal with intangibles. Even Michelangelo—Vasari to the contrary—had a campus. Surrounded by Florentine artists and men of letters and classic and contemporary works of art, his genius developed in an enviable setting. It is almost trite to recall that great artists and great "periods" are synonymous. As time increases the distance between the present and campus days, one is tempted to forget the educational value of the campus, and fond memories and deep feelings take its place. An abstract description of the campus 46
THE CAMPUS is almost impossible, for the campus is to each one a personal experience, his own little treasure which he guards through the years and from which he would not part for the world. A diplomé of the Ecole des Beaux Arts perhaps might not acknowledge a campus, but the charrettes, the bal des quat'z arts, the conversations over the wine glasses, and the glories of Paris, he would not disown. He cherishes their memory along with his technical skill. Each one has a "campus" of his own, a personal thing which he carries about with him like a picture in a locket on a chain—only it can't be lost— and each picture varies according to the taste and temperament of the owner. In some lockets you will see the quiet stroll along Hamilton Walk with a book or a close friend; in others, those conversations over a favorite brew when weighty matters of art, religion, and politics were settled for all time. Some will cherish the thrill of hearing a Tetrazzini sing the Bell Song from Lakmé, the stentorian tones of a Dufrenne, or the fulness that came to the eyes when the water colors hanging in the Academy made their own puny attempts under Dawson look futile. And there are those whose campus pictures will portray great groups of men swaying back and forth at mass meetings, giving vent to the human passion to vie with other groups, and the annual game—with Her, adorned with a flower—to help drink in the mass vibration. Actual participation and the opportunity to do and to strive, stand out prominently in some campus pictures. Perhaps it may be the chorus practices for the Mask and Wig, with the sharp commands of the leader and the syncopated sounds from the piano produced by a sleeveless "stude," cigar in mouth, converting aching legs and panting breath to a semblance of order by rhythm. Or again the Training House and locker room (those anathemas of Educators!) will be pictured in unfading colors, recalling unforgettable sounds and smells, the click-clack of spiked shoes on cement floors, the cacophony of cursing coaches, the pungent odor of sweat and witch hazel and the swishing downpour of many showers which somehow were always accompanied by snatches from Lucia di Lammermoor or other popular airs. Outdoor sensations will, of course, be included, with the 47
BOOK OF T H E SCHOOL blowing of the whistle to "get on your marks" coming at the end of a period of nervous tension, or the dull thud of bodies in contact, and the crunching of spikes. Philosophers there will be in plenty, but not all of the Faculty. Tommy Hassell, the janitor, will expound his philosophy of art, and select the winner of a competition and tell you why. The trainer sitting on the wall in the bloom of spring, between tryouts, will rival the classic masters in philosophic controversies. Mind over matter, free will, the will to power, the morality of masters versus the morality of the herd, the superman—in homely phrases the theories will be discussed. But more, there will be an attempt to put the theory in actual practice—something that greater philosophers never dream of trying. "A man who won't be licked, can't be licked," is bellowed at the aspiring athlete, and the trainer stakes his reputation on his assumption that philosophy and muscles do work together. Do you not find that down through the years, extracurricular pictures such as these are cherished? Of course, some pictures are faded, colorless or dull—that is but natural. But does not a student, even an architectural student, put them, good or bad, in a locket and carry them around his neck? In planning the ideal architectural school, the monastic point of view might be advocated by some, and the selection of a site such as the Monastery of Silos outside Burgos in Spain would be appropriate. One must travel by horse and carriage for a day or more to reach the cloistered walls, and the road leads through barren rocky treeless country, occasionally touching isolated poverty-stricken villages. Desiring a place for uninterrupted prayer and meditation, untouched by the outside world, the good fathers made a wise selection. Strange to say, however, the visitor upon arrival is greeted cordially by the monks, and the Superior in well-spoken English bids him welcome. A substantial meal in the refectory with the kindly brothers seated at the long table is one of the signs of hospitality. The trip through the many parts of the buildings is a personally conducted tour, and the conversation continually turns to matters of outside worldly interest. In the library, American magazines are pointed out proudly. When the visitor leaves he is wished "God speed" or "Good luck" in returning to the great 48
T H E CAMPUS outside world. He leaves enriched by a pleasant experience, but also by the thought that his visit satisfied a human longing for interests outside oneself. Would you select this for your campus picture and replace it for the one now in your locket? The campus is the outside world of school days. Of course, there should be shaded walks and grassy plots and cloistered nooks, but not without the activity of men, of many men, of varied tastes and temperaments. As deepseated as the desire for life itself is the yearning for a campus, and even Michelangelo loved the "friendship of great and learned men at seasonable times."
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Executed Work ALUMNI OF THE SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
NON-ALUMNI JURY FOR THE SELECTION OF ILLUSTRATIONS CHARLES Z . KLAUDER
Architect FRANK R . W A T S O N
Architect H E N R I MARCEAU
Assistant Director, Pennsylvania
Museum of Art
Cosmopolitan Club New York Awarded the Gold Medal in Architecture for 1933 by the Architectural League of New York
Architect THOMAS HARLAN ELLETT, '06 New York
The Edison Building Los Angeles,
California
Architects ALLISON & ALLISON Los Angeles David C. Allison, '04
Residence of Mrs. Warren C. Graham Villa Nova, Pennsylvania
Architect G. E D W I N BRUMBAUGH, '13 Philadelphia
The Chapel, Girard College Philadelphia
Architects THOMAS and MARTIN Philadelphia Walter H. Thomas, '99 Sydney E. Martin,
'08
City Hall Schenectady,
New
York
Architects McKIM, MEAD and WHITE New York James Kellum Smith, '19
Entrance to Group of Eight Houses for Dr. George Woodward Chestnut Hill,
Pennsylvania
Architect H. LOUIS DUHRING, '95 Philadelphia
Berks County Court House Reading,
Pennsylvania
Architects WM. H. DECHANT & SONS Reading F. H. Dechant, '10 Miles B. Dechant, '15
Forsyth County Court House Winston-Salem,
North
Carolina
Architects NORTHUP & O'BRIEN Winston-Salem Willard C Northup, '06
First and Central Church Wilmington,
Delaware
Architects BROWN & WHITESIDE, INC. Wilmington G. Morris Whiteside, 2d, '05
Residence of Wm. R. Mercer, Esq. Doylestown,
Pennsylvania
Architects WILLING, SIMS & TALBUTT Philadelphia
Charles Willing, '06 Joseph Patterson Sims, '12 James Felix Talbutt, '06
Folger Shakespeare Library Washington Architect PAUL P. CRET Philadelphia Paul P. Cret, Hon. '13 John F. Harbeson, '10 Wm.J.
H. Hough, '11
Wm. H. Livingston,
'19
Roy F. Larson, '25 Consulting Architect ALEXANDER B. TROWBRIDGE
School of Nursing, St. Francis Hospital Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania
Architects SCHMIDT, GARDEN & ERIKSON Chicago, Illinois Carl A. Erikson, '10
Map of Old Philadelphia Made under the auspices of the Philadelphia Chapter, A. I. A.
WM. M. CAMPBELL, '12
United States Post Office Building Philadelphia
Associated Architects RANKIN & KELLOGG TILDEN, REGISTER & PEPPER Philadelphia H. Bartol Register, '09 Geo. W. Pepper, Jr., '18
The Lillie B. Ryan Memorial Building for the Haverford School Haverjord,
Pennsylvania
Architect W . POPE BARNEY, '13 Philadelphia
Wing of School Building, St. Monica's Parish White fish Bay, Wisconsin
Architect A. C. RUNZLER, '18 Milwaukee
Chestnut Hill Office of the Germantown Trust Company Chestnut
Hill,
Philadelphia
Architect ARTHUR H. BROCKIE, '95 Philadelphia
Department of Justice Building Washington
Architects ZANTZINGER, BORIE & MEDARY Philadelphia C. C. Zantzinger, '93 C L. Borie, Jr., '92 M. B. Medary, '94 C. Louis Borie, III, '17
Wilmington Public Library Wilmington,
Delaware
Associated Architects EDWARD L. TILTON, ALFRED MORTON GITHENS New York City Alfred Morton Githens, '96
Entrance Gate, Valhalla Memorial Park Burbank,
California
Architect KENNETH McDONALD, JR., 03 Los Angeles
American Bank and Trust Company Philadelphia Awarded Gold Medal in Architecture for 1929 by the Architectural League of New York
Architects DAVIS, DUNLAP & B A R N E Y Philadelphia Paul A. Davis, 3d, '94 W. Pope Barney, '13
Residence of Mrs. Samuel P. Rotan Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia
Architect ROBERT RODES McGOODWIN, '07 Philadelphia
Residence of Mrs. Phil Polsky Portland, Oregon
Architect J . LISTER HOLMES, 15 Seattle
Administration Building Board of Public Education Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania
Architects INGHAM and B O Y D Pittsburgh Charles T. Ingham, '97 William Boyd, '07
The Baltimore City College Baltimore,
Maryland
Architects BUCKLER and FENHAGEN Baltimore G. Corner Fenhagen, '05
School of Business Administration College of the City of New York New
York
Architects THOMPSON, HOLMES & CONVERSE New York Gerald A. Holmes, '08
City and County Building Denver,
Colorado
Architects ALLIED ARCHITECTS OF DENVER Denver Designer and Consultant George Simpson Koyl, '09
The Baltimore Country Club From the Golf Course Baltimore, Maryland
Architects HERBERT G. CRISP and JAMES R. EDMUNDS, JR. Baltimore Herbert G. Crisp, '12 James R. Edmunds, Jr., '12
The United States Naval Hospital Philadelphia
Architects WALTER T. KARCHER & LIVINGSTON SMITH Philadelphia Photograph by Wood Aerial Surveys, Inc.
Walter T. Karcher, '01 Livingston Smith, '01
Residence of Mr. A. T. Maimed Germani own, Philadelphia
Architects MELLOR and MEIGS Philadelphia Walter Mellor, '04
Public Library Charlottesville,
Virginia
Architect WALTER DABNEY BLAIR, *99 New York
Montgomery Ward Memorial Building Northwestern University Chicago,
Illinois
Associated Architects JAMES GAMBLE ROGERS New York CHILDS & SMITH Chicago William Jones Smith, '03
School of Fine Arts, Washington University St. Louis,
Missouri
Architects JAMES P. JAMIESON and GEORGE SPEARL St. Louis George Spearl, '03
Slovak Girls Academy Danville, Pennsylvania
Architect HARRY STERNFELD, '11 Philadelphia Associate Architect B. E. STARR
"Philbrook" Residence of Waite Phillips, Esq. Tulsa,
Oklahoma
Architect EDWARD BUEHLER DELK, 07 Kansas City
Residence for J. Herbert Egmore, Esq. Wayne,
Pennsylvania
Architect R. BROGNARD OKIE, '97 Philadelphia
University Club View from Locust Street Philadelphia
Architect GRANT M. SIMON, '11 Philadelphia
Bell Tower, Scarritt College Nashville,
Tennessee
Architect HENRY CLOSSON HIBBS, '04 Nashville
The Pan American Union Washington
Associated Architects ALBERT KELSEY, '95 PAUL P. CRET, Hon. 13 Philadelphia
Residence of John Burlinson Coleman Southold, Long
Island
Architects GOODWIN, THOMPSON & PATTERSON New York Howard T. Patterson, '11
World War Memorial New
York
Architect and Landscape Architect J O H N J . SHERIDAN, '18 New York
Motion Picture Setting "Dorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall" (MARY PICKFORD)
Motion Picture Architect PARK FRENCH, '04 Hollywood
Industrial Trust Company Providence, Rhode
Island
Architects WALKER and GILLETTE New York Leon N. Gillette,
'99
Residence for Roy Stewart, Esq. Chestnut Hill,
Philadelphia
Architects PURVES and DAY Philadelphia Edmund R. Purves, '18 Kenneth Day, '22
United States Custom House Philadelphia
Architects RITTER and SHAY Philadelphia Lewis Howell Shay, '13
Residence for C. W . Baker, Jr., Esq. Wilmington,
Delaware
Architects DE ARMOND, ASHMEAD & BICKLEY Philadelphia
Clarence De Armond, '03 Duffield Ashmead, Jr., '06 George Howard Bickley, '03
Residence of Walter C. Sharp Dallas,
Texas
Architect WALTER C. SHARP, '09 Dallas
Confederate Memorial Institute Richmond, Virginia
Architects BISSELL and SINKLER Philadelphia Elliston Perot Bisseil, '93 John P. B. Sinkler, '98
The Beginnings of Architecture UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
N 1874-75 the Trustees introduced Architecture to the group of options open to students in the four-year course of the Department of Science, later named the Towne Scientific School, and promoted Thomas W . Richards, who had been Instructor in Drawing since 187071 as well as architect of the University's new buildings in West Philadelphia, to be "Professor of Drawing and Architecture." Thus, in 1934, architecture has been taught at the University of Pennsylvania for exactly sixty years. It is true that, compared to the breadth and richness of courses in the many present-day schools, the offerings of this earliest period may seem meager—that at Pennsylvania, for example, constituting but part of the last two years of a four-year "scientific" curriculum, with architectural drawing and construction and the history of architecture as the distinctive content. Nevertheless this course was faithfully administered by Professor Richards, who earnestly desired its expansion. This came in October 1890, when, through yeoman effort by the Philadelphia Chapter of the A.I.A., the new "School of Architecture," then so titled, was opened with a full-fledged four-year course and a status independent of the other courses in the Towne Scientific School. The whole history of architectural education in this country has been one of struggle to escape from the condition of the alien child in a family of engineering courses and to live its life according to its own traditions as the oldest and, we like to think, the noblest art. It is therefore a credit to Pennsylvania that this earlier stage of its architectural development has required no more than the first quarter of the ripe age to which it has attained. W.P.L.
I
Bibliography, at the University of Pennsylvania: Catalogues in the General Library, 1828 et seq.; "University Courses in Architecture and the Allied Arts," Warren P. Laird, 1952.
149
Abbreviations Am. Acad, in Rome A.I.A. Medal Alumni Fello. Bacon Prize Brooke Prize C. Chandler Fello. Cope Prize Cret Prize Day Prize Faculty Medal Fello. Harbeson Prize Huckel Prize Laird Prize Loeb Prize Paris Prize Pupin Prize Stewardson Schol. Stewart Schol. Sp. Woodman Schol. T2A
23 APX A.I.A. F.A.I.A. A.D.G.F. S.A.D.F. B.A.I.D. B.L.A.
The fellowship in Architecture of the American Academy in Rome. The American Institute of Architects Medal. Alumni Fellowship in Architecture. Bacon Prize of the Society of Beaux Arts Architects. The Arthur Spayd Brooke Memorial Prize. Certificate. The Theophilus Parsons Chandler Fellowship in Architecture. The Walter Cope Memorial Prize. The Paul Philippe Cret Prize. The Frank Miles Day Memorial Prize. The Faculty Medal in Architecture. Fellowship in Architecture. Medal for Architectural Ornament or Archeology. The Samuel Huckel, Jr., Architectural Prize. The Warren Powers Laird Memorial Prize. Loeb Prize, given for Class B design. The Paris Prize of the Society of Beaux Arts Architects. Pupin Prize of the Society of Beaux Arts Architects. The John Stewardson Memorial Scholarship in Architecture. The Thomas S. Stewart Scholarship. Special. The Henry Gillette Woodman Scholarship. Membership in Honorary Society Tau Sigma Delta. Membership in Honorary Society Sigma Xi. Medal of the Alpha Rho Chi Honorary Fraternity in Architecture. American Institute of Architects. Fellow, American Institute of Architects. Architecte Diplômé, Gouvernement Français. Société des Architectes Diplômés Français. Beaux Arts Institute of Design. Bachelor Landscape Architecture. 150
Alumni Record 1890
1877
M C I L V A I N , CHARLES J . , J R . , 1 1 2 S o . 1 6 t h S t . , Phila. MCILVAIN 8c ROBERTS.
SELLERS, H O R A C E W E L L S . D e c e a s e d .
1880 PRTTCHETT, W I L L I A M CRESSON, J R . D e c e a s e d .
1882
W H I T M A N , ALBERT MAXWELL.
Deceased.
1883
K I R K , CHESTER H .
Deceased. President, The American Institute of Architects,'06-'07. ELLICOTT, W I L L I A M M., 7 1 4 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. D A Y , FRANK M I L E S .
1884 FERREE, J A M E S BARR.
Deceased. (Pen name
Barr Ferree.) STEWARDSON, E M L Y N LAMAR, 3 1 5 S . 1 5 t h S t . ,
Phila. b. Phila. Jan. 6, '63. STEWARDSON & Home Office, Insurance Co. of North America. PAGE. F . A . I . A .
1885 KRUG,
GEORGB
H., Polytechnic Sch., Sao
1892 BEAUMONT,
EUGENE
BEAUHARNAIS,
JR.,
Meadowlane, Lawrenceville, Tioga Co., Pa. b. Fort McKavett, Tex. Oct. '68. Lieut. U.S.N. General Constr., Topographer, Justice Peace, Burgess. Flood Control Dykes, Tioga Co., Pa. BORIE, CHARLES LOUIS, JR., Architects Bldg., Phila. b. June 9 , ' 7 0 . ZANTZINGER * BORIE. B.S. in C.E. Trustee of U. of P. since 1910; Ch. of Board of Fine Arts. FA.I.A. The Pennsylvania Museum, Phila. CRESSON, W I L L I A M P E N N , J R . Died May 1 2 , FIELD, RICHARD. D e c e a s e d .
1886
1887 COATES, CRAWFORD, 4 2 5 3 1 s t S t . ,
Manhattan
Beach, L-A. Co., Cal. b. Capetown, S. Africa, May 24, '66. Battery A Penna. Lt. Art. Vol., Porto Rico. Organized Victoria Assn. of Archts. '11 ( H o n . Sec., later P.) Los Angeles Bd. of Ed., Special Investigator of Arch. Ed. First Drawing of Phila. Parkway (Publ. in Phila. Press ' 8 8 ) . Charter Mem. of first Chap. A.I.A. Assisted in organization of Arch. Dept. U. of P. HARRIS, J O H N M C A R T H U R , Drexel Bldg., Phila. HARRIS & RICHARDS. A.B. A.I.A. L E E , CHARLES R., 2280 Pacific Ave., San Francisco. 1888 D.,
EDWARD ROBERT, 4352 Broadway, Indianapolis, Ind. Sp. KELSEY, ALBERT, Architects Bldg., Phila. b. St. Louis, Apr. 26, '70. P. Travel. Scholarship in Arch. '96; Gold Medal, Sesqui-Centenniai Exh.; Gold Medal of the Americanistas. F.A.I.A. P. Pres., Arch. League of Amer.; P. Pres., T. Sq. CI.; Trustee, Fairmount Park Art Assn.; one of founders of Amer. Civic Assn.; Amer. Fed. of Arts. Commander of the Order of Isabella la Católica. Arch. Adv., Internatl. Compet. for Columbus Meml. PanAmerican Union, Wash., D.C. (Asso. Paul P. Cret). GREEN,
ASH, PERCY. Deceased.
MAURICB
Died Nov. 3, '18.
ROWLAND, WALTER.
'33.
Paulo, Brazil.
WILT,
1891 402 W . School Lane, Gmtn., Phila. P. C.E. Mem. Art Club, Phila. Consulting Eng. Valley Forge Park Com. of Pa. CLARKE, JACOB O R I E ,
612
W.
Hortter
St.,
Phila. B.S.
LANSING, ADDISON FARWELL.
Died June 4,
'29. LEWIS, CLIFFORD, JR., C . E . '93.
240 So. 4th St., Phila.
B.S.;
MONTGOMERY,
HARRY
BRUCE,
14
E.
18th
St., Chester, Pa. C. N E L S O N , FREDERIC SHAW. Died Apr. 2 4 , ' 3 0 . W A L R A V E N , K A R L ALBERT. Died Dec. 3 1 , '20.
1889 K E E N , CHARLBS B A R T O N . D e c e a s e d . B . S .
151
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL 1893 BISSELL, ELLISTON PEROT, 4 1 0 W .
1894 Chelten
Ave., GMTN., Phila. b. Phila., Nov. 23, '72. B.S. in Arch. F.A.I.A. Mem. Council, Phila. Prot. Epis. Gty Missions. Confederate Mem'l. Inst., Richmond, Va. (Bissell & Sinlder). BRIGHT, JOHN IRWIN, Cherry Lane, Ardmore,
Pa. A.B. '90. M_A. '95 (Princ.). A.I-A. Author First Regional Plan, Phila. Dist. and First American Regional Plan. Chm. Comm. Community Planning, A.I.A. Associate Editor Journal A.IA. Author, Post Depression Architecture O the City Debt. CLINGAN, HARRY B. Deceased July 31, '93. CROWELL, PAYSON. D e c e a s e d . HARRIS, CLINTON GARDNER. D e c e a s e d . HAYS, WILLIAM CHARLES, 2 9 2 4 D e r b y
JAMES CLARKE,
care
of
KEYWORTH, EDWARD T . , 7 4 7 S. Q u e e n
St.,
York, Pa. Sp. Knights Templar Hall. LANDIS, RICHARD. MEDARY, MILTON BENNETT, JR. D i e d
Aug.
6, '29. Fellow & P. Pres. A.I A . ; P.P. Phila. Chap. A.I-A., also T. Sq. CI. Mem. Nat. F A . Comm. Valley Forge Chapel; Bok Tower. Gold Medal A.I.A., 1929. METZ, HENRY COUNTISS.
PANCOAST, ALFRED HARRISON. D i e d J u l y ' 3 1 . PEROT, ROBESON LEA, 137 Harvey St., Phila. RAMBO, ALBERT SIDNEY, 6 3 4 A s h b o u r n e R d . ,
Elkins Park, Pa. St.,
Berkeley, Cal. b. Phila. July 7, '83. B.S. in Arch. Studied at Ccole des B.A., and at Amer. Acad, in Rome. Stewardson Schol. IVon Compet. for Houston Hall, U. of P. '94 (in assoc. with M. B. Medary, Jr.). Prof. Sch. of Arch., U. of Cal. F.A.I.A.; Mem. Soc. B.A. Archts.; T. Sq. CI.; B.A. Inst. Des. Bldgs. at University of California, Berkeley, Cal. MOORE,
HAWKE, FRANCIS ( R e v . ) . D i e d Sep. 1, ' 2 3 .
REHFUSS, GEORGE ULRICH. D i e d
Mar.
15,
'21. B.S. in Arch. SHELLY, O W E N WEINBERGER,
1895 BREYFOGLE, J O H N WINDSTANDLEY. BRINKLOE, WILLIAM DRAPER. D i e d M a r . 6,
'33. B.S. in Arch.
Barclay,
BROCKIB, ARTHUR HOWELL, Architects Bldg.,
Moore 8c Co., Fidelity-Phila. Bldg., Phila.
Phila. b. Phila. Jan. 17, '75. B.S. in Arch. Stewardson Schol. Corp. Batt. A, Pa. Lt. Art., Span.-Am. War. Am. Acad, in Rome. F.A.I.A. V.P. Phila. Chap. Mem. Pa. Acad. F.A., T. Sq. CI. Germantown Trust Co., Phila.
B.S. ( C o l l e g e ) . BARCLAY, MOORE & c o . SMITH, HOWARD PERSIFOR, E n g i n e e r s
CI.,
Phila. 1894 BLITHE, WESLEY
LESHER, 7 0 5
Kenilworth
Ave., Oak Lane Park, Phila. b. Phila. Nov. 28, '74. C. A.I.A. Oak Lane Methodist Episcopal Ch., Phila. BULLOCK, JAMES MAXWELL, JR. D e c e a s e d Jan. 3, ' 3 0 . CLOTHIER, ALBERT EDWIN CLIFTON, 1 4 0 9
Allegheny Ave., Phila. CLOUD, STEPHEN ALBERT. D e c e a s e d M a y 2 7 , ' 1 0 . B.S. DAVIS, PAUL ARMON, 3D, 1 8 0 5 W a l n u t St.,
Phila. b. Phila., Jun. 18, '12. B.S. in Arch.; A.D.G.F.; F.A.I.A.; P.P. Phila. Chap.; Ch. Jury of Fellows A.I.A.; Design Critic, U. of P. '03, "16, "34. Hall of Chemistry, West Va. Univ. FETTEROLF, EDWIN HENRY,
1524
Chestnut
St., Phila. b. Andalusia, Pa., Dec. 31, '73. A.B. Undergraduate prizes, Greek Prose and Eng. Comp. A.I.A. Collaborated in editing A Handbook of Practice. Specializes in work that involves lettering.
BUHMANN, CHARLES J O H N . CHALMERS, J O H N THOMAS ( R e v . ) . DEWSNAP, SAMUEL BROWN, 3 0 7 5 t h
Ave.,
N.Y. DUHRING, HBRMAN LOUIS, 1 3 0 9 L o c u s t St.,
Phila. b. Phila. Mar. 23, '74. B.S. in Arch. A.I.A. Stewardson Schol. Silver Medal, Arch. League. Gold Medal in Arch. Pan American Expos. '27. 1st P. Arch. Alumni Soc. U. of P. T. Sq. CI. Residences for Dr. George Woodward, Phila. FRANK, J O H N HORACE, 3 2 R e x St., C h e s t n u t
Hill, Pa. B.S. in Arch. Instr. and Asst. Prof. Cons«., Sch. of Arch. U. of P. A.I.A. HANNA,
THOMAS
CARSON
(Rev.),
19
E.
Willow Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. HEACOCK, JOSEPH LINDEN, 1 2 1 1 C h e s t . St.,
Phila. b. Moberly, Mo., July 28, '73. B.S. in Arch, HEACOCK at HOKANSON. A.I.A. P. Pa.
State Assn. A.I.A. Trustee Friends Central Sch. System of Phila.; Trustee Elwyn Training Sch., Media. Upper Darby J.H.S.
152
HEALD, HARRY P .
C.
ALUMNI RECORD
St., Phila. b. St. Paul, Minn., Oct. 25, "71. C. HE ACOCK & HOKANSON. Silver Medal, Robert Clarke Meml. Com p., Chicago. A.I .A. Arch. Alumni Soc. Abington H.S. Pa.
1895 Educa.; P. T. Sq. CI. and Patron of Atelier; Pres. Phila. Chapter A.I.A.; Soc. B.A. Arch.; P. V.P. Soc. des Arch. Diplomés. Wax Trade Bd. representative in Sweden '17. Dept. of Justice Bldg., Washington, D C.
HORROCKS, HARRY HAVELOCK. D i e d A p r . 5,
ZIEGLER, CARL AUGUSTUS, 4 2 7 W .
'33.
Lane, St. Martin's, Phila. C. A . I A .
1895 HOKANSON,
OSCAR
MONS,
1211
Chestnut
KEELY, WILLIAM AUSTIN. D i e d J u l y 2 5 , ' 3 1 . KEMBLE, WILLIAM FRET. D e c e a s e d . B.S. KLEMANN, W I L L I A M AUGUST. D e c e a s e d . LANING, J O H N , JR., 7 4 W . R o s s St., W i l k e s -
1896 BAKER, FRANK LIDSTONE. S p . BALDWIN, FRANCIS JOSEPH, 3 2 8 N .
Charles
St., Baltimore, Md. C.
Barre, Pa. LATROBE,
Mermaid
OSMUN,
Col.
Cavalrv,
BANCROFT, FRANCIS WILLARD, 4 5 7 W .
U.S.A.,
24th
St., N.Y. B.S. in Arch.
Hdq. 7th Corps Area, Omaha, Neb. b. Baltimore, Aug. 8, '74. Entered Cuban Insurgent Army and served two years as officer of A n . May '98 entered U.S. Army, serving continuously.
BAUM,
GEORGE
CROLL.
Deceased.
B.S.
in
Arch. BRINTON, GEORGE LEWIS. D e c e a s e d . B . S . i n
Arch.
MICHLER, W I L L I A M MARSH, 5 2 4 R e e d e r St.,
CHASE,
SAMUEL
HART,
Easton, Pa. B.S. in Arch.
Phila. Sp.
N E W T O N , ALBERT WOODCOCK.
COFFIN, JACOB MORGAN
NORRIS, S. WALTER, 1716 Chestnut St., Phila.
1422
Walnut
(Col. U.S.
St., Army
Med. Corps), care of Adj. Genl. Off., Washington, D.C.
PERROT, EMILE GEORGE, 1 4 0 5 N o . 1 6 t h St.,
Phila. b. Phila. Nov. 12, '12. B.S. in Arch. Ballinger & Perrot "01-'20; since practicing independently. A.I.A. Mem. A.S.C.E. Inventor of "Unit Girder Frame," "Cellular Floor." Fordham University Library. Author of Chap. X X V in Kidder-Nolan, Reinforced Concrete Factory O Mill Constr.; with Walter F. Ballinger.
COLLIER, AUSTIN MCDOWELL. COOPER, HARRY ROBERTS. DAGGETT, ROBERT FROST, 9 2 2
Continental
Bk. Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind. C. Sp. DICK, GUSTAVE ALFRED, 6 0 6 W . W i s c o n s i n A v e . , M i l w a u k e e , W i s . C . DICK & BAUR, INC.
A.I.A. Mem. Wis. State Comm., Chicago Century of Progress.
ROBB, J O H N ALEXANDER. D i e d D e c . 31, "33. ROWLAND, J O H N THOMAS, JR., J o u r n a l B l d g . ,
ELCOCK, THOMAS ROBERT, JR. S p .
Jersey City, N.J.
ENSIGN, WILLIAM. D i e d N o v . 2 0 , ' 9 4 .
STONE, DAVID, 3 1 7 W . 9 9 t h St., N . Y . C .
FISCHER, EDWARD EMIL. D i e d J u l y ' 1 8 .
STOUT, HOWARD ACKERMAN, G u a r a n t e e T r .
FITZWILLIAM, FRANCIS JOEL.
Bldg., Atlantic City, N.J. C. A.I.A.
GAISSER, EUGENE.
TAYLOR, GEORGE HERBERT, O v e r h i l l & W e s t -
GIDEON, WALTER INGALLS, C l a r e n d o n , V a . C. GITHENS, ALFRED MORTON, 4 2 0 L e x i n g t o n
field Rds., Ardmore, Pa. TRUMP, CHARLES NORMAN, 5 4 4 9 G r e e n e St.,
Phila. WETHERILL, HERBERT J . , 4 2 0 W . A l l e n L a n e ,
Mt. Airy, Phila. b. Phila. May 13, '73. T. Sq. CI.; Phila. Sketch CI. Lieut. U.S.N. WOODMAN, HENRY GILLETTE. D i e d J u l y 2 4 ,
"02. C. The Henry Gillette Woodman Traveling Scholarship, founded as a memorial. ZANTZINGER,
CLARENCE
CLARK,
C.
C.
Ave., N.Y. b. Phila. Aug. 25, '76. B.S. in Arch.; Ecole des B.A., Paris; Amer. Acad, in Rome. Stewardson Schol. Medal A.I.A. '25 for excellence in public work. Inst. Decorative Design, Monumental Design, Columbia Univ. A.I.A. Wilmington Institute Free Library. HATCH, WILLIAM WHEELER. D i e d J u l y
'31.
Architects
Bldg., Phila. b. Phila. Aug. 15, '72. B.S. in Arch.; Ph.B. '92 ( Y a l e ) ; A.D.G.F. ZANT-
HAUER, HARVEY THOMAS.
C.
HAYS, HENRY NARTLETT.
C.
ZINGER *
HILL, IRA EDGAR. D i e d M a r . 16, ' 3 3 . C .
BORIE. F . A . I A . ;
Ch. Comm.
on
153
10,
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL 1896 Oris, 3109 N . Meriden St., Indianapolis, Ind. C. JACKSON, HARKER W I L L O U G H B Y , 7 3 7 Brockway, W . Saginaw, Mich. C. J U N E , H E N R Y N O R T O N . B.S. in Arch. K I E H M , CHARLES, 1 6 0 1 Suns« Ave., Utica, H U N T E R , EDGAR
N.Y. KIMBALL,
HARRISON
GOFF.
Died Oct.
'98.
FRANKLIN.
BROOKE, A R T H U R SPA YD. Died 1899. B.S. in Arch. Arthur Spayd Brooke Memorial Prize founded in his name. DAUDT, W I L L I A M CHARLES, 5600 Colorado Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. C.
JOHN
EDGAR,
Aug.
Died Sep. 4, '08. 31
Fithian
Ave.,
Merchantville, N.J. C. NEFF,
Died May 18,
CONRAD FERDINAND,
12th
&
Locust
Sts., Phila. C. EMIL H E R M A N N , 3816 Shaw Blvd., St. Louis, Mo. b. St. Louis, July 9, '74. C. Kroger Grocery Baking Co.'s Plants at Indianapolis G> Columbus, O. NIEMANN,
PARRY, OLIVER R A N D O L P H , 3 4 S o . 1 7 t h
St.,
Phila.
18,
' 7 2 . VAN RYN
at DE GELLEKE.
FERGUSON, D R . GEORGE M C I N T I R E , 7 0 6
433 Bryn Mawr Ave., Bala-Cynwyd, Pa. b. Doylestown, Pa. July 17, '72. SAVERY & SHEETZ. C. A.I.A. Administration Bldg. O H.S., Lower Merion Sch. Dist., Ardmore, Pa. SHRIGLEY, A R T H U R , 1700 Sansom St., Phila. b. Phila. B.S. in Arch. A.I.A. France with Amer. Friends Service Comm. S L I N G L U F F , FIELDEN CROSS. Died July 2 2 , '33.
49th St., Phila.
SWAIN, W I L L I A M
CRAMP,
MOSELEY,
Belfair
Planta-
tion, Bluffton, S.C. C. Fi-
nance Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. b. Kansas City, Mar. 23, '76. C. Gaylord Hotel, Kansas City. V R E E L A N D , JACOB J . , J R . , 5 2 N . Bergen St., Dover, N.J. W A G N E R , FREDERICK C O M P T I O N . Died July 22, '10.
b. Phila. Aug. 17, '76. B.S. in Arch. Mem. Archeo. Institute of America ; Deutsche Orientische Gesellschaft of Berlin and Soc. of London. Archaeological Architect at Nippur '04-0); Babylonia Expedition '89, '90, '93- 96, '99-'00; Harvard Excavation at Samaria '08-10; Phila. Univ. Museum, Minor Cemetery at Giza '24; Eckley B. Cox Expedition to Nubia. Univ. of Chicago Press '29, The Excavation of Armageddon. FISHER, CLARENCE STANLEY,
INGHAM, CHARLES TATTERSALL, 9 1 7 Bellefonte St., Pittsburgh, Pa. b. Pittsburgh, Jan. 2 1 , '16.
INGHAM IT BOYD. F . A . I . A . D i r .
ARTHUR,
Blue
Ridge
'30-
'32; P. Pres., Pittsburgh Chap.; Pittsburgh Arch. CI. ; Construction League of U.S. Board of Pub. Educa. Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa. KREGELUIS,
CHARLES
So.
GEORGI, EDWIN. S p .
VANDENBERG, CHARLES C O R N E L I U S , 6 0 1
WARNER,
C.
F.A.I.A.; P. Wis. Chap.; Dir. Central States '34; Wisconsin Bd. of Exam. Arch, tc Eng.; Arch. Milwaukee Sch. Bd. '12-'25. Vocational School, Milwaukee. DILLEY, EDGAR M E C K , 3029 Union St., St. Petersburg, Fla. Author of "Hail, Pennsylvania." EDMUNDS, FRANKLIN DAVENPORT, 6423 West Chester Rd., Millbourne, Pa. b. Phila. O n . 10, '74. B.S. in Arch. Instr. Arch. Dwg., Boys Central H.S. ; A.I.A. The Public School Bldgs. of Phila. (7 vols.)
ROESCHLAUB, F R A N K SYDNEY. SHEETZ, W I L L I A M
Wis-
consin Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. b. Milwaukee,
M C M A N U S , F R A N K SEES.
MORTON,
BOYER, SAMUEL CARPENTER. '02.
D E G E L L E K E , GERRIT JACOB, 1 5 2 W .
B.S. in Arch. MILLER, W M . C.
1897 ANDREWS, W A L T E R H A Z E L .
HERMAN,
10821
Orville
St.,
Cleveland, O. C.
Summit, Pa.
KROPFF, HENRY,
WEINSCHENK, ARTHUR ANTON, 1102 G r a n d -
burgh, Pa. C.
view Ave., Scranton, Pa.
MILES, J O S E P H STARNE.
5635 Stanton Ave., PittsDied Dec. 13, '31.
B.S. in Arch. 1897 ADAMS, HAROLD FRANCIS. C.
306 S. Smedley St., Phila. b. Camden, N.J., June 26, '75. B.S. in Arch. F-A.I.A. Mem. Bd. Twp. Supts.,
O K I E , RICHARDSON BROGNARD,
Died Jan. 30, '34.
154
ALUMNI RECORD 1898
1897
and of Sch. Bd. Easttown Twp. Asso. with Bissell & Sinkler in reproduction. "High St." Phila. Sesqui-Centennial. Res. ]. Herbert Egmore, Wayne, Pa.
PETERSEN, THOMAS CARL, J R . S p . REINHARDT, GUSTAV ADOLPH, 1 4 3 1
RAWSON, LORIN ANDREW. C. R O M M E L , FRANK AUGUSTUS, 1 5 2 4
field Bldg., Cleveland, O. b. Cleveland, Mar. 26, '76. P. of The Universal Lubricating Co. SINKLER, JOHN P. B., Architects Bldg., Phila. b. Phila. Sep. 10, '75. B.S. in Arch. F.A.I.A.; Past Sec., V.P., P., Phila. Chap.; Past Sec., P., T . Sq. CI.; Past P., Arch. Alumni Soc. City Archt., Phila. ' 2 0 - ' 2 4 ; Dir. Dept. City Arch., Phila. ' 3 2 ; Zoning Bd. of Adj. Phila. '33; Phila. Zoning Comm. '20, '24, '29, '33. Confederate Memorial Inst., Richmond, Va. (Bissell & Sinkler.)
SCOFIELD,
Chestnut
St., Phila. b. Phila. Jan. 9, '76. B.S. in Arch. Asst. City Archt., Phila. '16—'20; Asst. Dir. of Arch. '32. Capt. Am. Red Cross A.E.F. Roanoke College Dormitories, Salem, Va. STEWART,
WILLIAM
A.,
Ter., Audubon, N . J . STUART,
PERCY
CLARK,
321
Washington
Stuartdale
Farm,
Brewster, N . Y . C. Founded the Fund," School of Arch., U. of P.
"Stuart
T R U E X , FREDERICK MORFORD, 1 2 B r o a d S t . , Wyo-
ming Ave., Ardmore, Pa. b. Phila. Senior Arch., Inter-State Commerce Comm. ' 1 6 - ' 1 9 ; Designing & Erecting Engineer with P. R. R. WILLAUER,
ARTHUR
EBBS.
'12. B.S. in Arch.
Died
Nov.
1400
TRUMBOWER, W E R N E R . D i e d M a y 2 , ' 3 1 . C . WLSCHMEYER, W I L L I A M FREDERICK, 7136
Waterman Ave., St. Louis, Mo. b. St. Louis,
July
6,
'75.
ASSOC.
CROWELL. Sp. A.I.A.
MAURAN,
RUSSELL
WITTENBERG, W I L L I A M J . , 3 0 W .
N . Y . B.S. in Arch.
1898 AUSTIN, HARRY O T I S .
Cedar
BAKER, SAMUEL HOUSTON. B . S . i n A r c h . BELLMAN,
C.
CUSTER, HORACE BRODUS. WALTER
St.,
1899
Ave.,
N.W., Washington, D.C. C.
DOUGLAS, "31.
58th
It
C.
B E T T S , MORRIS COSGROVE, 4 3 7 B I R N E Y , RICHARD C .
Scho-
THORN, LOUIS M . , 6 0 Fairview Ave., Tarry-
Mill
Race Dr., Eugene, Ore. Sp.
WRIGHT,
town, N . Y .
26,
W I L L C O X , W A L T E R R o s s BAUMES, 7 6 4
SHERMAN
SMITH, LINCOLN HARVEY. D e c e a s e d . SNYDER, ROBERT WOODROW. D e c e a s e d . C . T A L L E Y , PAUL. S p .
Red Bank, N . J .
W H A R T O N , W I L L I A M MOORE, J R . , 3 5
Lake
Ave., Wilmette, III. C.
GEORGE. D i e d
GRANT, CHARLES CROTHERS, 4 4 6
Ave., Maplewood, N . J .
LAWRENCE
STEVENS,
Ohio
Bk.
Bldg., Toledo, O. b. Toledo, Feb. 29, '76.
C. June
MILLS, RHONES, BELLMAN * NORDHOFF, INC.
8,
C. A.I_A.; P.P. Toledo Chap.; P.P. Ohio State Assn. Res. George R. Ford.
Richmond
BLAIR, W A L T E R
DABNEY,
154
E.
6lst
St.,
HAVENS, HARRY PARKER. D i e d J u l y 3 0 , ' 1 6 . HINCKLEY, FRANK HERMON. HUTCHINSON, LLOYD PAXTON. C. JOHNSON, VIRGIL LAMONT, 2 9 W . U p s a l St.,
N.Y., b. Amelia Co., Va., June 14, '77. B.S. in Arch.; B.A., M.A. ( U . of V a . ) ; A.D.G.F.; F.A.I.A.; Soc. B.A. Arch.; S.A.D.F.; Arch. League N . Y . U.S. Coast Art. Public Library, Charlottesville, Va.
LAIRD, FRANK JUDSON, 3 5 V i o l e t L a . ,
Wayne, Pa. b. Bridgeton, N.J., Apr. 10, '74. B.S. in Arch. T. Sq. CI. Prize. Instr. in Design, U. of P. '20-'23.
Phila. b. Mannsville, N.Y. June 10, '68. C. Chief Struct. Eng. Bd. of Educa., Phila. A.I.A. T . Sq. CI. downe, Pa.
Lans-
FRANK
LEE,
320
Midland
CHURCHMAN, CLARKE W H A R T O N , 6 1 5
LEISENRING, L U T H E R MORRIS, 1 7 0 7 E y e S t . ,
Washington, D.C. C.
N I S B E T , B E N J A M I N MORRIS, J R . C . PATTERSON, FRANK KINGSLEY, 4 4 4 3
BODINE,
Green-
wich Pky., N . W . , Washington, D.C. Sp.
Bldg., Phila. C.
Otis
CLEVENGER, CHARLES H E N R Y . D i e d J a n . ' 9 9 . D E SILVER, J O S E P H FRANCIS. D i e d J a n . 1 ,
'14.
D W Y E R , DAVID W A L T E R -
155
Ave.,
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL 1899 EASTBURN,
Phi la.
JAY
WALTER,
Penn St.,
4656
FROMM, J O H N DAVID. Died July 12, "08. G I L L E T T E , LEON NARCISSE, 5 9 9 M a d i s o n
Ave., N.Y. b. Maiden, Mass., '77. WALKER * GILLETTE. C. A.D.G.F. Gold Medal in Arch. League of N.Y. ; Medal, A.I.A. F.A.I.A.; Dir. Aich. League of N.Y. ; B.A. Inst. Capt. U.S-A. First National Bant, N.Y. GILPIN,
CHARLES,
3D,
Liberty
Tr.
Btdg.,
Phila. b. Phila. Oct. 7, '78. B.S. in Arch. HALL, J O H N HERBERT. Deceased. B.S. in Arch. HIRSH,
Phila.
JACOB
HENRY,
1420
Walnut
St.,
George's Rd. & Gty Line, New Brunswick, N.J. B.S. in Arch. KRIEG, CHARLES PHILIP, 75 Prospect St., East Orange, N.J. b. Pottsville, Aug. 27, '72. C. A.I.A. KUENZLI, EDWIN OSCAR, 8027 Warren Ave., Wauwatosa, Wis. b. Milwaukee, Jan. 24, '74. HERBST & KUENZLI. Sp. Past Sec. & P. Wisconsin Chap. A.I.A. Dir. Wis. State Soc. Archts. KOCH, LOUIS H E N R Y ,
LINCOLN, FREDERICK FOSTER.
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MARSHALL, EDWARD N E W E L L . S p . MILLER, HIRAM, J R . S p .
Willow Grove & Stenton Aves., Chestnut Hill, Pa. B.S. in Arch.
MORGAN, SAMUEL ROWLAND,
OSTERHOUT,
GUY
Ave., Scranton, Pa.
WEBSTER,
PRESTON, W I L L I A M PROCTOR,
Brazil. B.S. in Arch.
338
Wheeler
Rio de Janeiro,
537 Lafayette Rd., Merion Park, Merion, Pa. Q U I N N , FRANCIS MACDONOUGH, RHEINFRANK,
GEORGE
Gardener Bldg., Toledo, O.
BRUCKNER,
601
C. 3006 Turner St., Allentown, Pa. b. Allentown, Jan. 27, '76. RUHE & LANGE. B.S. in Arch. A.I.A. ; Arch. Soc. School, Hospital and Bank Bldgs. SIEGEL, PAUL RAYMOND. Died June 6, "14. B.S. in Arch. RUHB,
WALTER
EDGAR,
SPAETH, CHARLES AUSTIN, 7 1 1 S t a t i o n A v e . ,
Haddon Heights, N.J.
THOMAS,
WALTER
HORSTMANN,
Architects
Bldg., Phila. b. Phila. '76. THOMAS » MARTIN.
B.S. in Arch.; École des B.A., Paris. F.A.I.A.; P.P. & V.P. Phila. Chap.; Ch. Natl. A.I.A.
1899 Comm. on Munic. Imp.; P.P. Arch. Alumni Soc. Dir. Dept. Gty Arch., Phila. "30-'31; Art Jury, Phila. "30-'31; Adv. Archt. M.E. Church in U.S. '22- 33; Tech. Adv. & Sec., City Plan. Comm., Phila. '28; Dir. C.W_A. and L.W.D. Projects, Phila. '33; Dir. Y.M. C.A. const, of Huts in France. Girard College Chapel, Phila. W A L K E R , ROSCOE LONGSTRETH. Died Dec. 12, 99. B.S. in Arch.
BAUGH, ARTHUR
mont, Pa. Sp.
1900 P., Thornbrooke Ave., Rose-
BORST, D R . EMIL EDWARD,
Baltimore, Md. CLOSE,
333 E . 30th St.,
CLARENCE W I L L I A M ,
St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Sp.
6540 Bartlett
CORBIN, ELBERT AUGUSTUS, JR.,
Pa. B.S. in Arch. DE
GARMO, W A L T E R C ,
Miami, Fla. DELANY,
THEODORE
Ave., Jenkintown, Pa.
Gradyville,
3 9 S. E . 6th
MORRIS,
234
St.,
Mather
D I L L E R , W A L T E R LUDWIG. S p . DOWLER, PRESS C., 803 Century
Bldg., Pinsburgh, Pa. b. Portersville, Pa., Aug. 16, '77. Sp. A.I.A.; P.P., Pitts. Chap.; Pa. State Assn. Archts.; P. Arch. Council, Pitts. Banks, Schools, Hospitals. FAIRCHILD, EDDY, 16 Argyle St., Glen Ridge, N.J. C. HILTEBEITEL, ADAM PAUL. Died 1932. B.S. in Arch. HOOVER, IRA W I L S O N , 4 0 8 S . O x f o r d A v e . ,
Los Angeles, Cal. C.
2628 N. Charles St., Balto., Md. b. Balto., Nov. 20, '77. C. A.I.A., Balto. Arch. Soc. Instr. Arch. Dwg. Sch. Art & Design, Md. Inst. Lt. Col. Quartermaster R.C. Adm. Bldg., Fort Meade, Md.
J O R Y , HERBERT GODFREY,
KAST, MILLER ISAAC, 2 2 2 M a r k e t S t . , H a r r i s -
burg, Pa. b. Mechanicsburg, Pa. C. MILLER I. KAST & THOMAS M. KELKER. F.A.I.A.", P.P., So. Pa. Chap.; P.P., Pa. State Assn. Penna. State Board of Exam, of Archts. KINTZUNG, LESTER, 360 N. Broadway, Yonkers, N.Y. B.S. in Arch. K O L B E , ARNO, i l l Hillcrest Ave., Yonkers, N.Y. C. A.I.A. Capt. Eng. Corps. KRABER, GEORGE R .
156
C.
ALUMNI RECORD 1901
1900 MAGAZINER, LOUIS, 1 7 0 1 W a l n u t S t . ,
Phila.
B.S. in Arch.
SCHENCK, A L B E R T FREDERICK. D i e d D e c . 2 2 ,
ROLIN, W I L L I A M ALPHONSO, C r e s t l i n e
Rd.,
Strafford, Pa.
R U S H , LOUIS HAROLD, R o o s e v e l t H o t e l ,
& Walnut Sts., Phila. B.S. in Arch.
23d
"31. B.S. in Arch. SMITH, GEORGE CLINTON. S p . W A R N I C K , A L L E N ROGERS. D e c e a s e d . W A R R E N , W I L L I A M ARTHUR, P l a n a d a ,
SCHWANN, GEORGE H E N R Y . D i e d D e c . '28.
30,
Mer-
ced Co., Cal. C. W I L L I N G , JAMES
EDGAR, W e s t b r o o k ,
Conn,
b. Phila. Aug. 29, '75. B.S. in Arch. A.I.A.; Arch. League N . Y . 1901 BATDORF, HARRY. EVANS, EDMUND CADWALADER, H a r r i n g t o n &
Pennstone Rds., Bryn Mawr, Pa.
GEILFUSS, CARL, 1 0 9 5 M a r k e t S t . , S a n
cisco, Cal. C. HARPER,
ALEXANDER
JAMES,
134
Fran-
Franklin
Ave., Mt. Vernon, N . Y . B.S. in Arch. IRWIN,
PAUL
WELLWOOD,
Pittsburgh, Pa. C.
Renshaw
Bldg.,
JACKSON, ARTHUR CONARD, 1 3 3 P e l h a m R d . ,
Phila. b. Phila. Dec. '79. B.S. in Arch. Administrator of Tenn. Valley Assoc. Co-operatives. Amer. Friends Serv. Comm. '18. KARCHER, W A L T E R THOMPSON, 1 5 2 0 L o c u s t
St., Phila. b. Phila. Aug. 23, '81. WALTER T.
KARCHER & LIVINGSTON SMITH. B . S . i n A r c h . ;
Atelier Duquesne, Paris ; Am. Acad, in Rome. Phila. Chap. Medal; 2 3 ; U. of P. Alumni Fello. A.I.A.; P. Sec. Phila. Chap.; Am. Acad, in Rome. U.S. Naval Hospital Group, Phila. MILLER, DANIEL. D i e d Feb. 1 6 , ' 1 2 . OAKLEY, THORNTON, V i l l a N o v a ,
Pa.
b.
Pittsburgh, Mar. 27. '81. B.S. in Arch. A.S. in Arch. '02. 2 3 ; T. Sq. CI. Prize; Brooke Medal: Medal for Watercolor Pan-Pac. Exp. '01; Beck Prize for Watercolor, "Palmes d'Officier d'Académie" (decoration). Fellow, Pa. Acad. F.A.; Wilmington Soc. F.A.; Sec., Phila. Watercolor CI.; Dir. Phila. Art Alliance. Mem. of faculty, Dept. of Arch. U. of P., and Penna. Museum & Sch. of Ind. Art. Illustrator of The Autobiography of Ben;. Franklin. Westward Ho, Polk Tales of Brittany, Philadelphia, Hill Towns of the Pyrenees. PAGE, CHARLES COLLINS. REYNOLDS, H E R B E R T EUGENE. RIEBENACK, W I L L I A M BEARD. D e c e a s e d .
157
SHARPLEY, W A L T E R W I L L I A M , 1 4 0 0 H a d d o n
Ave., Haddonfield, N.J. C. Stewardson N.J. State Dept. of Educ.
Scbol.
SMITH, ALFRED M O R T O N ( R e v . ) . SMITH, LIVINGSTON, 1 5 2 0 L o c u s t S t . , P h i l a . b . P h i l a . N o v . 4 , ' 7 9 . WALTER T. KARCHER ft LIVINGSTON SMITH. B . S . in A r c h . Cresson
Trav. Sch., Pa. Acad. P.A. '08. Phila. Med. 2 3 . A.I.A. Capt. U.S.A.; U.S. Hospital, Phila.
Chap. Naval
S T O L E N , W A L T E R HAMILTON, 2 6 N . H o w a r d
St., Pittsburgh, Pa. C.
WEIDEL,
HENRY
Lane, Merion, Pa.
FOSTER,
701
S.
Latches
WRIGHT, HENRY, 5 6 W e s t 4 5 t h St., N . Y . b . L a w r e n c e , K a n s . ' 7 8 . S p . ASSO. ROBERT D.
KOHN. F .A.I.A. Lecturer Illinois Univ., Cornell & Univ. of Mich. City Plan Asso., St. Louis. Chairman, Comm. Community Plan, A.I.A. Bd. Dir. Am. City Planning Institute. Sunnyside Gardens, L.I. (Community development). Author, City Planning O Apartment Planning. 1902 A B E L E , J U L I A N FRANCIS. B . S . in A r c h . A L L E N , SAMUEL A U S T I N . D e c e a s e d . B . S .
in
Arch. BARROWS, RICHARD L E E . BOSCHEN, W A L T E R
St., St. Joseph, Mo.
LUTHER,
1114
N.
25th
BRISCOE, J O H N MANVERS. D i e d A u g u s t ' 3 3 . COULTAS, EUGENE HARRINGTON, 2 0 H a r d i n g
Ave., Providence, R.I. Sp. DE GELLEKE, PETER, Troy Hills, Boonton, N.J. b. Milwaukee, June 21, '77. ARMSTRONG & DE GELLEKE. A.I.A. Milwaukee County Genl. Hospital. DENTZ,
JOHN
Ave., N . Y . C.
GERHARDT,
145
Lexington
D U N N , HARVEY H O P K I N S , 4 4 W e s t v i e w A v e . ,
Mt. Airy, Phila. b. Phila. July 19, '79. Pa. Acad, of F.A.; Pa. Sch. of Ind. Arts. Prizes in Poster Competitions, Cover Designs, etc. Experience covers entire field of advertising
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL 1903
1902
and publicity. Trade Marks &• Business Devices.
GARRETT, F R A N K CHESTER. S p .
H I N K L E , EDWARD F O O T E .
Reading, Pa. C.
H O L L I N G S W O R T H , F R A N K , 22 Forest Ave., Cranford, N.J. B.S. in Arch. K I N G , T H O M A S EWTNG. Died Nov. 12, ' 3 3 . M I L L S , C O L E M A N SELLERS. B . S . in Arch. A . B . '98. T H U M M E L , W A R R E N FREDERICK, J R . Died Jan. 21, '07. B.S. in Arch. W E T T E R A U , CARL. B.S. in Arch.
H O W E L L , CARL E U G E N E . Died June 17, "30. M C D O N A L D , K E N N E T H , JR., 3305 Wilshire
W I L L I A M S , CHARLES EDWARD.
C.
1903 ANDERSON,
JOHN
LUTHER,
285 Madison
Ave., N.Y. BAIRD, W I L L I A M , C a r t h a g e , I I I . BICKLEY, GEORGE HOWARD, Commercial
Tr. Bldg., Phi la. b. Phila. Nov. 6, '80. DE ARMOND, ASHMEAD & BICKLEY. B.S. in Arch. A.D.G.F. Brooke Medai; École des B.A. Medals. A.l-A.; Phila. A n Alliance; S.A. D.G. Prof, of Design & Ch. Des. Staff, U. of P. Res. C. W. Baker, Jr., Wilmington, Del. BIGGER, FREDERICK LEWIS, 600 S. Negley Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. b. Pittsb. Ch. City Planning Comm. of Pittsburgh. A.I.A. (P.P. Pitts. Chap.) ; P.P. Amer. City Planning Inst.; Internatl. Fed. for Housing & Town Plan. Lecturer U. of Pitts., Duquesne Univ. Penna. State Art Comm. Carnegie Library, Snohomish, Wash. BRETTNER, O T T O LEWIS. D e c e a s e d . BROWN, DANIEL
FRANKLIN.
BUCKLEY, D A N I E L ,
Broad Axe, Pa.
CHASEY, GEORGE V A N DERVEER, 4 2 2
Hoyt
St., Long Beach, N.J. CLARK, LAURENCE, 1 2 5
W . Penn St., Phila.
B.S. in Arch. Died 1926. 4809 Springfield Ave., Phila. b. Beverly, N.J. Sep. 7, '80. DB ARMOND, ASHMEAD & BICKLEY. B.S. in Arch. D E R R , HARRY F . Died Jan. 6, '16. C O N N E R Y , E M M E T JAMES. D E A R M O N D , CLARENCE,
H I L L , MIDGLEY W A L T E R , 2 1 1 C h e s t n u t
St.,
Blvd., Los Angeles, Cal. C. Entrance Gate, Valhalla Memorial, Burbank, Cal. MAYS, GEORGE E H R L E N . MCILVAINE, GILBERT, 5 2 1 E . L a n c a s t e r A v e . ,
Downingtown, Pa. b. Phila., Dec. 4, '80. EYRE & MCILVAINE. B.S. in Arch. A.B. '00, M.A. 04 (Trin. Col.). A.I_A. 1st Lieut. U.S.A. Seminary for the Order of Augustinians, Stolen Island, N.Y. WILSON
M E D O F F , BARNET. METZGER, SOL. Deceased. B.S. in Arch. MILLIS, H E N R Y ALLOWAY. D e c e a s e d . OWSLEY, CHARLES FREDERICK, 211 N . Cham-
pion St., Youngstown, O. b. Weathersfield, O. Jan. 10, '80. B.S. in Arch. A.I.A.; P.P. Youngstown Arch. Soc.; P. Ohio State Bd. of Exam.; Ohio State Assn. Arch.; P. Regional State Bd. Exam. Mahoning Valley Filtration Plant Bldg., Mineral Ridge, O. PACKARD, J O H N HOOKER, 2D, Northwestern & Stenton Aves., Chestnut Hill, Pa. PALMER, EDWARD LIVINGSTON, J R . ,
513
N.
Charles St., Baltimore, Md. B.S. in Arch. SCHAMBERG, M O R T O N LIVINGSTON. Died Ort. 13, '18. B.S. in Arch. SMITH,
WILLIAM
JONES,
430
N.
Michigan
Ave., Chicago, 111. b. Phila. May 26, '81. CHILDS & SMITH. B.S. in Arch. Studied at ficole des B.A. Paris. Scholarship U. of P. S.A.D.G. A.I.A.; V.P. Chic. Chap.; Arch. CI. of Chic.; Sen. Critic, Armour Inst, of Tech. '25-'29. Capt. 319th Eng. Hardware Mutual Ins. Bldg., Stevens Point, Wis. SPARKS, HARRY A., 19 S. Detroit St., Xenia, Ohio. SPAULDING, W E L L I N G T O N
HARVEY,
163-18
Jamaica Ave., Jamaica, L.I., N.Y. C. SPEARL, GEORGE, 21 Hartford Ave., St. Louis,
Mon-
M o . b . N . Y . ' 8 1 . JAMIESON & SPEARL. B . S . i n
terey Ave., Highland Park, Detroit, Mich. C. A.I .A.
Arch. Brooke Gold Medal; Stewardson Schol. A.I A . ; Atner. Acad, in Rome. Art School, Washington Univ., St. Louis.
FAIRBROTHER, FREDERICK A R T H U R , 7 5
GALLOWAY, W A L T E R BAWDEN, 3 2 d i t
Wal-
nut Sts., Phila. b. Phila. Nov. 9, '79. GALLOWAY TERRA COTTA co. B.S. in Arch. T. Sq. CI.
W A R D , H E N R Y BEECHER. D e c e a s e d . C . W A T T S , J O H N MURRAY, 3 0 1 W . R e x A v e . ,
Chestnut Hill, Pa.
158
ALUMNI RECORD 1903
1904
W I L L I S , J O H N SWING, V i a d u c t A v e . ,
Md. B.S. in Arch. ZORTMAN,
WILLIAM
Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
NOBLE,
527
Vassar Col. ' 2 5 - ' 2 7 ; Prof, of F A . , U. of P. '29; Chair of F.A., Library of Congress. The Garden Blue Book, Doubleday, Page Co.
Relay, Lincoln
KARCHER, JAMES B U L L E N . D e c e a s e d ' 0 7 . B . S .
in Arch.
1904 ADAMS,
KEAGEY, JAMES W I L L I A M , D u n d a s ,
ALEXANDER MACKIE,
Pa. B.S. in Arch.
Sharon
Canada. B.S. in Arch.
Hill,
LUCKENBILL, GORDON H . ,
ALLISON, DAVID CLARK, 1 0 1 4 E d i s o n
St., Quakertown, Pa.
Bldg.,
Los Angeles, Cal. b. Hookstown, Pa., May 14, ' 8 1 . ALLISON & ALLISON. S p . F . A . I . A . ;
Springfield, Mass.
BINSWANGER, CHARLES THEODORE, 6 5 2 1 N o .
13th St., Phila. C.
DALE,
1110
Buffalo
MERCER, SAMUEL HAYS BAILEY. C. MINOR, CLYDE RATLIFF, S h r e v e p o r t , L a . MOLLARD, J O H N T H O R N E , M a n d a r i n , F l a . MORRIS, EDWIN BATEMAN, S u p e r v . A r c h t .
St.,
Franklin, Pa. b. Franklin, Mar. 3, '76. C. Wanango Country Club, Oil City, Pa. BROOKE,
FREDERICK
H.,
1218
CONKEY, GEORGE LISSANT. D e c e a s e d . DISSEL, JULIAN ALEXANDER, C r e s c e n t
City,
Fla.
EMLEN,
JOHN
THOMPSON,
Off.. Treasury Dept. b. Phila. '81. B.S. in Arch. P.P. Assn. Fed. Archts. Agricultural "Extensible" Bldg., Wash. Ed., The federal Archt. Author, numerous novels, Arch, articles, etc.
Connecticut
Ave., N . W . , Washington, D.C.
36
W.
REYNOLDS,
School
10106 Toluca
G I L L , ARTHUR B E N J A M I N ,
Camden, N . J . B.S. in Arch.
328 Market
CLOSSON, A m e r .
Tr.
gie Ave., Cleveland, O. WOOD,
HENRY
DUNN,
Nashville, Tenn. b. Camden, N . J . Jan. 26, '82. B.S. in Arch. M.F.A. ( S . W . Univ.). Southern Chap. A.I.A. Gold Medal, Ecclesiastical e > Educational Architecture. F.A.I.A.; P.P. Tenn. Chap. Tenn. Bd. of Exam. Southwestern College, Memphis, Tenn. HOLLAND,
LEICESTER
BODINE,
3715
Chest-
nut St., Phila. b. Louisville, Ky. May 23, '82. B.S. in Arch.; B.S. '02; M.A. ' 1 7 ; Ph.D. '19. F-A.I.A. Fellow in Arch., Amer. Sch. of Classical Studies, Athens ' 2 0 - ' 2 1 ; Prof, of F.A.,
5541
Carne-
Morris
St.,
Phila. b. Trenton, N.J., Jan. 11, '82. B.S. in Arch. Carnegie Fellow in Arch., Am. Sch. Classical Studies at Athens '06-'08. Brooke Gold Medal. T. Sq. CI. Industrial Buildings.
St.,
Bldg.,
Nyac
Phila.
Phila. B.S. in Arch. HENRY
106
SMITH, EDWARD MITCHELLON. THOMAS, JAMES W I L L I A M , J R . , 3 8 6 3
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SHISLER, AUGUSTUS F . , 2 7 0 5 S . H o l b r o o k St.,
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in Arch. B.S. (Haver. Col ) . Phila. Chap. A.I.A. Medal '22; Gold Medal, Arch. League N.Y. F.A.I.A.; T . Sq. CI.; Arch. Soc. Res., Melville G. Curtis, Bala, Pa.; Hilles Engr. Bldg., Haverford Col., Pa.
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1907
GEORGE,
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M U R R A Y , LESLIE W A L T E R .
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CHARLES
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6
Smedley
St., Oil Gty, Pa. 1908 AUSTIN,
162
WILLIAM
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534
Chestnut
ALUMNI RECORD 1908
1908
103 Park Ave.,
BAXTER, O S M O N D M O N R O E ,
KEAST,
WILLIAM
RICHARD
MORTON,
N.Y.
Rittenhouse St., Phila. A.I.A.
BILLMAN, FRANK W I L L I A M , 875 Elmore Ave., Akron, O. b. Wadsworth, O., Feb. 4,
KIRK, HARRY H A M R I C H .
"82. HARPSTER & BILLMAN. C . M e m . B d .
Appeals, Akron Bldg. Code. Dept. Akron Dry Goods Co. CLARKE,
FREDERICK
HERBERT,
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36
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GEORGE
10th
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MCALISTER, PAUL F., 8 1 0 Portola, G l e n d a l e ,
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June 6, "25. CRAIG, COLISTER M O R T O N , 2 1 5
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BOOK OF THE SCHOOL 1908
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FRED
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DISE, JOSEPH
43d
GEBHART,
ROLLIN
E.,
622
Kenwood
Ave.,
G R U N W E L L , J O H N ROSCOE, 7 0 8 L a n i e r 1909
ALTMAN, HARRY W E S L E Y , 3 0 6 F a y e t t e T . &
Tr. Bldg., Uniontown, Pa. C. A.I.A. BANKES, EARL FREDERICK, Tudor Hall Apts., Elmhurst, L.I., N.Y. B.S. in Arch. BARTHOLOMEW, PAUL AMOS, First Natl. Bk. Bldg., Greensburg, Pa. B.S. in Arch. BEAR, ALBERT G . , 3 0 5 8 C l i n t o n A v e . , N . E . ,
Washington, D.C. Sp.
BENEKER, ALBERT LAWRENCE,
1629 K
St.,
N.W., Washington, D.C. b. Cincinnati, Oct. 24, '84. B.S. in Arch. A.I.A. Instr. Arch. Dwg., Ohio Mech. Inst.; Q.M. Genl. Off., U.S.A. Hotel Danville, Danville, Va. BRISTOL, RAYMOND WALCOTT, 8 2 0 Connecticut Ave., Washington, D.C. b. Chic. July 24, '82. B.S. in Arch. B.S. (Weslyn. Univ.). Federation of Fed. Archts. Maj. A.E.F. Post Offices, Provincetown, Mass., Kansas City, Mo. BRITT, W A L T E R FRANCIS. Deceased. CALDWELL, EDWARD BAKER, 1 0 2 9
Fairfield Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. b. Mansfield, O., Nov. 18, '85. B.S. in Arch. A.I.A.; P.P. Conn. Chap.; Bridgeport Arch. Soc.; Arch. Exam. Bd., State of Conn. Adm. Bldg., Bridgeport Hosp. CHANCE, THOMAS MITCHELL. Died Sept. 1, '13. CRAWFORD, LEON W I L D E . Died Oct. 2 1 , ' 1 8 . CURTIS, JOHN POLLOCK, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. B.S. in Arch. DAWSON, WILLIAM PERCY. Deceased. C .
PI.,
Washington, D.C. B.S. in Arch. HALL, LAWRENCE HAMPTON, 973 Manhattan Ave., Dayton, O. C. HANCE,
WALLACE
EUGENE,
1222
Market
St., Wilmington, Del. B.S. in Arch. HARRIS, ALFRED E . , 715 Old Lancaster Rd., Bryn Mawr, Pa. HATCH, RAYMOND W A L T E R . Died Apr. 13, '28. HITCHENS, W I L L I A M FRANK,
Carnegie Inst, of Tech., Pittsburgh, Pa. b. Delmar, Del., Nov. 12, '85. B.S. in Arch. Brooke Medal. A.I.A. Prof, of Arch., Head of Dept. of Arch., Carn. Inst, of Tech. 2d Lieut. Field Art. HOKANSON, HORACE MILTON, 17 Roselawn Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. b. St. Paul, Minn. Nov. 15, '80. B.S. in Arch. H U M M E L , FREDERICK CHARLES, 220 E. Idaho St., Boise, Idaho, b. Baden, Germany, Sep. 9, '84. TOURTELLOTTE & HUMMEL. C. Idaho State Soc. of Arch. State Bd. Arch. Exam. Idaho State Planning Comm. Col. 116th Eng. Fox Theatre, Boise, Idaho. J E M N E , MAGNUS, 649 Endicott Bldg., St. Paul, Minn. b. Norway. Sp. P. Gargoyle CI., St. Paul. Women's CI., St. Paul. KERVICK, FRANCIS W., Notre Dame, Ind. b. Springfield, Mass. B.S. in Arch. Prizes in House Design, N.Y. and Chic. A.I.A. Head, Dept. of Arch., U. of Notre Dame. Cushing Hall of Eng., U. of Notre Dame. KOYL, GEORGE SIMPSON, 4400 Spruce St., Phila. b. Evanston, Wyo. Feb. 8, '85. B.S. in
164
ALUMNI RECORD 1909 W., 2035 Oakley St.,
1909
Arch. M.S. "11. Fello. Amer. Acad, in Rome; T. Sq. CI. Prize; Brooke Silver Medal. 2 2 . A. I .A.; Arch. League N.Y.; P.P. Alumni of Amer. Acad, in Rome. Corbett Koyl Atelier, N.Y.; Design Critic, Columbia U., Princ. U.; Des. Cr. & Instr. in Elements of Arch., N.Y.U.; Dean, School of Fine Arts, U. of P. 2d Lt. A.E.F. The City O County Bldg., Denver (Designer and Consultant). LANCE, LINGLE DOUGLAS. Died June '29.
WILLIAMSON, THOMAS
Topeka, Kan. WINBIGLER,
1925
Long-
WOOD, FRANK HERMAN, 3 0 W . U n i o n
St.,
Burlington, N.J.
1910
Died Aug. 17,
ALLEBACH, MURUYUNE KIRK.
'31.
LAW, JAMES RICHARD, First Central Bldg.,
Madison, Wis. LAW, LAW AND Mayor City of Madison. A.I.A.
CECIL MEREDITH,
wood Ave. S., Los Angeles, Cal. B.S. in Arch.
ANDERSON, HELGE ANDREW, 3 0 8 W .
Wash-
MCCLOSKEY, LT. PALMER J E N K I N S
ington St., Chicago, 111. C. ANGLE, FRANK PURSELL, Danville, Pa. BASTOW, ABRAM, Division Drive, Dobbs
NELSON, JOSEPH, 147 E. Center St., Provo,
BLOGG, HERBERT AINSWORTH,
POTTER.
(U.S.N.), U.S.S. Camden, care of Postmaster N.Y.
Ferry, N . Y . C. BASTOW AND WAY. A . I A .
RAY,
GEORGE
NICHOLS,
1321
Ave., Washington, D.C. C.
RINEHART, THOMAS W A R D E N ,
Rd., Baltimore, Md. C.
Connecticut
BORZNER,
4823 Keswick
JAMES W E L L S , 439 Penobscot Bldg., Detroit, Mich. B.S. in Arch. SAHM, R O Y , 3938 Guilford Ave., Indianapolis, Ind.
N.Y. B.S. in Arch. '30.
DAVIS, AUGUSTUS
R.I.
DOLMAN,
CALVERT,
Construction
JOHN,
Swarthmore, Pa.
St.
Girard
McCaus-
Boss, JR., Kingston Hill, JR.,
304
Vassar
Ave.,
196 Rue Stanislas Chevanlier, Shanghai, China.
D U N N , WILLIAM ALLEN,
ELLIOT, LAWRENCE BLACKBURN,
erty Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
Bethel, Conn. B.S. in Arch. WALTER
St.,
CLARK, DOUGLAS W I L S O N .
SCOTT, W I L M E R E . , 1 9 3 4 N o . 7 r h S t . , P h i J a . SENIOR, HAROLD BENEDICT, 7 4 South St., SHARP,
CHARLES,
land Ave., St. Louis, Mo. C.
Died Feb. 20,
Bldg., Dallas, Tex. b. Madison, Tex. Dec. 19, '84. C. A.I.A.; P. No. Texas Chap. SWARTZ, FREDERICK LLOYD, 4 7 6 Van Ness Ave., Fresno, Cal. C. TSUBOI, MASATARO. Died Dec. 1 8 , ' 3 2 . W H I T E , LUCIUS READ, 5 0 4 Rossiter Ave., Balto., Md. b. Balto. July 20, '87. B.S. in Arch. 1st Medal Stewardson Schol.; 1930 "Sun Prize" Apt. House, Balto. A.I A . ; First Pres. Balto. Bldg. Cong. Instr. in Arch. Constr. U. of P. "09-'10. Maryland Casualty Group, Balto.
ANDREW
BRASHER, WILLIAM ASA, J R . , 1 4 4 2
101 Park Ave.,
SCHMIDT, HERBERT ADOLPH.
9th
Bldg., Phila. b. Phila. Feb. 23, '88. Sp. Fred Graff Prize in Arch., Sch. of Ind. Arts. Bldgs. at Hog Island, Pa.
ROLLINSON,
SCHELLING, GEORGE COVIS,
201
S.W., Washington, D.C. b. Cape Vincent, N.Y. July 13, '80. C. A.IA.; Seattle Fine Arts Soc.; Archts. Small House Bur. Asst. Arch., Off. of Superv. Arch., U.S. Treasury Dept., Exec. Asst. to Dean, U. of P. Arch. Sch. '13-'l6.
Utah. b. Mantua, Utah. Sp. A.I.A.; Utah Acad. Science, Arts & Letters. Bd. of Arch., Utah. High School, Nephi, Utah. PHILLIPS, ANTHONY. Died Mar. 21, '10. PUTNAM, KARL SCOTT, 78 Main St., Northampton, Mass. B.S. in Arch.
ENGELHARDT,
THEOBALD
5116
HARRY,
Lib-
1170
Broadway, NIY. B.S. in Arch. Lexington Apartments, Forest Hills, N.Y. ERIKSON, CARL ANTHONY, 104 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111. b. Joliet, 111. Aug. 15, '85. SCHMIDT, GARDEN & ERIKSON. B.S. in Arch. Brooke Medal. A.I.A. School of Nursing, St. Francis Hospital, Pittsburgh, Pa. EVERTS, FRANK J., 102 S. Ann St., Lancaster, Pa. FIEDLER,
CHARLES
Pasadena, Cal.
KERN,
115
Valley
FULTON, HARRY ALDUS, 8 1 2 0 E u c l i d
Cleveland, O. C. A.I.A.
165
St., Ave.,
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL 1910 GAILEY, JAMES HERBERT, 3 6 1 2 t h St., N . E . ,
Atlanta, Ga. b. Phil*. May 27, '87. BUSHBROWN & GAILEY & ASSOCIATES. B.S. i n A r c h .
M.S. in Arch. Woodman Trav. Scbol. A.I.A. Prof, of Arch. Ga. Tech. Aeronautical Bldg., Ga. Tech. GEARY, JOSEPH MATTHEW. HARBESON, JOHN FREDERICK,
1910 A.I.A.; N.Y. Soc. Archts.; 2 * 2 . A.E.F. Public Auditorium, Cleveland. book of Humanology '23. MAXWELL, MAURICE FEGER. D e c e a s e d .
B.S.
in Arch. MCALISTER,
Architects
Capt. Text-
PAUL
FRANKLIN,
810
Portola
St., Glendale, Cal.
Bldg., Phila. b. Phila. July 30, "88. PAUL P. CRET. B.S. in Arch. M.S. in Arch. '11. 2 3 ; Pello. Sch. of Arch. U. of P. '10-'11; Brooke Gold Medal; Cope Prize. F.A.I.A.; P. & V.P. Phila. Chap.; T. Sq. CI. Instr. in Perspective, Pa. Acad. F.A.; Assoc. Prof, of Arch. Des. U. of P. former Ch. Dept. of Arch. Be Landsc. Arch. & Acting Dean, Sch. of F.A. Phila. Atelier '18-'21. Mallory Fountain (R. T. McKenzie, Sculp.). Author, The Study of Architectural Design '26.
MCCARDELL, ERNEST WILBUR, 4 0 4 R o c k w e l l
H I N M A N , CLARENCE GEORGE. S p . HOFFECKER, JOSEPH V A N GASKEN. B.S. i n
MYERS, J O H N W A R R E N , 9 2 6 S. S t . B e r n a r d
Arch.
NEWBERRY, EDGAR ANDREW, 2 4 5 5 t h
H O F F M A N , EDWARD FENNO, JR., S p r i n g M i l l
N.Y. b. Nanticoke, Pa. B.S. in Arch. V.P. & Tr. J. J. Newberry & Co. 5-10-25c Stores Inc., N.Y. 1st Lieut. Req. Div., U.S.A.
Rd., Villa Nova, Pa. b. West Chester, '88. EDWARDS & HOFFMAN. B.S. i n A r c h . A . I A . ;
Ter., Frederick, Md. MECHLING, W I L L I A M HUBBS, L i n t o n ,
Hare-
stone Hill, Caterham, Surrey, London. MEISLAHN, CARL WALTER, 2 1 9 N . S h a r p St.,
Balto., Md. B.S. in Arch. MILLAR, JAMES, 3642 New Hampshire Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. C. Sp. MILLER, GEORGE RAUL. MURPHY, SAMUEL EDWARD.
St., Phila. Ave.,
Pa. Arch. Soc. 2d Lieut. Aero Squad. Res. Henry S. Drinker, Jr.
OCHS, ROBERT EMANUEL, 2 0 5 9 L i b e r t y St.,
HURSHMAN,
S.
PAMPEL, HEBER DAVID, F i n a n c e B l d g . , K a n -
IMBS, THOMAS FRANCIS, 5 4 C l a v e r a c h D r i v e ,
PARKER, HARRY EWING, S o u t h a m p t o n , B u d e s
ABRAHAM
ELEAZER,
245
Cobb's Ck. Pkwy., Phila. St. Louis County, b. St. Louis, Aug. 17, '85. B.S. in Arch. Mem. Arch. Socs. of 111., Mich., Wis., Ind. K. of C. Cant. '18. St. Louis Theological Univ. IVEY, EDWIN J O H N , 1 4 1 6 O l i v e W a y , Seattle,
Wash. b. Seattle. Sp. A.I.A. Blythe & Office Bldg., Seattle.
Co.
JACQUES, GILBERT. KEEPER, WILLIAM WBSLEY, 2D, 7 8 1 3
Win-
ston Rd., Chestnut Hill, Pa. b. Phila. '88. B.S. in Arch. Steel Mill Constructions. KERR, JOSEPH MICHAEL. D e c e a s e d . K O H N , J O H N LOWRY, 9 2 8 W a s h i n g t o n A v e . ,
Oakmont, Allegheny Co., Pa. C. LAUCK, JESSE FAY, 2 0 6 E . 6 0 t h St., K a n s a s
City, Mo. C. LAWRENCE,
CHARLES KBNNEDY, JR.,
2719
Henry St., Augusta, Ga. B.S. in Arch. LONG, BRICE HAYDEN, 3 3 4 1 A r d m o r e
Rd.,
Shaker Hts., O. b. Sweet Valley, Pa. LONG & CARPENTER. B.S. in Arch.; Studied at ¿cole des B.A., Paris. City Archt., Cleveland.
Allentown, Pa. B.S. in Arch. sas Gty, Mo. C. A.I-A. Co., Pa. b. Southampton, Mar. 31, "87. B.S. in Arch. M.S. in Arch. '13. A.I.A.; Print CI. Prof. Arch. Constr., Sch. of F.A., U. of P. 1st Lieut. A.E.F. Author, Ready Written Specifications '26 (Holland & P a r k e r ) ; KidderParker Archts. O Bldrs. Handbook '31 (Harry Parker, Editor-in-Chief); Materials O Methods of Arch. Constr. '32 (Gay & Parker). PATTERSON,
LAWRENCE
RAYMOUR,
Vista,
Cal. A . I A . POLLOCK, ROBERT WILSON. B . S . i n A r c h . REGISTER, HENRY BARTOL, 1 6 0 8 W a l n u t St., P h i l a . b . P h i l a . J a n . 2 5 , ' 8 6 . TILDEN, RBGISTER
& PEPPER. B.S. in Arch. M.S. '12. A.I.A.; Past Sec. & V.P., Phila. Chap.; Arch. Alumni Soc. ( P . P . ) . Asst. Instr. in Design, Sch. of F.A., U. of P. '26-'28. Capt. A.E.F. Office Bldg., 1616 Walnut St., Phila. (Hon. Men. Foreign). ROBESON, GEORGE CHAPIN. D e c e a s e d .
B.S.
in Arch. ROLLINSON, J O H N
166
ALLBN,
206
Broadway,
ALUMNI RECORD 1911 Bldg., St. Paul, Minn. B.S. in Arch, SILFER
1910
N . Y . b. Elizabethtown, N.J. Nov. 2, '87. AMES at BOLLINSON (Designers & Engravers). 2d Lieut. A.E.F.
AND ABRAHAMSON. A . I - A .
ROTHSCHILD, L B R O Y B . , 2 1 5 S . B r o a d
Roland Pk., Balto., Md. B.S. in Arch. M.S.
ADAMS, OTTO
St.,
Phila. b. Phi la. Oct. 14, "86. B.S. in Arch. A.I-A. Lecturer U. of P.; Dir. Mt. Sinai Hosp.; Comm. Revision of Phila. Bldg. Code. Sylvan/a Hotel, Phila. RUMMELL,
RICHARD W I L L I A M ,
Arch.
SCHENCK,
St., Phila.
JOHN
HENRY,
JR.
2414
B.S.
N.
JAMES
ROBINSON,
BACON,
St.,
TAYLOR,
St.,
ELLERY
KIRKE,
1429
Walnut
Highland Park, Pa.
URLING, N E E L VAN
1929.
NAME,
WADSWORTH,
3307
Clarendon
54
Corin-
thian Wk., Long Beach, Cal. B.S. in Arch. BAUER, GEORGE FREDERIC, A n d a l u s i a , BEERSMAN, CHARLES GERHARD, 2 0 7
ton St., Evanston, 111. C. A.I.A.
Pa. Hamil-
BROWN, GEORGE MARX, 4 5 M o n t r o s e
Ave.,
Scarsdale, N.Y. B.S. in Arch.
Road,
BUTNER, CHARLES EDWARD, 4 2 8 C o r y B l d g . ,
W. FRANK
CLINTON.
Died
REGINALD J E F F R E Y ,
308
Fresno, Cal. C.
Nov.
CHAPA, PEDRO ACACIO. B . S . in A r c h .
G.F.
W.
COATES,
Lancaster Ave., Wayne, Pa. b. Montreal, Canada. Sp. A.I.A.; Arch. Soc.; T. Sq. CI. (Past Sec.).
WARD, ALFRED LEWIS. D e c e a s e d . C . WEAVER, RAYMOND MELBOURNE. WEITZENFELD, JACOB J O H N , 1 8 S .
WBTZEL, JOHN ALBERT, B e d f o r d Hills, N . Y .
b. Paris, 111. July 7, '86. B.S. in Arch. A.I.A.; Arch. League N.Y. Instr. Pratt Inst, of Des. Bldg. Code Comm. N . Y . ; Natl. Engr. Standards Comm. 1st Lieut. U.S.A. Alabama Episcopal Cb. Home for Orphans, Springhill, Ala. W I N N , J O H N DIEDRICH. S p .
1911 FRANK
SHERMAN
GARDNER,
Endicott
Architects
COHEN, JULIUS AARON, 5 8 3 5 P h i l l i p s A v e . ,
Pittsburgh, Pa. Sp. DAS
NEVES,
CHRISTIANO
STOCKLER,
Sao
Paulo, Brazil. C. Head of the Arch. Dept. of MacKenzie College, Sao Paulo, Brazil. DICK, GEORGE, 604 36th St., Sioux City, Iowa. C. EICHENLAUB,
GEORGE
EDWARD,
218
Hess
Ave., Erie, Pa. b. Erie, Apr. 7, '89. C. Engrs. Soc. of N.W. Pa.; Reg. Engrs. Assn. Instr. in Descriptive Dwg. at Davis-Elkins Col. '32. Valdinger Warehouse, Erie, Pa. Stairways (Pencil Points ' 3 0 - ' 3 2 ) . FINKEN, EDWIN H . , 2 T u d o r La.,
AUGUST,
A.D.
Bldg., Phila. b. Berwyn, Pa. Feb. 17, '90. B.S. in Arch. Delano Prize '07. T. Sq. CI.; Engrs. CI. 2d Lt. A.E.F. Res. J. K. Kane, Jr., Glenloch, Pa.
Lynn
Blvd., Upper Darby, Pa. b. Phila., Tan. 14, '89. B.S. in Arch. M.S. '11. Alumni Fello. in Arcb. Phila. A n Alliance. Sch. of Fontainebleau '32. Res. Harlan E. Woehrle, Easton.
ABRAHAMSON,
ROGERS,
BATES, RICHARD MORTIMER, J R . ,
Phila. b. Chicago, July 9, '86. B.S. in Arch. A.I.A.; Past Sec. Phila. Chap.; T. Sq. CI. Army Supply Base '18-'19. TWITCHELL, STANLEY DAVID. ULLRICH, JESSE ROGERS, 2 1 2 F a i r v i e w
FRANCIS
Rd., Cleveland, O. b. Haddonfield, N.J. April 18, '88. B.S. in Arch. M.A. '13. E E . A.I.A.; Treas. Clev. Chap. Assoc. Ed. American Archt. ' 1 3 - ' l 4 . Instr. Arch. Sch. U. of P. ' 1 4 '20; Instr. & Asst. to Dean, U. of P. ' 2 2 - ' 2 3 ; Dir. & Dean, Clev. Sch. of Arch., Western Reserve Univ. Am. Friends Serv. Comm., Leipzig & Berlin. BARBER, CHARLES I., General Bldg., Knoxville, Tenn. C. BARBER AND MCMURRY. A.I.A.
Strauss
Phila.
1928.
B.S. in Arch.
in
SIMONSON, LOUIS W A I T E . B . S . in A r c h . STETLER, JESSE L U K E , 4 4 0 1 W a l n u t
Rd.,
ARENCIBIA, SILVIO PAYROL, Sta. C l a r a , C u b a .
Garnet
11
Edgevale
'12.
AND SON. A.I.A. SHOWALTER,
509
ANDERSON, ROBERT HALL. D i e d
SCHMILL, KARL G . , 3 2 0 L i n c o l n Pkwy., B u f f a l o , N . Y . B . S . i n A r c h , KARL SCHMILL
St., Pittsburgh, Pa. B.S. in Arch.
EUGENE,
N.Y.
167
Yonkers,
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL 1911 G A L L E H E R , PARKE A S H B Y , 4 3 2 0 G a r f i e l d S t . ,
N.W., Washington, D.C. GELB, BENJAMIN
M.
GLENN,
STARKEY.
'13.
GERALD
Died
Mar.
12,
GRAHAM, J O H N , J R . , 3 4 5 R o u m f o r t R d . , M t .
Airy, Phila. b. Camden, N.J., Dec. 26, '88. B.S. in Arch. 1st Lt. & Capt. 19th Eng. U.S.A. "17-19. GREENWELL, CARLYLE, "Holston," Powell St., Killaaj New So. Wales, Australia. B.S. in Arch. HALLENBECK, EARL. Died June 2, "34. M.S. in Arch. Prof, of Arch. Syracuse Univ. and Archt. for many of its buildings. HARNED, PERCY L E R O Y , 1 8 4 7 A s b u r y A v e . ,
Evanston, 111.
HARRINGTON,
JOHN
Oct.
15,
HASTINGS, FREDERICK W A T S O N , D e v o n ,
Pa.
"18. B.S. in Arch.
PETER.
Died
b. Phila. Jan. 2, '89. B.S. in Arch. M.S. '12. Fello. U. of P.; Inter-Col. Arch. Medal; B.A. I.D. Medals; Finalist in Rome Prize '12. Ensign U.S.N. HENNESSY,
JACK
FRANCIS,
Birnam,
Shafts-
burg Rd., Burwood, Sydney, Australia. B.S. in Arch. HOUGH,
WILLIAM
JARRETT
HALLOWELL,
1911 3d Mach. Gun Batt. 1st Div. A.E.F., three citations. Studied at £c. des B_A. Christian Assn. Bide., U. of P. (Thomas, Martin and Kirkpatrick). KNAUER, GUSTAV, 1920 40th St. Place, Des Moines, Iowa. LA B R J Q U E , CHARLES LOUIS. LAIRD, W A R R E N POWERS ( H o n . ' 1 1 ) , 7 3 0 N .
Highland Ave., Merion, Pa. b. Winona, Minn. Aug. 8, '61. Studied at Cornell U. Sc.D. '11. LL.D. '32. Prof, of Arch., U. of P. '91-'32 and Dean, Sch. of F.A. '20-'32. Retired '32 as Emeritus Prof, of Arch. F.A.I.A.; Pa. State Art Comm.; Mem. Council Cathedral of Wash.; Zoning Comm., Phila.; P. '12-'21 Assn. Collegiate Schools of Arch.; Mem. Perm. Comm. Internatl. Congress of Archts.; Consulting Architect and Professional Adviser in Competitions. $ B K ; 2 3 ; T2A. LANGE, DAVID CHRISTOPHER, 1 0 3 S p r u c e S t . ,
Audubon, N.J. b. Camden, N.J., Sep. 17, '88. B.S. in Arch. M.S. '13. Asst. Prof., Texas A. & M . ; Prof, of Arch. & Univ. Archt., Univ. of Idaho; Instr. State Col. of Wash. Bldgs. for Univ. of Idaho. Author, Shades and Shadows. LIBHART, ELLWOOD POTTS, 5 1 2 2
Ave., Phila.
Springfield
Ambler, Pa. b. Ambler, July 19, '88. PAUL P. CRET. B.S. in Arch. M.S. '13. Stewardson Schol.; Inter-Col. Compet., 1st Prize; Fellow Amer. Acad, in Rome. A.I.A. T. Sq. CI. Borough Councilman, Ambler. Dir. School Bd., Ambler. Amer. Red Cross, A.E.F. Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington (Paul P. Cret).
Ave., Durham, N.C. C.
HUTCHINSON, W I L L I A M J . , 2 7 W i n d s o r A v e . ,
M E Y U N G , L E O N JOSEPH. B . S . in A r c h .
Highland Park, Pa.
JAMES, EDMUND D U D L E Y . JENNINGS, ARTHUR BATES, J R . , 5 8 4 S . N e g -
ley St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
JONES,
HARRISON.
K E Y S E R , CHARLES MARIS, J R . D i e d M a r .
'17.
KIRKPATRICK, DONALD MORRIS,
6,
"Landfall,"
Bailey's Bay, Bermuda, b. Easton, Pa. '87. B.S. in Arch. A.B. '08 (Lafay.). Paris Prize '12; Brooke Medal; 2 3 ; Etchings, hon. men. Paris Salon '31. A.I.A.; T . Sq. CI.; Print CI.; Art Alliance; Soc. Amer. Etchers; Soc. des Artistes Français. Asst. Prof, of Des. U. of P. '30-'33 ; Curator, Pa. Art Comm. Capt. Co. A,
LINDSEY, J A M E S DAVID. LOUIS, ISADORE. B . S . in A r c h . M A R K L E Y , ROBERT READING, 1 0 2 0
Oakland
MATHESON, ROBERT M . C. M C C U L L O U G H , H E R B E R T MEREDITH,
Tilbury St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
2312
MILLER, WARREN D . , 8 1 9 O h i o St., Terra
Haute, Ind. b. Terra Haute, Aug. 24, '87. MILLER & YEAGER. B.S. in Arch. A.I.A.; P. and Sec. Ind. Chap.; Ind. Soc. of Archts., P. and Sec.; Ch. Bd. of Reg. for Archts., Ind. NEEDHAM, G U Y PARK. OSGOOD, IRVING LESTER,
311
N.
Oakhurst
Dr., Beverly Hills, Cal. b. Oakland, July 9, "88. Sp. A.I.A.
OUGHTON, JOHN, JR., Meeting House Rd.,
Jenkintown, Pa.
PALMER, CLARENCE C . PATTERSON, HOWARD STOKES, 5 3 3 W . 1 1 2 t h S t . , N . Y . b . F r e e h o l d , N . J . GOODWIN, THOMP-
168
ALUMNI RECORD 19X1 Res. John
SON at PATTERSON. C .
Coleman,
L.I.
Burlinson
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b. Phila. Dec. 4, '87. B.S. in Arch. M.S. 12. Alumni Fello. in Arch.; Brooke Prize. A.I.A.; Arch. Soc. Instr. in Dwg. U. of P. "12. Holy Name Hospital, Teaneck, N.J. REINERT, CARL CORNELIUS, 4633 Korte St., St. Louis, Mo. C. Yale Ave.,
1911 STEWART, JOSEPH LEMLY, 4 0 0 S a n s o m e S t . ,
San Francisco, Cal. C.
SULLIVAN, ELTON EUGENE. SWITZER, FRED R., 1100
W.
Shamokin, Pa. C. TATUM,
S.C. c .
HAROLD,
TAYLOR, CLYDE A . ,
111.
TOWNLEY,
Arch
St.,
Kinard Bldg., Columbia, 9036 Loerin St., Chicago,
FREDERICK
LAUGHTON,
325
SAMSON, DAVIS PARSONS.
Homer St., Vancouver, B.C. C. T R U E X , GEORGE EMORY, 27 Broad St., Red Bank, N.J. C.
SAUNDERS, EDWARD W .
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RICE,
FRANCIS
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262
Westville, Conn. C.
SCHULTZ, ARTHUR
Balto., Md.
H., JR., 1910 Park Ave.,
WILLIAMS, SEYMOUR, 123 Central Ave., Rail-
SCHWEITZER, FREDERICK RAYMOND. C . SEMANS, HARRY HUSTEAD,
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GRANT
MILES,
104 Morgantown
1500
Walnut
St.,
Phila. b. Phila. Oct. 2, '87. B.S. in Arch. M.S. in Arch. '12. Studied at fic. des B.A., Paris. Alumni Schol.; Cope Prize; Brooke Medal; Stewardson Schol.; Paris Prize; First Medals of B.A.I.D. A.I.A.; Soc. B.A. Archts.; Sketch CI.; T. Sq. CI. Patron, B.A. Atelier. First Army H.Q., A.E.F. University Club, Phila. SIMONS, ALBERT, 8 4 South Bay, Charleston, S.C. b. Charleston, July 6 , ' 9 0 . SIMONS & LAPHAM. B.S. in Arch. M.S. in Arch. Alumni Fello. '11- 12. F.A.I.A.; P.P. So. Car. Chap.; V.P., Carolina Art Assn. Instr. in Arch., Clemson Col. '16-'17. Natl. Adv. Comm. of Histl. Amer. Bldg. Survey; Trustee Charleston Museum; Trustee Charleston Library Soc. H Q. Troop of 30th Div., A.E.F. New Choir O Chancel, St. Philip's Ch„ Charleston. Collaborator on Vol. 1, Octagon Library of Early Amer. Arch., Charleston, S.C. STERNFELD, HARRY, Architects Bldg., Phila. b. Phila. Nov. 21, "88. B.S. in Arch. M.S. '14. B.A.I.D. Cert. Studied at £c. des B.A., Amer. Acad, in Rome. 2 3 ; Grad. Fello., U. of P. '13; Paris Prize '14; Visiting Fello., Am. Acad, in Rome '20; Medals B.A.I.D.; Diploma from Montevideo, S.A. A.I.A.; Arch. Soc.; T 2 A ; Scarab Frat.; Soc. B.A. Archts.; Sketch CI. Faculty, Dept. of Arch., Head of Dept. of Arch., Carnegie Tech.; Prof, of Design, Sch. of F.A., U . of P. 2d Lt. U.S.A.
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825
Jenkintown
ZIMMERMAN, ERNEST B E N J A M I N .
1912 ALCANTARA, ARMANDO D . ARELLANO, J U A N MARCOS. BARNEY, W I L L I A M POPE, 1 8 0 5 W a l n u t
St.,
BEATON, HUGH ARTHUR, J R . S p . BENERMAN, W A T K I N S , 2721 Richmond
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Phila. b. Columbus, Ga. Oct. 15, '90. B.S. in Arch. M.S. '13. Woodman Schol.; Gold Medal ¡it Arch., Arch. League of N.Y. '29. A.I.A.; T. Sq. CI.; Dir. Phila. Art Alliance; Vice-Chm. of Arch., B.A.I.D. 2d Lieut. A.E.F. American Bank £> Trust Co., Phila. (Davis, Dunlap C> Barney).
El Paso, Texas.
BOENISCH, JULIUS, 1900 Euclid Ave., Cleve-
land, O.
C.
BOSTON, ROBERT B E N J A M I N ,
St., Baltimore, Md.
1313 Division
BURNER, JAMES A L L E N . CAMPBELL, W I L L I A M MARTIN,
413
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BOOK OF THE SCHOOL 1912
1912
410 Netherwood Rd., Beverly Hills, Upper Darby, Pa. C. C H A P I N , R O L U N C O E , 707 Kenwood Pkwy., Minneapolis, Minn. b. Minneapolis, July 12, '88. C. A.I.A. Hon. Mem. Better Homes in America. Housing Project for Minn., Assoc. with Stravs, Dorr, Bersback &• Cbapin.
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C H A M P I O N , RAYMOND W I L L I A M ,
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Nor-
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PL,
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HARRISON
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JAY.
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DAVID
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311
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S. Tulpehocken
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170
ALUMNI RECORD 1912 POTTS,
ALLEN
1912
HUSSELL,
Meadow
La.
&
Woodside PI., Chevy Chase, Md. PRINGLE, ERNEST EDWARD. REEDER,
DAVID
KITCHEN,
729
Belvedere
MARTIN
FRANCIS,
SCHWAB,
WILLIAM
M.,
4714
Therese
SIMS, JOSEPH PATTERSON, A r c h i t e c t s B l d g . , P h i l a . b . P h i l a . J a n . 6 , ' 9 0 . WILLING, SIMS *
TALBUTT. B.S. in Arch. A.I.A.; T. Sq. CI.; Arch. Alumni Soc. ( P . P . ) ; Dir. Print CI. Executive Officer Courier Serv. A.E.F. Res. Wm. R. Mercer, Doylestown, Pa. Author, Old Phila. Colonial Details (in collaboration with Chas. Willing ' 1 4 ) . FORD,
289
Peachtree
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N.E.,
Park
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Atlanta, Ga. B.S. in Arch. SMITH, EDWIN FORREST, North Rock, Shamokin, Pa. C. SPALDING,
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2341
Carnegie
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(Oberlin). M.S. '13. Stewardson Schol; Bacon Prize; Warren Prize; Logist Paris Prize; B.A.I.D. Medals; 2 S . A.I.A.; Past V.P. Clev. Chap.; City Plan. Comm. of Clev. 1st Lt., A.E.F.; one citation. Severance Hall, Cleveland, O. STEDMAN, GEORGE ORANGE, 1 0 0 0 N .
Madi-
son St., Rome, N.Y. B.S. in Arch. TOMPERT,
WALTER
WILLIAM,
214
Cam-
bridge Ave., Dayton, O. C. TOWNSEND,
HARRISON,
JR.,
169
Park
La.,
JR.,
Ill
Tyler
La.,
Santa Barbara, Cal. B.S. in Arch. TRUMBOWER,
CHARLES
KINCAID,
York Ave., Pittston, Pa. TYLER,
WILLIAM
CHAMBERS.
Louisville, Ky. B.S. In Arch. M.S. '13. WALKER,
CHARLES W E L L I N G T O N ,
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PARSONS,
Ash
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Lakeside,
WOOD, EDWARD F r r z RANDOLPH, 1 7 0 0 San-
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PI.,
S H E L L Y , J O H N ALFRED.
DE
FREDERICK
848
W I L S O N , ARTHUR SCOTT.
Atlantic Gty, N.J. B.S. in Arch. SEE, WILLARD, 96 The Prado, Atlanta, Ga. B.S. in Arch.
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W E R D E H O F F , GEORGE A .
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WARREN,
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1913 ALDRIDGB, SHIRLEY VINCENT, C h r y s l e r B l d g . ,
N.Y.C.
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CHARLES
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4000
Clair-
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RALPH
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3202-B
Marshall
BARNES, ARTHUR KALLOCK, H i g h a c r e ,
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WILLIAM
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142
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171
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL 1913
1913 CLARK, ROY A . , 1 3 0 M a r Lin D r . , W „
Pitts-
GORDON,
burgh, Pa. B.S. in Arch.
SPENCER
ROBERTS,
447
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COEN, ALB AN WASSON, 3 1 1 7 H o m e
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HAASER,
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331
Hartford
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Ave., Wethersfield, Conn. b. Hartford, Conn., Mar. 30, '89. Sp.
COHEN, '15.
HOWELL, H E N R Y W . , 18 E . C a n o n
COLTON,
SIDNEY JACOB. D e c e a s e d
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HACKETT, TERRY.
15,
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HUNSBERGER, SAMUEL HAROLD. D i e d
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CHARLES,
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DOUGLAS
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PAUL
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1304
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St..
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Architects
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Bldg., Phila. b. Lyons, France, Oct. 23, '76. Sc.D. '13, U. of Pa. A.D.G.F. "03. Paris Prize (Lyons) '96; Rougevin Prize '01; Grand Medal of Emulation. Prof, of Design, U. of P. '03 to date. F.A.I.A.; Mem. Art Jury, Phila. 1st Lt. French Army attached to 18th Div. A.E.F.; Chev. Legion of Honor. Consulting Arch., Amer. Battle Mon. Comm. Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington.
Co., Hagerstown, Ind. KEMPKE, HARRISON GURDON, 2 4
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LASSEN, J O H N NICHOLAS. LEVY,
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415
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'14.
LIEBBE, H E N R Y JAMES, 3 6 2 1 G r a n d St., D e s
DEVLIN, EDWARD ALOYSIUS, 4 5 E . S t a t e St.,
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Trenton, N.J. B.S. in Arch.
LINDHEIM, M I L T O N MARTIN, L a r e d o , T e x a s . LINDQUIST, MARTIN GUSTAV, 2 3 0 0 16th
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JOHN
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325
Pelhamdale
MACCAULEY, MORRIS BAKER. MCDONALD, EDWARD D . , 2 9 2 1
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182
Summit
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GARDNER, J O H N MONTIETH, 1 3 4 5 B i r c h St.,
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FRJD,
VICTOR
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118
Maplewood
Denver, Col. GIBSON,
THOMAS
EWING
HARRY. D e c e a s e d
FREDERICK
HALCOMB,
July
1853
3,
Fair-
mount Ave., St. Paul, Minn. MASSON,
2458
5th
St.,
NEWMAN,
Seattle, Washington. Sp. GILL, ERNEST L., 3 8 4 E . B r o a d St., C o l u m -
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387
Chestnut
1855
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172
ALUMNI RECORD 1913
Arch, in High Schools. 1st Lieut. A.E.F. First Methodist Ch., Charlotte, N.C. REED, JACOB ELMER, 1 1 9 4 Elbur Ave., Lake-
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514
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246
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1913 V O N KOLNITZ, GEORGB FREDERICK, J R . ,
Broad St., Charleston, S.C.
WALLACH, JACOB BERNARD. C . W A P L E S , HENRY HOWARD, Treasury
1914 ASHWORTH, CLAUDE SHEPHERD, 2 1 1 N . U n i -
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EUGENE
BERKELEY.
Stewardson Schol.
& SCHOEPPE. A.I-A. Treas., Am. Asso. Pools & Beaches. 1st Lieut. Air Service.
BEATON, HUGH ARTHUR, J R .
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STEWART, DAVID FULLER. C .
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C.
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B E Y E R , GEORGE LEIDY. Died Oct. 2 7 , ' 3 2 . BLACKLEDGE, J O H N ELDER, 6 2 8 C h a m b e r o f
Commerce Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind.
CALLANAN,
Lake, N.Y.
ANDREW
WILUAM,
CARL WESLEY, 413 Hasbrouck Heights, N.J. Sp.
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CLARK,
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Paul Court Apts., Baltimore, Md. B.S. in Arch. GRAHAM, MALCOLM ELLIOTT. Deceased. B.S. in Arch.
TANNEHILL, N E W T O N OREAR.
HAIGHT,
TODD, ROBERT CATHCART.
Arch.
Deceased.
B.S.
in
173
Phila.
JAMES
RALPH,
631
HARRISON, KENNETH SCOTT. S p .
Ellett
St.,
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL 1914
1914 HARTIG, K A R L W „
1 6 1 3 W e b s t e r St., N . W . ,
Washington, D.C. B.S. in Arch.
HARVEY, H E N R Y S T E P H E N , P a l m B e a c h , F l a .
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M A C Q U E E N , JAMES RONALD, Center St., Se-
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M A N N , W I L L I A M GEORGE. D e c e a s e d J a n .
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5,
N E U B A U E R , STANLEY K . , 2 3 2 8 N . Park A v e . ,
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BENJAMIN
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Reading, Pa., Aug. 19, '94. B.S. in Arch. M.S. Woodman Fello.; Brooke Medal; Bacon Prize; Pupin Prize; Gold Medal, Exposition Pan Americana. Arch. League N.Y. Ch. Faculty Arch. Sch., Cooper Union; Senior Instructor, Arch. Design. Overseas Camouflage Sec. Hotel Casino, Cambria Park, Wy.
KAPP, WILLIAM
Way, West Reading, Pa. B.S. in Arch.
EDWARD,
3250
Sherbourne
Rd., Detroit, Mich. b. Toledo, Ohio, Aug. 20, ' 9 1 . SMITH, HINCHMAN AND GRYLLS, INC. C .
Harbeson Medal. A.I.A. Arch. Soc. Thumb Tack Club, Detroit. Lieut. A.E.F. University Club, Detroit. KEELY,
RUSSELL
Gates St., Phila.
CONWELL
SAXON, 6 0 6
E.
KENNEDY, CLARENCE, 9 3 B a n c r o f t Rd., N o r -
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RICHARDSON,
RAYMOND
ROESCH, RUDOLPH
JOHN,
128
GEORGE, 8 0 7
Ave., Syracuse, N.Y.
Onondaga
R O H L F F S , W A L T E R V . , 1 2 0 L o m b a r d St., San
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ARTHUR
REBD,
17
Court
St.
SAVAGE, SAMUEL W A L T E R , 3 2 2 5 7 t h St., P o r t
Arthur, Tex. Sp.
SCHEID, ROBERT MELVILLE, J R . , 2 8 B o u d i n o t
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S E L F , EDGAR ALFRED, 2 4 7 P a r k A v e . ,
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C.
LOVELACB, CURTIS MEREDITH, 1 0 3 W . B r o a d St., B e t h l e h e m , P a . C . LOVELACB AND SPILL-
SEMMENS, FRED ALLEN.
LUNDERGAN, W A L T E R MARTIN PATRICK.
STERN,
SHEFFER,
4th St., Springfield, 111. C.
MACLAURIN,
ROBERT
New Zealand. C.
WILLIAM,
ADIEL
Phila. Sp.
S.
STEVENSON,
MARTIN,
413
40
STURDY,
No.
HAROLD
FREDERICK,
38th
St.,
C. Orchard
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174
Chatham
PHILIP.
STROHECKER, LEON LOOSE. Gisborne,
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LAWRENCE ALBERT,
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LYMAN, L E W GARLAND. Sp. MACARDELL, CORNELIUS WORCESTER, 6 3 1
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K U H N , W A L T E R FREDERICK, 2 4 0 7 N . 5 t h St.,
MAN. A.I.A.
Kent
Hill
ALUMNI RECORD 19X4 THOMSON, N.Y.
JAMES
1915
ADAM,
14
£.
46th
6943 Limekiln Pike, Phila. b. Phila., May 25, '92. C. Designer, Maintenance of Way Dept., P.R.R.; Designer, Dept. of City Transit. BOYD,
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T H O R P , ARTHUR GEORGE. D e c e a s e d F e b . 11,
'31. Sp. TUSLER, W I L B U R
HENRY,
104
So.
9th
St.,
Minneapolis, Minn. b. Miles Gty, Mont. MAGNEY & TUSLER, INC. B.S. in Arch. A.I.A. P. Minn. Chap. ' 3 0 - ' 3 2 . Foshay Tower, Mph. W A R N E R , FRED GROSS, Giraid Tr. Bldg., Phila. W E S T O N , REES W I L L I S T O N , 304 Ridge St., Parsons, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. W I E N E R , J E R O M E LOUIS, East End Park Hotel, Chicago, 111. C. ZIEGLER, HERBERT O T T O , 25 Hancock St., Riverside, N.J. ZIMMERMAN, DANIEL JOHN, 501 Meyer Kiser Bk. Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind. C. 1915 AICHELB,
FREDERICK
SIMON,
Burns
1178
Ave., St. Paul, Minn. Queen Lane, Phila. b. Phila., May 2, "91. B.S. in Arch. 1st PI. CI. IJ Intercollegiate Com.; Citj Plan. Com. '33'34. Sec. Arch. Alumni Soc. T. Sq. CI. Instructor Arch. Design, T. Sq. CI. & U. of P. Lieut. U.S.N. BALDWIN, HARRISON EARL, 2 8 Carmel St., New Haven, Conn. b. N.H., Sep. 26, '92. Sp. Arch. Soc. Sec. Board of Airport Com., N.H. Sgt. U.S.A. ANTRIM, WALTER, 3 2 3 7
BAUMEISTER,
GEORGE
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5136
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LESLIB CARTER.
BENSWANGER, RICHARD,
Deceased
Mar.
21,
1450 Inverness
St.,
1120
Adams St., Fairmont, W.Va. B.S. in Arch. CALISCH, HAROLD EDWARD, 2515 Woodley Rd., N.W., Washington, D.C. B.S. in Arch. CARROLL, J O H N J O S E P H , 1414 Cayuga Ave., Riverdale, N.Y. A.I.A. B.S. in Arch. CASTRO, EUGENIO ALMEIRA, Bahia, Brazil, S.A. CHAPMAN, 1, ' 1 8 .
KILBORN,
10,
in
' 9 0 . W M . H. DECHANT TT SONS. B . S .
in
ISRAEL, 4631 N. Warnock St., Phila. B.S. in Arch. A.I.A.
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CommuBuilding
BLACKSTONE, PAUL B U R N E L L , 8 0 7
Race St.,
2D, 6 4 0
D U N S T A N , T H O M A S JAMES. D U T H I E , JAMES HARVEY, 3102
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90
PERRY & BISHOP. C . M e m . N e w B r i t a i n Z o n -
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O.
Arch. Brooke Gold Medal; Harbeson Medal. A.I.A.; Reading Arch. Soc.; Phila. Sketch CI.; P. Reading Sketch CI. A.E.F. Berks Co. Court House, Reading, Pa.
Cadrillo
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H A L BROUGHAM. D e c e a s e d
CONRAD, EDWARD GEORGE,
Cleveland,
Ave., Burlingame, Cal. C. BISHOP,
LIVINGSTON,
BROWER, CLARENCE HAROLD. BURCHINAL, J O H N CALVIN, 103
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175
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL 1915 EMREY,
WM.
1915
HAROLD,
322
H.
Laurel
St.,
Bethlehem, Pa.
ISHIKAWA, HIKOSHIRO,
460 Negishi Machi,
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JACOB, J U L I A N HURST,
6606 No. 17th St.,
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Phila. C.
ESPY, CURTIS LEACH.
KAYLL, SWINBOURNE ANANDALE, 1 9 9 7
723 Commonwealth Bldg., Allentown, Pa. B.S. in Arch. FINEGAN, EDWARD PATRICK, 317 S. Palm Dr., Beverly Hills, Cal. B.S. in Arch. F R E E M A N , G . CLEVELAND, Liberty Bk. Bldg., Reading, Pa. FROST, W A L L A C E J . , Santa Barbara, Cal.
Ave., Vancouver, B.C. C.
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174
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47th St.,
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Died Mar.
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Sheridan,
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V.P. Minn. Chap.; Friars CI. Minn. Black O f f . Bldg., Fargo, N.D. LIPPERT, GROVER H E N R Y , 303 Gay Bldg., Madison, Wis. A.I.A. LISTER, ALFRED BROOKS. Died in France, Oct. 1918. B.S. in Arch. MACBRIDE, O W E N EARL, 430 N . Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111. MACLEOD, ALEX. J O H N . S p . M A H N K E N , WALTER RUDOLPH,
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H I L L , CHARLES ALBERT.
MILBURN,
HESSER, PAUL M I L L M A N , JR., 1 5 7 W .
Dur-
HOLMES, J . LISTER, 406 N e w W o r l d
Life
Bldg., Seattle, Wash. b. Seattle, July 6, '91. A.I.A. Dir. '33, Ex. Comm., Seattle Art Museum. O. W. Fisher Res. Honor Award. H O P K I N S , GRANVILLE BOWDLE, Rose Lane, Haverford, Pa. H U M M E L , FRANK KONRAD, 9 7 R u t l a n d T e r . ,
Portland, Ore. HUTCHASON, ARTHUR,
126 N .
Norton
Died Mar.
T
St.,
M I N I C H , BERTRAM B E N J A M I N . MORRISON, N E L S O N J O H N ,
228 Perkins Bldg., Tacoma, Wash. b. Tacoma, June 6, '91. MACK & MORRISON. B.S. in A r c h .
A.I.A.;
Tacoma Soc. Arch.; Tacoma Philharmonic Orchestra. Ensign U.S.N. Residences, Etchings O Dry Points.
28,
Australia.
Sydney,
ROBERT D E N N I S , 2D, Architects Bldg., Los Angeles, Cal. b. Frankfort, Ky.
MURRAY,
IRONS, T H O M A S ROY. S p . IRVIN, CHARLES OAKLEY,
1427
MORRISON, N O R M A N ROBERT. M U N R O , W I L L I A M M C L E A N ROSS,
'19.
Falls, O. B.S. in Arch.
YANCEY,
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N o v . 2 2 , ' 9 2 . NEWTON & MURRAY. C .
Schol. A.lJi.
176
Lieut. 313th Cav. U.S.A.
PottS
ALUMNI RECORD 1915
1915 NEWHALL,
GEO., Phoenix Iron Co.,
JOHN
W E L L S , BERNARD A. B . S . in Arch. W I G H A M , EDWARD H E N R Y , 2 0 5 S.
Phoenixville, Pa. NOLAN,
THOMAS
JOHN,
Ky. Home Life
St., Phila.
36
Jacksonville, Fla.
Bldg., Louisville, Ky. POLLIT,
ALFRED
WILLIAMS,
ODELL,
Oberlin
St.,
Devereux
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WOLFE, VAN
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YODER, CHARLES LA ROSS, 4 9 C o l i g n i
REGAR, C O L O N E L H . B . S .
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37th
Z I R P E L , W A L T E R CHARLES M A R T I N , 7 1 7
1916 2708 Guadalupe St., Austin, Tex. b. Austin, July 30, '92. Sp. Field Art. U.S.A. AJLMOUR, J O H N LESTER, 1300 Los Robles PI., Pomona, Cal. B.S. in Arch. A T K I N S O N , HOWARD STANLEY, 1048 S. Ithan St., W. Phila. C. BAKER, CORNELIUS SIMONSON, Edinborough Apts., Phila. B.S. in Arch. B E L L , J O N A T H A N M O U L D . B.S. in Arch. ARLITT, N O R M A N M A X ,
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313
STOCK, D O N A L D M A R K . STOCKHOLM, FRANK C . , 4 5 1 6 N o .
13th
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STOHLDREIER, W I L L I A M
B E N N E R , ARCHIE VIVIAN.
CHRISTOPHER,
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BINFORD, MURRAY CROSMAN. BISHOP, EARLE KILBORN,
BLACKLEDGE, J O H N ELDER. C A N N O N , W I L L ALBAN, United Office Bldg., Niagara Falls, N.Y. B.S. in Arch.
St., Phila. B.S. in Arch. EDMUND
BRADFORD,
524
CAPOBIANCO, M I C H E L E .
Pem-
520 First Natl. Bk. Bldg., Virginia, Minn. B.S. in Arch. C O L T O N , R A L P H LESTER. Died Sep. 9, '31. CODDING, J O H N ALBERT,
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WARDWELL
THORNTON,
JR.
Died Jan. 22, '14. TURNEY,
PETER
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20
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Summit
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TECUMSEH,
1118
W.
King's Highway, San Antonio, Tex. WELCH,
KENNETH
MANUEL.
C O R N E L L , A L L E N D Y E R , 7 1 0 3 M c C a l l u m St.,
V A N BUSKIRK. CHARLES HAROLD, 7 9
WEIDNER,
17 Court St., New
Britain, Conn. C.
TAYLOR, N O R W O O D V I N C E N T , 1 1 1 9 N o . 6 3 d TAZEWELL,
E.
40th St., Indianapolis, Ind. B.S. in Arch.
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SALLADE, HARRY ERNEST. D e c e a s e d . SCHILLINGER, J O H N LEWIS. D e c e a s e d . C . S p . SCHLEGEL, LLOYD W A Y N E N., 1 0 4 0 Ridge SHEFCHIK,
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YEAGER, R A L P H OSCAR,
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HORN
Florida Theatre,
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R E H N Q U I S T , EDW.
HERBERT
Juniper
CURTIS,
345
Plymouth
DAILEY, J O H N
Rd., S.E., Grand Rapids, Mich. B.S. in Arch.
177
BALLINGER.
D A N D O , ROBERT EUGENE.
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL 1916
1916 DAVID, CHARLES,
52
Holyrod Ave., Outre-
moot, Que. C. DAVIS, RAYMOND H I L L I E R . DAVIS, W I L L I S E L P H I N S T O N E ,
Gate Ave., San Francisco, Cai. EICHENBAUM,
EDWARD
1731
Golden
EMANUEL,
7558
Crandon St., Chicago, IH. C. FORBES, A R T H U R
BUCHANAN,
810
Grosve-
nor Ave., Montreal, Que. C. GLASS, W I L B U R W A L L A C E . G R E E N , JAMES MAYNARD, JR.,
1122 Taylor
GUNTHER,
GEORGB,
St., Columbia, S.C. JOHN
FREDERICK
1
Walkerst PI., Boston, Mass. C. H A M I L T O N , H U G H A B N E R , 6338 No. 6th St., Phi la. B.S. in Arch. H A U S L E I N , LUCIEN ALBERT, 3704 Baring St., Phila. HAWKINS,
MERRILL
LAWRENCE.
B.S.
in
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CYRIL
HENRY,
323
Tunbridge
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WARREN
4 Court Alsace,
DAVID,
Pennside, Reading, Pa. C. B.S. in Arch. L., 2515 W . Franklin Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. JACOBSON, N . SIDNEY, JR., 2 5 1 5 W . Franklin Ave., Minneapolis, Minn.
JACKSON, GEORGE PARSONS.
PAUL,
MUNROE,
THOMAS
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DYER & NADHERNY. C. A . I . A . ;
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RABOTEAU, J U N I U S SARUM. Died Jan. RACKELL, GUSTAV A D O L P H , 121
3, '16. Satterthwaite Ave., Nutley, N.J. b. Phila. June 16, '94. B.S. A.I.A. O Brooke Medals; Saltus Prize. Arch. League N.Y.
Ave., Chicago, 111. B.S. in Arch. K U H N S , E M A N U E L LINDLEY, Greensburg, Pa.
RICE, F R A N K V A N C E .
LEWIS, GEORGE M I F F L I N DALLAS,
Cleveland, O.
Scranton
111. Soc. of
Arch. 4th Field A n . Oakridge Abbey, Hillside, III. N A K A N O , Y O S U K B W., 109 Park Ave., Ridley Park, Pa. M.S. in Arch. '16. PARKER, JAMIESON, 807 Spalding Bldg., Portland, Ore. b. Portland, Jan. 28, '95. C. A.I.A.; P. Oregon Chap.; Trustee, Portland Art Assn.; Trustee, Ion Lewis Scholarship, U. of Ore. Historic Am. Bldgs. Survey, Ore. & Wash. 2d Lt. Coast A n . P A R M A N , CLARENCE JAMES, 1404 Goodale St., Toledo, O.
Phila. b. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Feb. 15, '93. 2d Lt. 29th Div. Residences.
MOSES
1100 Attica
St., Altadena, Cal.
KEYES, J O H N W I L L I A M , 6 2 2 6 M c C a l l u m S t . ,
KROMAN,
C.
38 S. Dearborn St., Chicago, 111. b. Chicago, Aug. 14, '91.
JACOBSON, DAVID
JOHN
M C M U L L E N , HARRY CUMMINGS. MONTGOMERY, ALLEN STONE. M O R G A N , LLOYD. C.
NADHERNY, JOSEPH JEROME,
H O L C O M B , FREDERICK MORSE.
JONES,
Elec. Bldg., Scranton, Pa. b. Phila. Jan. 11, '91. DAVIS Kitchens, Supt.'s Res. Colonial Natl. Monument, Custodian's Quarters Geo. Washington Birthplace Nat. Mon., Yorktown, Va. HARTMANN,
HEBDEN, HERMAN REVEL W H A R T O N . C . S p . HENRY, DANIEL W O L F H I L L . HIBSHMAN, BENJAMAN THOMAS, 2938 E .
132d St., Cleveland, O. B. of Arch. HINES, GEORGE MILLARD, 1842 California St., N.W., Washington, D.C.
198
ALUMNI RECORD 1928
1928
Fuller-
HOOTON, JOSEPH JOHNSTON, 3 9 N .
MONTGOMERY,
ton Ave., Montclair, N.J. B. of Arch. HORROCKS,
HARRY
HAVELOCK,
Ce-
JR.,
2100
M O Y A N O , VICTOR HORACIO,
Cordoba, Argen-
tina.
H U F F , CLARENCE W R I G H T , JR.,
4010 Clinton
Ave., Richmond, Va. Sp. HUNTER, L. LE GRANDE, 4 0 6 S. C a n d l e r St.,
Decatur, Va. b. Charlotte, N.C., Mar. 22, 05. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. "29. Woodman Schol.; Fatuity Medal; Brooke Medal; Stewardson Schol.; B.A.I.D. Medals. TZA. 2 3 . Arch. Soc. Asst. Prof, of Arch. Design, Ga. Inst, of Tech. Egyptian Hdq., Oriental Institute, U. of Chic. J E N N I N G S , HERBERT K E N T , 1547 Goodrich Ave., St. Paul, Minn. JESS, RICHARD W O O D , 1 0 7 3 2 Ashton Ave., Westwood, Los Angeles Co., Cal. ONES, F R A N K NICHOLAS, 1 9 Buck St., Newuryport, Mass. KEEBLE, E D W I N A., 9 0 3 Nashville Tr. Bldg., Nashville, Tenn. b. Monteagle, Tenn., Aug. 1 8 , ' 0 5 . WARFIELD & KEEBLE. B. of Arch. Fontainebleau; ficole des B.A. ' 2 6 - ' 2 7 . B.A. I.D. Medal. Instr. U. of P. '28. Bd. of Tr., Montgomery Bell Academy. Res., Mr. John H. Cheek, Nashville. Arch., Its Place in Airport Design. K E L L Y , J O S E P H ROLLAND, 2 5 1 2 W .
NEUBECK,
K E T C H A M , JACKSON PLATT,
11
PONTIUS,
LANGHORNE, DONALD THOMAS, 1 2 3 C o l i g n i
LOFGREN, ALRIK T H E O D O R E ,
503
Kathmere
103
Lipton
Ave.,
BERNARD
OSCAR,
470
Hamilton
St. Augustine, Fla.
POTTER, DAVID W I L F R E D ,
RAGLAND, DAVID L A W S O N , J R . , 2 1 7 M t . V e r -
non Ave., Danville, Va. B. of Arch. RODEMAN, GEORGE
ALBERT.
Deceased
Feb.
'30. B. of Arch. RODRIGUES,
FERNANDO
Sao Paulo,
GAMA,
Brazil. ROSENAU, ALEXANDER
Market St.,
Ave., New Rochelle, N.Y. B. of F.A. '30. LIANG, T H O M A S P A O - H O , Tientsin, North China.
HENRY,
St., Geneva, N.Y.
1 7 t h St.,
Poughkeepsie, N.Y. B. of Arch.
W.
Trenton, N.J. b. Trenton, Feb. 22, 04. B. of Arch. O G D E N , J O S E P H RICHARD, J R . , 1 4 3 So. Carolina Ave., Atlantic Gty, N.J. B. of Arch. O R A M , F R A N K W I L L I A M , 1 0 1 1 1 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, O. Sp. PARRENT, H E N R Y C L I N T O N , J R . , 2 0 7 Louise Ave., Nashville, Tenn. B. of Arch. P E N N E L L , H O W E L L BARRETT. B . of Arch. PERISHO, C O R W I N HORACE, care of Episcopal Academy, Merion, Pa. P L O C K E L M A N , RAYMOND H E N R Y , 4 2 4 Colonial Rd., West Palm Beach, Fla. Sp.
Los Angeles, Cal.
ROSENFELD,
WEIL.
EDWARD MORRIS,
358
S. Main
St., Phillipsburg, N.J. B. of Arch. ROTHENBERGER,
THOMAS
BROWN,
19
No.
10th St., Reading, Pa. SCOTT, RODGER M A T H E W S ,
4238 Arden Way,
San Diego, Cal. S H E P P E , A R T H U R TAYLOR, S t a u n t o n , V a .
Rd., Brookline, Pa.
SHOUMATE, BELFORD W R E N ,
M A J O R , M I L T O N CYRIL. MARKSON, FRANCIS IRVING,
Kew Gardens, L.I., N.Y.
8216 Austin St.,
M C G U I R E , ALVIN D E M I N G , S a r a s o t a , M E D O F F , AARON DAVID, 2 1 3 5 N o .
SILVERWOOD, W I L L I A M
13th
St.,
310 W . 3d St., Madi-
son, Ind. 421 So. 16th St., Reading, Pa. b. Reading, June 5, '06. M I L L E R , THEODORE STARK, 601 Wyoming Ave., W . Pittston, Pa.
Whitler, Ala.
BRADLEY.
SLOAN, GEORGE W A L L A C E , 6 1 2 1 O x f o r d S t . ,
Phila. B. of Arch. A.B. '24. B. of Arch.
Fla.
Phila. A.B. '28. B. of F.A. '33. B. of Arch.
MILLARD, M . ROBERT,
5831
darhurst St., Phila.
Walnut St., Phila.
'33. MERSDORFF, J O H N , JR.,
RICHARD SAVAGE,
SMANIOTTO, LOUIS.
SMITH, G O R D O N ALBERT. S p . SNYDER, JACOB ROWLAND, 1 1 1 9 S o . 6 1 s t St.,
Phila. b. Bangor, Pa. July 5, '02. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '28. Woodman Schol.; Brooke Medal. Arch. Soc.; T Z A ; Phila. Water Color CI. STEWART, PAUL PERCY,
Arch.
199
Fort Dodge, la. B. of
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL
STRUZEWSKI, GEORGE THADDEUS.
1929 side Rd., Elkins Park, Pa. b. Phila., Sep. 11, '06. B. of Arch. Bui.I.D. Medals. BILLINGSLEA, JAMES LAWRENCE, Chestnut Hill, Pa. B. of Arch.
TAYLOR, EDWARD CORDELL, J R .
BOLLEN, FLOYD LOWELL, 2 7 1 9 A
1928 STILLER, NORMAN, 2 4 0 ter, N . Y .
Pinnacle Rd., Roches-
STONHAM, MALCOLM HUGH,
Montclair,
N.J.
THRUELSON, RICHARD D E L MAR, 4 5 H o r a t i o
St.,
N.Y.
TRAYNOR, J O H N
E.
TROUTMAN, ROBERT B E N J A M I N , 1 2 3 5
How-
ard Ave., Pottsville, Pa. T U N G , C H U I N , 4 0 Ningpo Rd., Shanghai, China, b. Mukden, China, Sep. 11, '02. THE ALLIED ARCHITECTS. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. Brooke Medal; B.A.I.D. Medals. Arch. Soc. T 2 A . Soc. of Chinese Arch. Prof. Dept. of Arch. Northeastern U., Mukden. Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Nanking. V A N ROOTEN, LUIS ROBERT, 2 1 0 1 Lenox Rd., Cleveland, O. B. of Arch. W E A V E R , W I L L I A M FRANCIS, 9 0 8 Washington St., Erie, Pa. W E L D O N , M I L T O N WALLACE, 2055 Fletcher Ave., S. Pasadena, Cal. B. of Arch. W E S T P F A H L , J O H N CHRISTIAN, 7 1 5 N . W e b -
ster Ave., Scranton, Pa. WILLIAMS,
CARROLL R . , J R . ,
St., Phila. B. of Arch.
W I L L I A M S , LESTER DAVIS,
Scranton, Pa.
250
So.
18th
228 S. Main St.,
RUDOLPH LA SHELLE, 4 0 4 Theodore St., Banning, Calif. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '29. WILSON,
W O O D , GEORGE EDWARD, 1 4 9 M a d i s o n A v e . ,
Englewood, N.J.
2300 Pine St., Phila. b. St. Louis, Apr. 25, '06. HARRY STERNFELD. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '29. B.A.I.D. Medal. Oriental Inst., U. of Chic. Arch. Soc. Reconstruction, King Solomon's Stables; Reconstruction, Governor's Palace, Megiddo. WOOLMAN,
WRIGHT,
Mich.
LAURENCE
HAYDEN
C.,
LOCKWOOD,
St.
Clair,
1929 H., Esterly, Pa. b. Oley Twp., Pa., July 2 , ' 0 7 . WEIDNER & ADAMS. B. of Arch. Lutz Funeral Home, Reading. AYCOCK, LESSE NELSON, Fremont, N . C . ADAMS, ELMER
AZEVEDO, WASHINGTON. BATES,
EDWIN DOUGLAS, J R . ,
8240
Brook-
St.,
coln, Neb.
Lin-
Lime Rock, Conn, b. Indianapolis, May 16, "05. Exteriors for N.Y. State Pub. BIdgs., Albany. CHASE, EDWARD ROY, 50 Vley Rd., Scotia, N.Y. BROWN, W A L T E R D E A N ,
COGGESHALL, CALVERT CECIL. DAVEY, IRA HOWARD. S p . DIADDORIO, J O H N . DINABERG, SAMUEL W I L L I A M . DODGE, JAMES ROBERT.
B. of Arch.
FIELD, SYDNEY STONE. FINE, MARVIN, 2 0 5 E . 4 2 d S t . , N . Y . B .
of
Arch. B. of F.A. '26.
FOSTER, CARROL BALDWIN, J R . FOULKE, ROBERT CASSELBERRY, S p a r t a ,
N.J.
FRANCIS, GEORGE KLINE, J R .
GITBBRG, MAX, 69 Patton St., Springfield, Mass. B. of Arch. GORRICHO, IGNATIUS FRANCISCO. GOUBERT, HAROLD V U L T E E , 8 4 W i l l i a m S t . ,
N.Y.
GRAHAM, DONALD STEUART,
GREENBERG,
MORRIS,
825
Streator,
Madison
111.
Ave.,
Scranton, Pa., b. Poland. B. of Arch. Huckel Prize, '29. GREENE, WILLIAM JACKSON.
GWATHMEY, CABELL, 14 Pelham PI., N o r -
folk, Va. B. of Arch.
HATFIELD, JAMES SPEAR,
Phila. B. of Arch.
8007 Lincoln Dr.,
HAUSER, CLARENCE HOWARD,
St., Emaus, Pa.
207 Harrison
HEYDE, HERMAN, J R . HOWRY,
CORNELIUS
VICTOR,
1212
ANTHONY,
15
K
St.,
N.W., Washington, D.C. b. I^ncaster, Pa. B. of Arch. Natl. Part. T. Sq. CI. INGHAM, CHARLES SETH, 917 Bellefonte St., Pittsburgh, Pa. INGLIMA, WILLIAM
St., Lodi, N.J. JACKSON,
GRANBERY,
JR.,
420
Autumn Vendome
Bldg., Nashville, Tenn. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. 2d PI. Stewardson Compet. Asso. Mem.
200
ALUMNI RECORD 1929
1929
A.I.A.; Arch. Soc.; T2A. Women's Dormitory Bldg., Peabodj Col. JAHN, CLARENCE WILLIAM, 1 5 2 S . Main St., Fond du Lac, Wis. C. KECK, FRANK BERNARD. K E L L , J O H N HILTON,
care of Ralph H . Cameron, San Antonio, Tex. KELLY, JOSEPH ROLLAND, 5 3 5 2 Franklin Ave., Hollywood, Cal. b. Hollywood. KERNUS, MAX, 2 8 3 5 W. Cumberland St., Phila.
PAPPALARDO, ANTHONY,
Chester, N.Y.
PESCHEL, HARRY W I L L I A M . S p . PINGREY, HARLAN GEORGE, 4259
St., Chicago, 111. of Arch.
REISBORD, SAMUEL,
B. of Arch.
Los Angeles, Aug. 13, '04. B. of Arch. Tropical Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa. H E N R Y MARTIN, J R . ,
LERCH,
EUGENE
FRANK,
Lockport, N.Y.
270
Gwynedd
Niagara
St.,
LESSIG, CHARLES W A L T E R . B. of Arch. LEWIS, WALTER GIBBS, JR., Beverly, N . J .
b. Phila., Nov. 23, "06. B. of Arch. Day Prize; Stewardson Schol.; Municipal Arts Soc., 2d Prize. Arch. Soc.; TZA Asso. 2 E . LOHMAN, FRANK RECK. LUDLOW, DAVID HARTWELL, M i d w o o d
Ter-
race, Madison, N.J. b. East Orange, N.J., Jan. 3, '06. B. of F_A. A.I.A.; Suburban League of Arch. (N.J.). Residences, Summit, N.J., and Short Hills, N.J. MACALUSO, ANTHONY. B . o f A r c h . MILLER, ALEXANDER DONALD. MILLS, W I L L I S NATHANIEL, 5 7
Christopher
St., N.Y. B. of Arch. NAGLE, WARREN THOMAS, 1 1 9 W i n d s o r S t . , NEFF,
GEORGE
WARREN,
Phila. B. of Arch.
NELSON, CHARLES L E ROY.
ROBERTS,
CHARLES TINDALL,
Alexandria, La. Sp.
1406
3d
St.,
S. Carlisle St., Phila. B. of Arch. A.B. '22 (Harv.). ROBERTS, GEORGE BROOME, 4 1 1
SAMANIEGO, FRANK JOSEPH. B . o f A r c h . SANTORSOLA, THOMAS V I N C E N T . SAVAGE, CONWELL, 1433 N. Edgewood
St., Phila. b. Phila., June 9, '07. B. of Arch. Harbeson Medal. SCHELL, J O H N
ALBERT,
321
E. Poplar
St.,
West Nanticoke, Pa. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '29. SCHUMANN,
FERDINAND
land, la. B. of Arch.
FREDERICK,
Way-
SCHWARTZ, ISADORE DONALD, 9 3 4 W . G i r a r d
Ave., Phila.
SCHWARTZ, SAMUEL JAMES,
St., Phila.
5633 Catharine
SHARP, MARTIN, 5621 Wyndale Ave., Phila.
SMITH, COURTLAND ELMER, Bridge Hampton Rd., Southampton, N.Y. B. of Arch. SMITH, RANALD LEARY, Kent, N . Y . SPRAGUE, GEORGE N E W M A N , 6 4 3 S . D e t r o i t
St., Los Angeles, Cal. B. of Arch.
MOORE, RICHARD W I L L I A M . S p .
Reading, Pa. B. of Arch.
4442 Ludlow St., Phila.
RIBLE, ULYSSES FLOYD, 1107 South Masselin Ave., Los Angeles, Cal. b. Chic. Nov. 22, '04. Sp. Le Brun Trav. Schol., Placed 2d; B.A. I.D. Medals; Finalist, Rome Prize; Newcomb Prize (U. of S. Cal.); Grad. Fello. in Arch. '28 (U. of P.); Brooke Medal. Instr. Arch. Design, U. of S. Cal. ' 3 1 - 3 3 . Mem. Los Angeles-Colorado River Aqueduct Comm. Arch. Soc.; TZA; Soc. B.A. Arch. N.Y. RIGGI, VINCENT JAMES, 109 S. Apple St., Dunmore, Pa. B. of Arch.
KLAVON, EDWARD FRANCIS,
Valley, Pa. b. Phila., Dec. 6, '04. B. of Arch. M.A. A.B. (Princ.). Pontainebleau Scbol. (M.l.T.) ; Cret Prize; B.A.I.D. Medals. Arch. Soc.; T2A. Kuo, YUAN HSI, Western Gate, Wusin, Wusin, Kiangsu Prov., China. B. of Arch. LA CAVA, FRANCIS ANTHONY, 2 6 Rowen St., Danbury, Conn. B. of Arch. LA ROSA, J O H N PATSY, 109 Pearl St., Port Chester, N.Y.
N. Ashland
RAWLINGS, CLARENCE HUGH, T u s t i n , C a l . M .
KIRTLAN, EDWARD ALBERT, C o v i n a , C a l . b.
KNEEDLER,
134 Pearl St., Port
5815 Alter St.,
STAYCOCK, RAYMOND ALFRED. SWETTMAN, W A L T E R H., 38 James
St., Hazleton, Pa. b. Hazleton, Oct. 5, '06. B. of Arch. Grad. Schol. (M.l.T.). Asso. Mem. A.I.A.; Hon. Men. Scarab. Instr. Arch. Design, Ala. Poly. Inst. '30-'33.
201
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL 1930
1929 86th St., N.Y. b. Hartford, Conn., Nov. 5, 01. TALCOTT FT TALCOTT. B. of Arch. B.A. '25 (Yale). B.A.I.D. Medals. Farmington Valley Polo CI. Add.
T A L C O T T , CHARLES H O O K E R , JR., 4 3 0 E .
TARANIN,
ALEXANDER
LAWRENCE.
ALLEN,
SHERWOOD T H O M A S ,
1300
5th
St.,
Wichita Falls, Tex. 226 W . Rittenhouse St., Phila. b. Phila. June 30, '04. Sec. of Fed. of Arch., Engs., Chem. & Tech. Bookplates, maps, printing. BALDWIN, JAMES TODD,
B.
of
THOMAS, HUBERT J O H N , 2 5 1 8 N o . 6 t h
St.,
N.Y.
145
BARTHELME, D O N A L D , 619 U.S. Natl. Bk. Bldg., Galveston, Tex. b. Galveston, Aug. 4, '07. B. of Arch. T 2 A .
Arch. M. of Arch. '29.
BALLARD, W I L L I A M W I R T , 3D, 6 6 E . 9 2 d S t . ,
Phila. THOMPSON,
WILLIAM
ANDREW,
JR.,
Montgomery Ave., Bala-Cynwyd, Pa. b. Cynwyd, May 2 6 , "06. B. of F A . T H R U E L S E N , RICHARD D E L M A R , 3 0 3 Hamilton PI., Hackensack, N.J. b. Hackensack, Jan. 19, '08. Air Corps U.S-A. Writer of Fiction. American Magazine. 10th
St.,
Phila. VON
UFFEL,
BRADSHAW, W I L U A M ALFRED, JR., 2 7
JR.,
5415
Catharine
St., Phila.
C H A P M A N , W I L L I A M E N N I S , JR.,
Duluth, Minn. Morristown, N.J. B. of Arch.
WHYNNE, HARRY T A M , 7 Chusan Rd., Shanghai, China. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '30.
COOK,
WILKERSON, FRANK EUGENE. W I N S L O W , K E N E L M KOSTER,
COWAN,
Thornycroft
Apts., White Plains, N.Y. WONG, Y. W „ 43-B Edinburgh Rd., Shanghai, China, b. Canton, July 22, '03. Soc. of Chinese Arch. W O O D H O U S E , U R B A N UDALL, H o l l a n d , P a . B .
of Arch. EUGENE,
JR.,
2409
Grove Ave., Richmond, Va. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '30. Y A M A T O , KIYOKI, Tsuruhada Kawakamimura, Hotakugun, Kumamotoken, Japan. B. of Arch. ZANTZINGER, CLARENCE CLARK, JR., Orchard Lane, Ithan, Del. Co., Pa. b. Phila., Oct. 4, '04. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '30. A.B. '26 (Yale). Brooke Medal; Cret Medal. Arch. Soc. ( P . ) . T 2 A . Sec. Archts. Munic. Dev. Comm.; Sec. Archts. Advisory Comm. to the F.E.A. Z E G L E N , F R A N K X., 524 Beech St., Pottstown, Pa. Sp.
ANOLD
31 Park Place,
COOK,
RICHARD, K i n g w o o d ,
MARCELLUS
Pendleton,
CLEVELAND, W A R N E R RAINS, 7 2 1 E . 1 s t S t . ,
W.
WRIGHT,
C.
CHAMBERS, F R A N K PENTLAND.
Va.
WHETSELL, J O H N
Lake-
view Ave., Jamestown, N.Y.
S.C.
NORMAN.
GEORGE,
Pember-
ton St., Phila.
CALLANDER, GEORGE W A L K E R .
TOMASSETTI, O D I N . T S C H O P P , CARL AUGUST, 5 1 2 5 N . UEZZELL, WILLIAM
BOLTON, BERNARD MELVILLE, 5 7 3 1
VOORHEES,
MATTHEW
PAUL,
1218
Ann
St.,
Homestead, Pa. B. of Arch. KENNETT,
JR.,
1027
Judson Ave.,
Evanston, 111. CUMMINGS, CARL P A U L , K i n g w o o d , DAGGETT, J A M E S
LOTHIAN,
W.Va.
4904 Washing-
ton Blvd., Indianapolis, Ind. CHARLES WOODFORD, 206 Union Ave., Peekskill, N.Y. B. of Arch. D E BEER, ROBERT H., 1254 N. 28th St., Phila. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '31.
DAYTON,
DE
LONG, KARL CHRIST, 5 1 0 7 N .
Mervine
St., Phila. DETWEILER,
ALBERT
HENRY,
139
N.
12th
St., Newark, N.J. B. of Arch. D I V E N , JAMES BARRY, JR., 1400 S. 54th St., Phila. D O M A N N , W A L T E R AUGUST, 4653 No. 38th St., Milwaukee, Wis. b. Madison, Apr. 3, '05. DOMANN at STRASS. C . B.A.I.D. Medal. A.I.A. Jr.; Wis. St. Assn. of Arch. Residences. Du
BOSE, CHARLES, 5 1 E . 5 1 s t S t . , N . Y .
M.
of Arch. EZAKI, N O B U I C H I , 2 3 M i y a z o n o d o r i - Y o c h o m e ,
1930
Nakanoku, Tokio, Japan. M. of Arch. FEISS, CARL LEHMAN, C r a n b r o o k
A L L E N , MARSHALL RIGGINS.
202
Architec-
ALUMNI RECORD 1930 Pine Rd.,
rural BIdg., Mich.
Long
FEY,
PAUL,
LESTER
1930
Birmingham,
KAMERLY, H E N R Y STOKES, 1 1 3 0 S p r u c e
St.,
Phila. 956
20th
Ave.,
Seattle,
K E N N E D Y , EDWARD T I L G H M A N ,
441
Harper
Wash.
Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa.
F I O L , PEDRO C E L E S T I N O , S a n t i a g o , C u b a . FISHER, A L A N B E R N E Y , 1 1 0 F r a n k l i n S t . ,
KIDDER, M O R S E .
Denver, Col.
St., Wormleysburg, Pa. B.S. in Econ. '33.
FOWLKES, MERLE NELSON. FRANCIS,
WILLIAM
KNEER,
64
Ave.,
LETZLER,
Detroit,
Mich. FRANKLIN,
1053
S.
Mc-
N.Y. 1331
N.E.
Mar-
shall, Minneapolis, Minn. ERNEST J U L I U S ,
1416
Linden
St., Reading, Pa. C.
MARSHALL,
46
Hill
Rd.,
Webb
Ave.,
LORNE
ERIC,
Lake
Ave.,
29
MASLAND, H A R V E Y C H R I S T I A N , J R . , 1 5 2 0
N.
15th St., Phila. B. of Arch. MCCAMPBELL, DONALD HUTCHINSON,
1010
So. 45th St., Phila.
WICKER,
4836
Larchwood
LEWIS, 2 0 2 4
MILLER, FRANK D E A N , JR., 5 4 J a c k s o n A v e . ,
Bedford, Pa. W.
Ontario
St.,
MIRICK,
Phila.
HENRY
DUSTIN,
Mill
Creek
Rd.,
Ardmore, Pa. B. of Arch.
HILL, BENJAMIN
D U N L A P , JR.,
1870
Wyo-
ming Ave., N . W . , Washington, D.C. b. Nashville, Tenn., Apr. 6, '03. B.S. in Arch. HOLST,
STITZEL,
Strathmore, Quebec, Canada. Sp.
Ave., Phi la. B. of Arch. HICKS, J O H N
War-
N.Y.
G O L D , SANFORD ROBERT, 3 5 6 6 t h A v e . , T r o y ,
DAVID
BERGMAN
M A R E R , A L F R E D MORRIS, 2 5 1 8
Duffie St., Anderson, S.C.
HAYNES,
St.,
Castlewood, Louisville, Ky. b. Louisville, May 31, '07. B. of Arch. First Prize, Compet. Des. for "A Suburban Comm. Center." A.I.A. J r . ; Asso. of Ky. Arch. Des. for Model Home, Arch. O Bldrs. Ex., Ky. LIANG, YEN, 55 Pei-Tze-Ji, Peiping, China.
Cynwyd, Pa. GATES, HENRY, 1 6 0 A t k i n s o n
HABERSTROH,
Front
wick Ave., S. Orange, N.J. B. of Arch.
F R Y , EDWARD N E V I N , 1 1 0 L i a n f a i r R d . , B a l a -
THOMAS,
N.
LEHMAN, WILLIAM EMANUEL, JR., 3 6 5
Rochester, N . Y .
GRISDALE, J O H N
424
Peekskill, N . Y . B.F.A. '31.
Sagamore
FRANSIOLI, T H O M A S ADRIAN, J R . B . o f A r c h . F R E N C H , LEWIS M I L T O N , 2 2 9 C o r w i n R d . ,
IRVING
CHARLES,
L E CLAIR, ROBERT CHARLES, 2 0 1 D e p e w
C.
DOUGLAS,
Rd., Bronxville, N.Y.
GEISBERG,
RICHARD
EDWARD
DEMIN,
2534
N.
1st
St.,
MYERS, CHARLES S T O W E . B . o f A r c h . N E F F , ARTHUR, 1 2 1 5 W a l n u t St., W i l l i a m s -
port, Pa. N O B L E , GEORGE H A D L E Y , 1 6 1 8 S u m m e r
Milwaukee, W i s . Sp. H O W E L L , CLARENCE H A M I L T O N , 1 9 W .
N O C A R , CHARLES JAMES, 1 2 8 1 8 F e r r i s
St., N.Y.
ORIENTE,
gheny Ave., Phila. B. of Arch.
JOHN,
2222
ORISHIMO.
INGHAM,
ama. B. of F.A. '31.
WALTERS,
319
S.
Woodstock
St.,
Phila. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '30.
N.Y.
b. Oakland, Cal. Dec. 13, '07. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '30. A.B. "28 ( U . of C a l . ) . Atelier Licht. Graduate Fello.: B.A.I.D. Medal. A.I.A. Jr.; Natl. Arts CI. Faculty, Cooper Union Inst.; Ex. Sec. Adv. Assn. for Housing & Planning. CHARLES
Ave.,
Cleveland, O. Sp.
H R U S L I N S K I , T H O M A S CONRAD, 1 2 0 E . A l l e H U T C H I N S , ROBERT S., 6 5 E . 5 5 t h S t . ,
St.,
Phila. B.F.A. '34.
54th
MAKOTO,
4956
Kanoezuracho,
Oimachi, Shinagawaku, Tokio, Japan. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '30. PALEY, W I L L I A M ,
519
W.
189th
St.,
N.Y.
City,
Pan-
B. of Arch. PAREDES, JORGE R A M Ó N , P a n a m a
Upland
Way, Drexel Hill, Pa.
PAUL,
J O N E S , CHESTER. D i e d J u n e 2 3 , ' 3 3 .
Chicago, 111.
FRANKLIN
LOUIS,
JORDAN, T H O M A S G I H O N , 1 2 6 A t l a n t i c A v e . ,
PECKINPAUGH,
Atlantic City, N . J .
Knoxville, Tenn. Sp.
203
EDWARD
2501 P.,
Wilcox
711
20th
St., St.,
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL 1930 PILAND, ROBERT STANLEY, 1 0 0 9 N . 6 4 t h St.,
Phila. PITT, EDWARD MORRIS. POTTER,
STEPHEN
C.
JOHNSON,
410
Colonial
Ave., Union, N.J. READINGER, DANIEL
SHOWALTER,
418
No.
1930 Phila. b. Richland Center, Wis. Dec. 31, '06. B. of Arch. Stewardson Scbol.; Hüchel Prize; 2d Med. Rome Collab. Arch. Soc. T 2 A . Student-Instr. Des. U. of P. '29. SUMWALT, CHARLES EDWARDS, 2 9 0 1 C h e l s e a
Ter., Balto., Md. TOBIESSEN,
6th St., Reading, Pa. C.
FRIDTJOF,
Waynesboro
REICHARDT, WALTER LOUIS, 1 4 5 0 N . O r a n g e
Leop Rd., Berwyn, Pa. B. of Arch.
Grove Ave., Los Angeles, Cal. b. Los Angeles, June 4, '08. B. of Arch. Faculty Medal; Cret Prize; Brooke Medal; Fello., Amer. Acad, in Rome. A.I.A. Jr. "Restoration of Vestibule Group, Hadrian's Villa."
TURLINGTON,
ROBERTS, WALTER SCOTT, JR., 1 2 2 S. G r e e n
St., Henderson, Ky. b. Knoxville, Tenn., Jan. 3, '04. B. of Arch. Arch. Soc. Spottsville Scb., Henderson, Ky. ROMANO, ALFRED WILLIAM,
19 Olivia
St.,
Phila.
it
Fremont,
N.C. VIIJAS, JAMES GEORGE, 3 7 B r i d g e St., N . Y . W A L L M A N N , GEORGE RUDOLPH, JR., 5 7 9
Kenmore Ave., Oakland, Cal. WATSON, WILLIAM STARR, 6 0 6 D e K a l b St.,
Norristown, Pa. WEIDRINGER,
TIBOR,
1407
Frankford
Ave.,
Phila. WENDLING, HENRY HUNSBERGER, 1 2 1 1 E r i e
Ave., Phila.
ROSSER, ROLLIN LA BARR, A r c a n u m , O . RYDER, ROBERT MALCOLM, 3 2 1 5 N . F r o n t
St., Harrisburg, Pa. SACK,
H U G H YELVERTON,
Rd.
CHARLES
4532
Harford
SAMMATARO, JOSEPH MICHEL. B . of A r c h . SANDERS, WALTER B E N J A M I N , 8 2 0 M u l f o r d
St., Evanston, 111. M. of Arch. HERSCHEL
EDWARD
WOODSIDE, J O H N MARTIN, 2 4 0 S. 3 9 t h St.,
Phila. W u , CHAUNCEY KEI, Bank of China, Shanghai, China, b. Canton, China, Jan. 3, '00. H. S. LUKE & C. K. WU, ASSOC. B . of
ROBLEY,
73
Orange
Ave., Irvington, N.J. SCHOENBERGER,
St.,
Perth Amboy, N.J.
CHRISTIAN,
Ave., Balto., Md. B. of Arch.
SAUNDERS,
WILLIAMS, ROBERT CHARLES. S p . WILSON, ELLIOT KÖSTER, 1 5 9 G o r d o n
WILLIAM,
Arch.
M. of Arch. '31. Chinese Soc. of Arch. Bant C> Apt. Bldg., Shanghai.
2540
Overlake Road, Cleveland, O.
1931
SELLERS, LESTER HOADLEY, 2 1 1 4
Pine
St.,
Phila. C.
ALKER, ROBERT THOMAS,
1045
School
St.,
Indiana, Pa. B. of Arch.
SHOEMAKER, ALBERT MOORE, JR., 7 7 3 0
N.
Ashland Ave., Chicago, III. B. of Arch. SILL, GABRIEL DUVAL,
12 E.
Pleasant
ARMSTRONG,
JEROME
GLENDENNING,
539
17th St., San Bemadino, Cal. B. of Arch. St.,
Baltimore, Md. B. of Arch.
ARNOLD, ROBERT STEIN, 9 1 4 M i c h i g a n A v e . ,
Evanston, 111. B. of Arch.
SMALL, FRANKLIN HERBERT, 3 8 5 B a i n b r i d g e
St., Brooklyn, N.Y.
ATKINS, FRANK COCHRAN, 3 7 3 5 S a l e m
St.,
Indianapolis, Ind. B. of Arch.
SMITH, ALLAN WALTER, 1 0 3 0 S o . 6 0 t h St.,
Phila. B. of Arch.
BECK, ALBERT EDWARD, 5 9 3 8 N o . 1 0 t h St.,
Phila. B. of Arch.
SMITH, ROSCOE SHELDON, 1 7 0 2 A St., B e l -
mar, N.J.
BEIDLER, PAUL HENRY, 3 1 6 S. 1st St., Le-
highton, Pa. B. of Arch.
SNYDER, CHESTER ROUTZAHN, 5 1 1 7 W i l l o w s
BLEW, JOSEPH MILLER, JR., 6 7 L o n g
Ave., Phila. B. of Econ. '25. STEPHENS, SHERMAN STERLING, 8 1 2 W a t s o n
Upper Darby, Pa. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '32. Fello. in Arch.
St., Lewiston, Mont.
BORGIA,
STEPHENSON,
WILLIAM
JOHN,
101
W.
DOMENICA
LAWRENCE,
JR.,
Lane,
1947
Broadway, N.Y.
Washington Lane, Phila. C.
BRIGHT, JOSEPH ELLIOTT, E m i n e n c e , K y . B .
STRANG, ALLEN J O H N , 1 6 1 0 A r c h i t e c t s B l d g . ,
of Arch.
204
ALUMNI RECORD 1931
1931 CAPPB, CONRAD,
463 Green St., So. Browns-
GOLDNER,
ville, Pa. CLARK, EDWIN
ROSS, 6 7
S. B a y v i e w
DAVID
EMMANUEL,
322
Ave.,
E.
BERNARD
MORGAN,
93
5th
Ave.,
G R E E N H O U S E , BERTRAM JACQUES, 1 5 0 7
22d
No.
16th St., Phila. b. Phila. Apr. 24, '08. B. of Arch. B.A. Fontainebleau, '30.
Ave., Wildwood, N.J. B. of Arch. COWPERTHWAIT,
KENNETH,
Brooklyn, N.Y. B. of FjV. '32. G R E E N , W I L B U R E U G E N E , 2927 Boulevard PI., Indianapolis, Ind. C. GREENE, LEON GRAHAM, Balboa, Canal Zone, Panama. C.
Freeport, L.I. b. Brooklyn, May 16, '09. FRANK M. CREIGHTON. B. of Arch. Fontainebleau Sch. of F A. A n Students' League, N.Y. Arch. Soc.; T 2 A . CONNOR,
LOUIS
768
GREGSON,
BOWDIN
NEALLEY,
440
N.
52d
KNOWLES,
77
Franklin
Springfield Ave., Summit, N.J. b. N.Y. '07. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '32. Finalist, Rome Prize; A.l.A. Medal, Hon. Men.; 2 3 . Asst. Instr. Arch. Hist. U. of P. '31. Stage settings "The Playhouse," Summit.
HARRELL, GEORGE FOSTER, J R . , 6 1 8 S y r a c u s e
CRAIG, H . EARL, 240 S. 39th St., Phila. b.
St., Rocky Mount, N.C. M. of Arch.
St., Phila. C. HARDING,
Homestead, Pa. Mar. 10, '08. B.S. in Arch. Musical CI. U. of P. Slum Survey; City Plan. Comm.
HUNTER,
Rockville Center, N.Y. b. Rockville Center, Sep. 27, '06. B. of Arch. Arch. Soc. School Bldg. O Country Club (in association). FREDERICK W I L L I A M , 6 1 3
E.
35th St., Brooklyn, N.Y. D E M E N T , R A L P H EARL, Indian Head, Md. b. Indian Head, June 10, '07. B. of Arch. Catholic Univ. of Am. D I C K I N S O N , ASA, 4 Woodview Rd., Hempstead, N.Y. b. Springfield, Mass. May 17, '09. FRANK M. CREIGHTON. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '32. Dipl., Fontainebleau '31. Food Bar for L.I. State Park Com. DUKEHART,
JOHN
KISTNER,
2655
PAUL
ROBINSON,
1544
Wooster
St., Los Angeles, Cal. b. Buffalo, 111. June 29, '06. B. of Arch. A.I.A. Jr.; Arch. Soc.; T 2 A . Asst. Instr. Hist, of Arch. U. of P. '29-'31. J O H N S T O N , T H O M A S H E N R Y , JR., Corinth, Miss. b. Corinth, Feb. '06. B. of Arch. Cope Prize. Res. C. W. Norwood, Corinth. LAWINSKI, A N T H O N Y STANLEY, 114 Grape St., Phila. B. of Arch. MARKOWITZ, M Y E R SAUL, 331 S. Main Ave., Scranton, Pa. B. of Arch.
CREIGHTON, FRANK M I L T O N , 9 4 M a r i o n PI.,
DEGENHARDT,
HENRY
St., Boston, Mass. B. of Arch.
MATYCH,
LEO
JACK,
97
W.
Corydon
St.,
Bradford, Pa. B. of Arch. M C C O N N E L L , HARRY W I L L I A M ,
5009 Broad-
way, N.Y. B. of Arch. MCFARLAN, J O H N DONALD,
6307 N. Camac
St., Phila. B. of Arch.
S.W.
Greenwolde PI., Portland, Ore. b. Port. Jan. 2 1 , '08. J O H N S O N & WALLWORK. B. of Arch. Prin. & Instr. in Stagecraft, Port. Civic Theatre Sch. of Drama. Stage settings C> costumes "Alice in Wonderland," Port. Rose Festival.
656 W . PhilEllena St., Phila. B. of F.A. '30. M I C H E L , D A N I E L CHARLES, Egg Harbor City, N.J. B. of Arch.
FAWCETT, T H O M A S HAVES, C h e y n e y ,
MILLER,
Pa.
M E H L H O R N , W I L B U R MORRIS,
MICKEL, ALLEN WARD, 1 4 9 8 P r i n c e s s
b.
Salem, O. Oct. 7, '05. B. of Arch. TZA. Asst. Instr. Sch. of F.A., U. of P. Bookplates. F O R M A N , H E N R Y CHANDLEE, Oakley & R.R. Ave., Haverford, Pa. M. of Arch.
Ave.,
Camden, N.J. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '32. GEORGE
WASHINGTON,
III,
1600
St., Gmtn., Phila. B. of Arch. GATTOZZI, A N T H O N Y , 16136 St. Clair Ave., Cleveland, O. B. of F.A. "30.
W . Louden St., Phila. B. of Arch. M I L L E R , JAMES ELDRIDGE, Winterset, Madison Co., Ia. B. of Arch. B. of F_A. '29. MONTGOMERY, N E W C O M B T H O M P S O N , 6806 Greene St., Phila. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '33. M O O R E , ALEXANDER D E E M E R , 192 E. Main St., Brookville, Pa. B. of Arch.
GILDER,
MOSELEY, GEORGE N O R M A N ,
FUGATE, EDWIN LINDSAY, 3D, 3 2 9
JAMES EDWARD,
Wyomissing, Pa.
929
Hansberry
Franklin
St.,
291
Girouard
St., Hyacinthe, Quebec, Can. B. of Arch.
205
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL 1931
1931 M U L L E R , EDGAR BARTOW,
4432 Chestnut St.,
YOSHIYASU, TAKESHI, Tokio, J a p a n . B. of
Arch.
Phila. B. of Arch. P I N T O F , J E R O M E HAROLD,
5435 Walnut St.,
Phila. B. of Arch.
1932
2319 La Grange St., Toledo, O. b. Warren, O. Apr. 23, '03. B. of Arch. Steu/ardson Schol.; Cret Medal; Cranbrook Fello. Arch. Soc.; T 2 A . Instr. in Water Color, U. of P.; Phila. Zoning Comm.; Detroit City Plan. Comm. Murals, Toledo Zoological Gardens. RICHARDS,
JOHN
NOBLB,
RICHARDSON, ROBERT NISBET,
1314
Lexing-
ton Ave., Ashland, Ky. B. of F.A. "32. SCHWARTZMAN, D A N I E L , 9 9 1 H e r k i m e r
St.,
Brooklyn, N.Y. B. of Arch. J O H N M A U R I C E , 2 4 9 York St., Hanover, Pa. b. Hanover, July 6, '06. Antique Shop, Hanover. SMITH, ROLLAND HAROLD, 5006 Dudley St., Lincoln, Neb. Sp. S M I T H , ROWLAND F R A N K , South Hampton, L.I. b. Hillingdon, Eng. Nov. 17, '06. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '32. Arch. Soc.; T 2 A . STEVENS, H E N R Y BRYAN, 5918 N . Park Ave., Phila. B. of Arch. STOKES, W I L L I A M ELWOOD, JR., 4 4 1 S. 44th St., Phila. b. Phila. Oct. 6, '06. B. of Arch. A.I.A. Jr. U T Z , ROBERT MORRIS, 3 0 3 4th St., Greenport, N.Y. B. of F.A. V A N A N T W E R P , T H O M A S COOPER, Spring Hill, Ala. b. Mobile, May 3, '04. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '32. Fello. in Arch.; Faculty, Brooke, A.I.A. Medals; Finalist Rome Prize C> Stewardson Prize. Arch. Soc.; T 2 A ; Assoc. 2 S . Stage settings, Little Theatre, Mobile. Author, Sources of Design of the Architecture of Mobile. W A I T E , D O N A L D EDWARD. B. of Arch. W B H R L Y , M A X SILER, R . R . 1, Alexandria, Va. b. West Manchester, O. Aug. 17, '05. B.L.A. T 2 A . Designs, Pavilions, Shelters, Road Signs for Mt. Vernon Mem. Highway. SHEFFER,
WHITTLESEY,
FREDERICK
WALLIS,
75
W.
Willetta St., Phoenix, Ariz. B. of Arch. W I L S O N , J O H N DAVIS, Braybarton Blvd., Steubenville, O. M. of Arch. WISDOM, DAVID PRESTON, 334 Vassar Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. B. of Arch. W O L F E , GEORGE MADISON, 4 1 0 W a l n u t
Ben Avon, Pa. B. of Arch.
Rd.,
ABBATEMARCO, A N T H O N Y JAMES,
265 Ocean
Parkway, Brooklyn, N.Y. A H E R N , WILLIAM THOMAS,
47 Genung St.,
Middletown, N.Y. A L L E N , ROBERT EVARTS,
42 S. Main St., Rut-
land, Vt. B. of Arch. BARTON, FRANCIS W O O D , 7 1 T h o m p s o n
St.,
Poughkeepsie, N.Y. BATTISTELLI,
PATRICK,
590
Central
Ave.,
Bridgeport, Conn. B. of Arch. BATY, O W E N CLARE, 1 3 2 3 N o r t o n A v e . , D e s
Moines, la. BEARD, W I L L I A M L E M E N , Williamsport, Md. BEDROSSIAN, BEDROS ARAKEL, 4 3 7 S o . 6 1 s t
St., Phila. B E R M A N N , MARCUS LOUIS, N.Y. B . of F.A. BLACK,
GILMER
12 E .
VARDIMAN,
41st
St.,
1250
Asbury
216
Jericho
Ave., Evanston, 111. B. of Arch. BODANSKY, ALEXANDER. BOWMAN,
URBAN
ANTHONY,
Road, Abington, Pa. B. of Arch. BOYCE, J O H N JOSEPH, JR., 2923 Fairmount Ave., Atlantic City, N.J. C. B R U M N E R , J O H N A D O L P H , 30 Penn Bldg., Bellerose, Nassau Co., N.Y. B U R C H , W I L L I A M ALBERT, JR., 3 0 0 V i r g i n i a
Ave., Danville, Va. BURROUGHS, PAUL D E N M A N , 733 W . State St., Trenton, N.J. b. Trenton. EDMUND BURROUGHS AGENCY. B . of Arch. Arch. Soc. C.W.A. work at Lawrenceville, N.J. CANTWELL,
JAMES FRANCIS,
649
Princeton
Ave., Trenton, N.J. b. Trenton, June 24, '08. C. Atelier of Trenton. CARROLL, CHARLES LOUIS, 1719 N . Judson St., Phila. B. of Arch. CATRAMBONE, A N T H O N Y , 8 1 3 2 S h a w n e e St.,
Phila. B. of Arch. CLARK, B U R N E T JENNINGS,
123
Beechwood
Rd., Summit, N.J. b. Chic. Aug. 13, '08. B.S. in Arch. Colgate Univ. Arch. Soc. COLISH, A A R O N , 320 So. 56th St., Phila. B. of Arch. Cox, BERNARD G L E K N Y , 111 Union St., Dunedin, N e w Zealand. C.
206
ALUMNI RECORD 1932 DETLIE,
JOHN
STEWART,
2415
Pilgrimage
1932 b. Phila. Dec. 30, '09. B. of Arch. Dipl. Ecole Am. des B.A., Fontainebleau. Day t > Hüchel Prizes. Winner Compel. 0 X Natl. Frat. Flag.
Trail, Hollywood, Cal. b. Sioux Falls, S.D., Dec. 23, 08. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '33. B.S. (U. of Ala.). Elliott O Stewardson Schol.; Chandler Fello.; A.I.A., Fatuity, Brooke, A P X Medals. Arch. Soc.; T 2 A .
J E N K I N S , GEORGE CLARKE, 2 0 3 9 L o c u s t
St.,
J O N E S , W I L L I A M TAYLOR, 6 3 2 N . M a i n
St.,
Ridgefield Park, N.J. DU Puis, DELPHIS JOSEPH, 100 Hanover Ave., Pawtucket, R.I.
K E I P E R , ALLAN WADSWORTH, 2 1 4 P a r k A v e . ,
EISENSTHIN, SAMUEL HARRY. ELMER, JASPER K E M P , 5 2 2 W a l n u t S t . , R e a d -
K E L L E R , CHARLES WILLARD,
DODSON, JOSEPH CRESSWELL, 3 8 G r a n d A v e . ,
Phila.
Scranton, Pa. b. Scranton, Dec. 24, '09. B. of Arch. Stroudsburg, Pa.
ing, Pa. B. of Arch.
FEICHT, J O H N STALEY, 2 3 9 O a k St., K i t t a n -
CARROLL
43d St., N.Y. FRIDY,
CHARLES
BALDWIN,
JR.,
DUHRING,
229
5738
LAVALLEE, EDWARD HECTOR, J R . ,
Ave.,
lyn, N . Y .
LEHR, DONALD M E R T Z , R o u t e 3, B e t h l e h e m ,
Pa.
LEHR, EDWARD CHARLES. D i e d J u l y ' 3 1 . L E N Z , CHARLES, 4 9 C h a r l t o n A v e . , E . , H a m -
Phila. b. Phila. June 26, '08. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '33. GLASS,
IRWIN. 9 0 1 1
GRAD,
BERNARD
1 8 2 d St.,
Richmond Hill, L.I. B. of Arch. JOHN,
885
Newark, N.J. B.S. in Arch.
Woodhaven,
S.
13th
GRANT, CHARLES CROTHERS, J R . , 4 4 6
St.,
HAMNETT. MILTON, Prospect St., Route 36, Trenton, N.J. C. HOBAN, JAMES LEON,
488
ilton, Ont. B. of Arch. MACGUIRE,
S. F r a n k l i n
St.,
JOHN
WILLIAM,
minster Ave., Phila. B. of Arch.
5001
MARSH, CHARLES HOWARD, J R . ,
St., N . Y . B. of Arch.
Rich-
mond Ave., Maplewood, N.J. HA, HARRIS WEN, 45 Lane 361, Yuyuan Rd., Shanghai, China, b. Peiping, Dec. 12, '07. D. DOON. B. of F.A. Soc. Chinese Archts.; Soc. of Highway Const. & Plan. Landscape Painting.
Flagg
L E F F , RALPH E I F F E L , 1 7 2 1 4 9 t h S t . , B r o o k -
Thomas
FRIDY, J O H N DUHRING, 5 7 3 8 T h o m a s
37
St., Worcester, Mass.
W.
Ave., Phila. b. Phila. Feb. 26, '10. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '33.
Rd.,
Scotia, N.Y. b. Scotia, Sep. 25, '09. B. of Arch. M. of Sc. in Educa.
FETZER, H E N R Y PETER, 3 0 3 E . 5 t h S t . , S o u t h , FOSTER,
South
LANSING, DONALD SHERWOOD, 6 4 V l e y
ning, Pa.
Salt Lake City, Utah. B. of Arch.
336 W .
St., Carlisle, Pa. KERTZMAN, NAAMAN, Palestine. B. of Arch.
MCKEAN,
THOMAS,
Ithan, Pa.
JR.,
MOORE, JOSLAH C ,
West-
12 E.
Conestoga
JR., 7 2 5 1 - D
4lst Rd.,
Radbourne
Rd., Upper Darby, Pa. b. Seattle, Wash. July 20, '08. B. of Arch. B.A.l.D. Medal. U.S. Dept. of Agric. Arch. Soc. T 2 A . Ensign U.S.N. MORRILL,
PAUL
DONOVAN,
335
Park Ave., Columbus, O. B. of Arch.
Wilkes-Barre, Pa. b. Wilkes-Barre, July 31, '09. B. of Arch. Engineering Corps. Penna. Dept. of Highways.
MUEHLMANN,
HOBAN, JOSEPH W I L L I A M , J R . , 4 8 8 S. F r a n k -
wood Ter., Balto., Md. b. Balto., Sep. 13, '08. Memorial Book Plate for Women's Eastern Shore Soc. of Md. Arch. Soc.; T. Sq. CI.
lin St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. b. Wilkes-Barre, July 31, '09. B. of Arch. Investigator, Luzerne Co. Em. Relief Bd. HOFER,
RUDOLPH
JULIUS,
JR.,
366
Ridge-
W.
Mont-
wood Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. B. of Arch. HOPKINS, EDWIN MAURICE,
348
gomery Ave., North Wales, Pa. B. of Arch. JANSSON, PAUL ERIK, 6 3 6 E l k i n s A v e . , P h i l a .
PAUL
worth Ave., Phila.
AUGUST,
710
Oakland Kenil-
M U L L I K I N , BENTON CARUTHERS, 2 2 0
NORTHROP,
Conn.
ALVIN
JENNINGS,
OTTMAN,
DONALD
JACOB,
25
PARSONS,
EDWARD
SHIER,
641
St., St. Johnsville, N.Y. Reno, Nev. B. of Arch.
207
Home-
Southport,
N.
Division
Jones
St.,
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL 1932 PATTERSON, MILFORD HAUGH, 9 1 0 W .
Lo-
cust St., York, Pa. b. Gettysburg, Mar. 3, '10. C. Day & Cope Prizes. Asst. Instr. Arch. Dwg. U. of P . "30. PAUL, LAWRENCE OTTO, 2501 Wilcox St., Chic., 111. b. Chic. June 2, "09. B. of Arch. PIERCE, ABEL BROWN, JR., Blessing, Tex. B. of Arch. RAGAN, PHILIP EDGAR, 2 3 4 - 0 Stonehurst Ct. Apts., Upper Darby, Pa. B. of Arch. RIEBBL, FREDERICK, 3D, 2 1 3 8 Collingwood Ave., Toledo, O. ROBINSON, BASIL DOUGLAS, 141 Edgerton St., Rochester, N.Y. ROOKE, WALKER, 12 E . 4 1 s t St., N . Y . B . of
FJ i . SANDER, HAROLD WILLIAM, 4 1 3
W. Wash-
ington Ave., Madison, Wis. Sp. SCHERR, PAUL HAROLD. B. of Arch. SCHLAG,
HENRY
WILLIAM,
5903
Harford
St., Baltimore, Md. B. of F.A.
Reno St., New
Cumberland, Pa. B. of Arch. SICHEL, DAVID, 6 9 Shanley Ave., Newark, N.J. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. SIDDONS, GERALD JOSEPH, 5 0 9 Gilmartin St., Archbald, Pa. B. of Arch. SIMS, LANCELOT FALCON, JR., Gray's Lane, Haverford, Pa. B. of Arch. STEIGLITZ, HERBERT. STRUZEWSKI, GEORGE THADDEUS, R . F . D .
3,
Bx. 79, Perkasie, Pa. JAMES
HARRISON
WILSON,
Greenville, Del. TIGHE, CHARLES GERALD, 6 1 0 W . 1 4 2 d St.,
N Y . B. of FA. 2 0 8 W . Franklin St., Chapel Hill, N.C. b. Chapel Hill. B. of Arch. Amer.-German Exchg. Fello. Arch. Soc. TWITCHELL, DONALD MUMFORD, Main St., Rushville, N.Y. UNGER, FREDERICK DILLER, 3 8 0 4 Locust St., Phila. b. Reading, Oct. 19, '08. B. of Arch. W A H , W O N G CHUNG, 1 1 2 5 So. 46th St., Phila. B. of FA. TOY, WALTER DALLAM,
WELLMAN,
CLARENCE
Kemerer.
EUGENE,
Wyoming. W H I T E , BURTON KIRKE, WILLIAMS,
ROBERT
Danville, Va. London, O.
CRISMAN,
A.B. (Coll.). WILSON, ABRAHAM LINCOLN, 4 4 5 W .
153d
St., N.Y. B. of Arch. WRIGHT, DAVID MCCORD, 2 0 7 E .
Hunting-
don St., Savannah, Ga. California St., San Francisco, Cal. b. San Fran. Aug. 26, '09. EDWARD E. YOUNG. B.A.I.D. Medal. Chapel for Westminster Presby. Ch., San Fran.
YOUNG, J O H N DAVIS, 2 0 0 2
1933 ACKENBRACK, JAMES LLOYD,
Woodlyn, Pa.
ADDIS, MAHLON, 4 3 1 Walnut St., AMOROSO, VICTOR CLEMENT, 4 8 8
Phila. Orange St.,
Newark, N.J.
Harrisburg, Pa. B. of F.A.
THOMPSON,
Foochow, China.
B. of Arch.
Sp.
SCHOCH, MILTON YETTER, Haverford, Pa. SELCHOW, FREDERICK MUDGE, JR. SHADEL, MARVIN SYLVESTER, 6 2 1 Camp St., SHULER, HERBERT LEE, 3 1 6
1932 W A N G , HAUPIN PEARSON,
AROSEMENA, ERNESTO,
Ancon, Canal Zone.
BARR, JAMES HENDERSON. BARRETT, LELAND, JR., 2 0 0 W . 9 2 d St., N . Y .
b. N.Y. June 20, '09. B. of Arch. Bryant St., N.W., Washington, D.C. B. of Arch, (with honors). BEECHER, DAVID KINNEY, 4 6 1 4 Sansom St., Phila. b. Ford City, Pa. Apr. 3, '10. BELL, J O H N TURNER, 1 7 8 Chedoke Ave., Hamilton, Ont. B. of Arch. BLACKMAN, IVON HAYES, JR., 2 2 3 Sedgewood Rd., Springfield, Pa. C. BOWMAN, THEODORE, 1 6 5 N. Dithridge St., Pittsburgh, Pa. B. of Arch. BOYD, VISSCHER, 4 2 2 Dudley Ave., Narberth, Pa. BOYER, LYNN H A H N , JR., 3 3 0 0 Pacific Ave., Wildwood, N.J. BROWN, LEON, 4 0 3 6 Spring Garden St., Phila. b. Blackville, S.C. Sep. 25, '07. B.S. in Arch. '29 (Ga. Tech.). M. of Arch. '33. B.A.I.D. Medal. Coml. Artist, Loughead & Co. An Instr. Neighborhood Settlement House. BUCKY, FREDERICK WILLIAM, JR., 2 0 2 5 Park St., Jacksonville, Fla. CAPAZIO, TAMES CLINTON, 3 2 6 Highland Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. BATES, JAMES LAWRENCE, JR., 2 3
208
ALUMNI RECORD 1933
1933 C A S T I L B A U M , A L B E R T CHARLES. C H A P I N , ROBERT MACFARLANE, JR., 3 3 7
E.
87th St., N.Y. B. of Arch. CONNELL,
Elm
St.,
Camden, N.J.
CULBERTSON,
PONT,
THOMAS
SHEEHAN,
1241
Windsor Ave., Dayton, O. B. of Arch. D E A N , FRANK EDWARD, Haven Hills, Albion, Mich. B. of Arch. D E L L A R , EARNEST JAMES. D E N N , H O W A R D PALLATT, 4 4 0 8
Wain St.,
Frankford, Phila. B. of Arch. GEORGE
EVANS,
JR.,
104
S.
Centre St., Frackville, Pa. D O U G H E R T Y , F R A N K BLASE, 1 4 0 7 W o o d l a w n
Ave., Wilmington, Del. B. of Arch. ELLIS, HOWARD, 3 8 0 0 Chestnut St., Phila. EVANS, RICHARD O V E R T O N . B. of Arch. FERNBACH, RICHARD BERTHOLD, 4 8 1 7 Beaumont Ave., Phila. b. N.Y. Nov. 30, "08. B. of Arch. FORT, EDWIN HARRY, 3D, 3 1 7 Bryn Mawr Ave., Cynwyd, Pa. B. of Arch. FURNO, VINCENT, H e m p s t e a d Gardens, L.I.
M. of Arch. GETRIEMAN,
MARTIN,
731
Linden
Blvd.,
Brooklyn, N.Y. GOTWALS, J O H N
902 De Kalb St.,
HENRY,
Norristown, Pa. H A M M O N D , A L O N Z O J O H N , JR., 7 0 7
Michi-
gan Ave., Evanston, 111. H A R D E N , BRUCE PRICE, 5 1 0 W . Market St., Newark, N.J. B. of Arch, (with honors). HARRIS,
ALFRED
WILSON,
18524
Winslow
Rd., Cleveland, O. HART,
722 Pierce St., Gary,
Ind. A L F R E D SAMUEL, JR., 24 Willow Ter. Apts., Louisville, Ky. B. of Arch. J O S E P H , OSCAR G R A E M E , JR., 1412 Willow Terrace, Louisville, Ky. JOSEPH,
Coraopolis, Pa. b. Pittsburgh, Oct. 19, '07. B. of Arch.
CORNELIUS, FRANCIS D U
DINTAMAN,
B. of Arch. J O N E S , SAMUEL O R T H O ,
RICHARD EDWARD, 6 2 8
East Troy, Wis.
J O H N S O N , TRONDER H E N R Y ,
ALLISON
BUELL,
323 W. 85th St.,
N.Y. B.S. in Econ. H A W L E Y , ROSWELL JACOB, 1 9 C r e s c e n t
Rd.,
Poughkeepsie, N.Y. H E A C O C K , J O S E P H L I N D E N , JR.,
1211 Chest-
nut St., Phila. H O U G H , ROBERT HARBISON, S c h o o l o f
F.A.
K E C K , HARRY LOUTZENHISER, J R . , 1 1 6 S h e -
nango St., Greenville, Pa. b. Greenville, Feb. 26, '08. B. of Arch. Study Hist, of Arch, in Egypt. KINGSLEY, T H O M A S H U G H E S , Park Central Hotel, N.Y. LAHN, BENJAMIN, 8 6 1 D u m o n t Ave., Brook-
lyn,
N.Y.
LEONE, MICHAEL, 161 M i l t o n St., Brooklyn,
N.Y. b. Brooklyn, July 5, '08. B. of Arch. Coan Gold Meaal. LIFTER,
HORACE
JAY,
6312
13th
St.,
L O N G , CHARLES RUSSELL,
301 W . Broad St.,
Tamaqua, Pa. B. of Arch. MAYBORN,
DONALD
WARD,
Temple, Tex.
B.S. in Econ. '31. EDWIN J U L I A N , 316 W . 36th St., Savanah, Ga. B.S. in Econ. M C I N T I R E , FRANCIS, Dupont BIdg., Wilmington, Del. MAZO,
MCLAUGHLIN,
GEORGE
WHEELER,
713
8th
Ave., S.E., Minneapolis, Minn. Fello, in Arch. M E D O F F , A A R O N DAVID, 2 1 3 5 N .
13th
St.,
Phila. B. of Arch.; B. of F.A. '32. M E R R I L L , RICHARD N Y B , JR., 4744 Court, Miami, Fla.
N.E.
1st
MICHAELSON, IRVIN,
1707 W i d e n e r
Place,
Phila. B. of Arch. M I C H E L , D A N I E L DAVID, 5 7 1 2 K e n m o r e A v e . ,
Chicago, 111. B. of Arch. MICHENER,
T H O M A S SWARTZ, J R . ,
235
W.
Clapier St., Gmtn., Phila. B. of Arch. M I L L E R , W I L L I A M DAVID, 6 1 1 N .
19th
St.,
Allentown, Pa. B. of Arch. MORRIS,
ROBERT COOPER,
Office, U. of P., Phila.
Radnor, Pa.
Federal St., Phila. b. Phila. Mar. 10, '05. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '34. JACKSON, R E N F R O E , 67 So. Broad St., Norwich, N.Y. B.S. in Econ. '32.
M O S E R , MARVIN EMERY,
H U R L E Y , GRANVILLE W A R N E R , 2 2 4 3
N.
Phila. A.B. (Col.).
2D, Radnor Inn,
5 Penn Ave., Green-
ville, Pa. N E L S O N , ROBERT W A L L A C E ,
2500 11th St.,
Moline, 111. PECK,
209
FREDERICK
W.
Y.,
29 Benezet St.,
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL 1933 Chestnut Hill, Pa. b. Wayne, July 2, '09. ANDORRA NURSERIES. B.L.A. Amer. Soc. L A. (Jr. Mem.). Springfield Part, Chestnut Hill for Dr. Geo. Woodward. PELSTRING, H E R M A N FRANCIS, 4 8 0 8 Chester Ave., Phila. PENTZ,
EUGENE
STRALEY,
528
E.
3d
Ventnor, N.J. (N.Y.U.). SHIFF,
SMITH, LEWIS PERIUN,
'34
1315 Lincoln
St.,
Greenville,
S.C.
B. of
F.A.
St.,
STAFFORD,
201
W.
77th St.,
GEORGE
GORDON,
1530
T
St.,
858 N. Damon St., Chic., 111. b. Chic. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '34 (U. of 111.). A.l.A. Medal. T 2 A . STEINBERG, HAROLD EUGENE,
N.Y. POETER, H O R A C E ROBERT, 4 9 0 Stuyvesant Ave., Irvington, N.J. b. Newark, May 8, '06. B. of Arch. Harbeson Medal. Arch. Soc. Office for H. M. Gartley, N.Y. PORTER, EDWARD N O B L B , 152 N . Sandusky St., Tiffin, O. B. of Arch. PRICE, BERYL, 2522 S. 6th St., Phila. B . of Arch.
STEINMETZ,
Salt Lake City, Utah. RATENSKY, S A M U E L , 7 1 0
Schenectady Ave.,
Brooklyn, N.Y. KENNETH
GORDON,
3717
Frank-
ford Ave., Phila. B. of Arch. REDMAN, ELWOOD B E N J A M I N ,
659
Downer
PI., Aurora, 111. B. of Arch. ANDERSON,
905 N. Penn
Ave., Morrisville, Pa. C. care of Mrs. Francis E. Green, Ithan & Montgomery Aves., Villa Nova, Pa. ROGERS, HAROLD R O L L I N . Died ' 3 0 . ROGERS, J O S E P H W I L L I A M , J R . , 2 2 0 S. 45th St., Phila. R U D O L P H , GBORGE COOPER, J R . , 9 Windsor Circle, Springfield, Pa. b. Phila. Mar. 17, '12. B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '34. Senatorial Schol.; Chandler Fello.; A.l.A. O B.A.I.D. Medals. Arch. Soc.; T 2 A . SAMUELS, M E Y E R , 920 N. 6th St., Camden, N.J. B. of Arch. SCHNEIDER, GEORGB GUSTAV, 2837 N. Marietta Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. C. SCHROTH, W I L L I A M M A N S O N , 90 S. Oraton Pkwy., East Orange, N.J. SEWBLL, B E N W I L L I A M , 2505 E. 7th St., Tulsa, Okla. S H A W , IRVING, 4 8 6 1 E . Lake Harriet Blvd., Minneapolis, Minn. SHERMAN, M I L T O N , 104 Pittsburgh Ave.,
HARRY
DARLINGTON,
410
Greenwood Ave., Wyncote, Pa. b. Wyncote, Mar. 7, '11. B. of Arch. Grad. Sch. Bus. Adra. (Harv.). STEVENS, J O H N CALVIN, 2D, 31 Cragie St., Portland, Me. B. of Arch. STOODY, CLYDE A N D R E W , 6th St. at Ft. Harrison Rd., Terre Haute, Ind. b. Terre Haute, Nov. 25, "03. M. of Arch. B. of Arch. '31 (Cam. Tech.). B.S. '32 (Col. U.). Pounders Schol.; A.l.A. Medal; Jansen Pr.; Second Rome Pr.; Second Stewardson (Cam. Tech.) ; Spec. Grad. Schol. (Col.); Chandler Fello.; B.A.I.D. Medals (U. of P.). Scarab Soc.; T2A. Photographer at Century of Progress. SYVERSEN, GEORGE M A R T I N , 2834 N. Kenneth Ave., Chicago, 111. TIMPSON, JAMES, 321 Highland Ave., Orange, N.J.
RASBAND, JAMES O R A L , 1 6 0 4 S . 1 1 t h S t . , E . ,
LB R O Y
SHERER,
M.A.
Sacramento, Cal. C.
PHILLIPS, M I L T O N A R T H U R ,
RIEGEL,
1933 of Arch.
Evanston, 111.
Williamsport, Pa.
REDIFER,
JOHN
B.
ROBERTS, H O W A R D RADCLYFFE,
V A N S A U N , RAYMOND OVIATT,
Summit Ave.,
Oradell, N.J. W A D E , JAMES M A R C O N I ,
1519 N .
11th
St.,
Phila. J O H N S O N , 690 Prospe« St., Maplewood, N.J. b. Newark, Apr. 20, '11. J O H N A. WAFERLING. B. of Arch. Grad. Work at U. of Col. and U. of Tenn. B.A.I.D. WAFERLING, J O H N
Medals. A.IJL. Jr. WHITE,
2026 E. 107th St.,
JAS. N E U M A N ,
Cleveland, O. W I L L I A M S , V I N C E N T GEORGB,
322 Williams
St., Slatington, Pa. W I L S O N , P E Y T O N LBB,
481 N.E. 30th Ter.,
Miami, Fla. W O L F F , LOUIS M I C H A E L ,
Allendale, S.C. B.
of Arch. W O L T Z , ROBERT PRATT, JR.,
203 Main St.,
Fort Worth, Tex. RICHARD BELL, Montrose Ave., Peekskill, N.Y. b. Peekskill, Mar. 28, '10.
WYATT,
210
ALUMNI RECORD 1934
1933
B. of Arch. M. of Arch. '34. Chandler Fello.; A P X Medals; 2 2 . Arch. Soc.; T 2 A . YEAGER, W I L L I A M MANDEVILLE, 6 6 1 0 E m l e n
St., Phila.
GEORGE
LESLIE
BERTON,
4140
WASHINGTON,
405
S.
Williams St., El Reno, Okla. b. El Reno, Oct. 19, 10. B. of Arch. ALBRECHT, ROBERT STANTON, 1 1 9 2 W .
Clif-
ton Blvd., Lakewood, O. b. Columbus, Mar. 24, '11. B. of Arch. Arch. Soc.; T 2 A . Office experience. BARRETTO, V I N C E N T E GUARDIO, 1 0 2
Manga
Ave., Manila, P.I.
BARTON, BRADFORD LEWIS, 7 0 W e s t A v e . , S .
Norwalk, Conn. b. N . Y . Aug. 19, '11. B. of Arch.
Ruckle
St.,
Indianapolis, Ind. b. Spartanburg, Ind. Feb. 25, '11. B. of Arch. Huckel Prize. Arch. Soc. Office experience. CONKLIN, GEORGE W I L L I A M ,
1934 ADERHOLD,
COLVIN,
1516
Webster
St., Washington, D.C. b. Rome, Italy, Nov. 14, '08. B. of Arch. A.B. '31 (Dartmouth); Graduate study ' 3 1 - 3 2 (Princ.). Office experience. DAILEY,
GIBSON
FULLER,
4508
Livingston
DUBEL,
FRANK
EDWARD,
420
Rutherford
Ave., Riverdale-on-Hudson, N.Y. b. N.Y. May 8, '10. B. of Arch. Arch. Soc. Office experience. Ave., Trenton, N.J. C.
EISENHOWER, CARL A N T H O N Y , 9 3 4 E l m S t . ,
b. N.Y. July 12, '10. B. of Arch. Arch. Soc.
Reading, Pa. b. Reading, Mar. 18, '12. B. of Arch. T 2 A . Office experience. EWERS, KLAUS, Frenssen Strasse 26, Blankenese, Hamburg, Germany. M. of Arch.
BERG, H E N R Y , 2 3 3 3 N . P a r k A v e . , P h i l a . b .
FEDELI, W I L L I A M J O S E P H ,
BLATNER,
FLECK, W A R R E N BROOKE, 6 3 6 2 D r e x e l
BARTOS, ARMAND PHILIP, 8 E . 9 6 t h S t . , N . Y .
Atlantic City, N.J., Sep. 1, '10. B. of Arch. Arch. Soc. HENRY
LE
ROY,
445
Western
Ave., Albany, N.Y. b. Albany, Aug. 3, '11. B. of Arch. Brooke and A P X Medals; Cret Prize; Ilium. Eng. Soc. Prizes; 2 S ; B.A. Cert, in Design. Arch. Soc.; T 2 A . BOGART, CORNELIUS V A N R E Y P E N , J R . ,
204
BONNO,
50th
St.,
S. Ruby
St.,
River Rd., Bogota, N.J. b. Bogota, July 17, '11. B. of Arch. Arch. Soc. Office experience. Phila.
JOHN
CARLTON,
35
S.
1106
Phila. b. Jamestown, N.Y., June 1, '11. Cope Prize; 2 3 . Arch. Soc.; T 2 A . Office experience. JOHN
SHERWIN,
3607
Chest-
nut St., Phila. b. Phila. Dec. 8, '08. B. of Arch. Arch. Orn. O Archeo. Prize. Arch. Soc. BROD, MELVIN D., care of Gulf Refg. Co., 1515 Locust St., Phila. B. of Arch. BROWN, WILLLAM
SAUNDERS,
501
Fauquier
St., Fredericksburg, Va. b. Fredericksburg, Oct. 17, '09. B. of Arch. Studied at RandolphMacon Col. '27-'29. Office experience. BRYANT, CLARENCE J O H N , 5 2 9 E . B r o a d St.,
ludson
Rd.,
Phila. b. Bala, Pa. Nov. '09- B. of Arch. Studied Bowdoin Col. "28-'30. Arch. Soc. FOLEY, J A M E S D A N I E L , 4 4 2 7
Broadway,
In-
dianapolis, Ind. b. Indianapolis, May 27, '08. B. of Arch. Arch. Soc. Office experience. GANUNG,
ARTHUR
LOUIS,
214
Park
Rd.,
Llanerch, Pa. b. Syracuse, N . Y . Mar. 12, 08. B. of Arch. Arch. Soc. Office experience. Blvd., Phila. b. Phila. Apr. 25, '03. B. of Arch. Studied Lafayette '28. GOULD,
Phila.
HAAG,
LEON
HENRY,
GEORGE
3859
HAROLD
N.
17th
WALDO,
St., 3606
Easton Rd., Horsham, Pa. b. Phila. July 14, '10. B. of Arch. Arch. Soc. Office experience. HACKETT,
CHARLES
MEGGINSON,
ney St., Wilmington, Del. Sp.
907
Rod-
HALL, CLARE HAMILTON, J R . , 1 9 3 0 N . P r o s -
pea Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. HAYLOCK,
FRANK
BASIL,
2335
Denver, Col. A.B. (Col.) '32.
Tamaqua, Pa. b. Tamaqua, June 16, '09. B. of Arch. Huckel Prize. Arch. Soc. Office experience.
HELMER,
COAN, PHILIP B U R R , 7 6 E l m S t . ,
HOLBROOK,
N.J.
N.
GILFILLAN, R O B E R T A . C . , 1 6 1 E . R o o s e v e l t
BREED, J A M E S W I L L I A M ,
BRENNEMAN,
3056
St., Phila. b. Phila. Apr. 20, "10. B. of Arch. Office experience.
CHARLES
HOOD,
Fairfax
Chelsea,
Vt.
St., b.
N.Y. Nov. 21, '06. B. of Arch. Arch. Soc. Office experience.
Montclair,
211
JOHN
RICHARDS,
Keene, N.H. B. of Arch.
82
Court
St.,
BOOK OF THE SCHOOL 1934
1934 HOLLAND, ALBERT RAYMOND, JR., 2 7 1
W.
NIECE,
JOHN
CHRISTIAN,
315
N.
3d
St.,
Pottsville, Pa.
Rittenhouse St., Gmtn., Phila. b. Phila. Oct. 22, '11. B. of Arch. Construction Prize. Arch. Soc.; T 2 A . Office experience.
ware Ave., Olyphant, Lackawanna Co., Pa.
H Y M A N , ABRAHAM ROBBINS, 1 1 5 S . M a s s a -
OSBORNE, JAMBS HARRY, 1 0 4 0 L a k e
chusetts Ave., Atlantic City, N.J. b. Atlantic Gty, April 26, '09. B. of Arch.
S.E., Grand Rapids, Mich.
JENSEN, D A N H A N S LAURBERG, S t e l t o n R d . ,
Gmtn., Phila. b. Phila. July 30, '10. B. of Arch.
OMALLEY,
2607
W.
FRANCIS,
407
DelaDrive,
PATTERSON, GEORGE, JR., 5 5 2 2 M o r r i s
New Market, N.J. JOUSSON, GASTON ROBERT,
WILLARD
St.,
16th
PECK, RUSSELL RALPH, 1 4 5 2 8 A r d e n a l l A v e . ,
KALBACH, GEORGE G . , 6 1 0 H i g h A v e . , E a s t
E. Cleveland, O. b. Cleveland, Jan. 10, '09. B. of Arch. Arch. Soc.; T 2 A . Office experience.
St., Wilmington, Del. Oskaloosa, la.
PERROT, EMILE GEORGE, JR., 1 4 0 5 N o .
KELLEY, PAYTON SHAW, 8 5 4 C a r p e n t e r L a n e ,
Phila. b. Phila. Aug. 17, '10. B. of Arch. KEYES, JOSEPH VICTOR, 6 5 6
S. B e a c h
16th
St., Phila. b. Phila. B. of Arch. Studied at Villa Nova Col. '28. Office experience.
St.,
POLEVITZKY, IGOR BORIS, 6 8 1 8 C o b b s C r e e k
Manchester, N.H. b. Madison, Wis. Sep. 12, '09. B. of Arch. Studied Univ. of N.H. '28'29. Arch. Soc. Office experience.
Blvd., Phila. b. Petrograd, Russia, June 21, '11. B. of Arch. Arch. Orn. Arcbeo. Prize. Arch. Soc. Office experience.
LANGLOIS, J O H N HURD, 4 2 0 3 C h e s t e r
Ave.,
REINHOLD, RICHARD H . ,
Phila. b. Brooklyn, Sep. 5, '11. B. of Arch. Brooke, A.I.A., Faculty Medals; 2 3 ; Sp. Grad. Sch. '54-'ii. T 2 A . Arch. Soc. LINFOOT, B E N J A M I N
SAMUEL, 9 1 0 S.
RICHARDS, ALFRED N E W T O N , JR., 6
RUSSELL,
LYNCH, J O H N JOSEPH, 8 0 4 N . 1 6 t h St., H a r -
LYONS, ROBERT BONNER, 5 3 2 9 W e b s t e r St.,
Phila. b. Phila. Dec. 7, '07. B. of Arch. JAMES,
239
THOMAS
ROBINSON,
MILLER, RALSTON HAROLD, 2 0 E . 4 6 t h
St.,
Sea Isle City, N.J.
Calvert
316 Ashbourne
SMITH, VIVIAN DAWSON, 1 1 S. D u d l e y
7031
Bradford, Pa.
2730
Rd.,
Elkins Park, Pa. PI.,
Ventnor, N.J. Sp.
Kelly St., Pittsburgh, Pa. MILLER, FRANK D E A N , JR., 5 4 J a c k s o n A v e . ,
THOMAS TRIPLETT,
SMITH, LESTER R . H . ,
Upper
Broadway, Saranac Lake, N.Y. C. MCLAUGHLIN,
Rugby
St., Balto., Md. b. Balto., Aug. 21, '10. B. of Arch. Studied T. Sq. Atelier. 2 H ; Chandler Pello.; Brooke Medal. Arch. Soc. Office experience. SAH, BENN YUAN, 19 First Kincow Rd., Tsingtao, China.
risburg, Pa. b. Phila. Sep. 5, '07. B. of Arch. Studied Catholic Univ. '30. Alumni Esquisse Medal. Office experience. TIMOTHY
Ave.,
Rd., Bryn Bawr, Pa. b. Chic., 111. Oct. 3, '09. B. of Arch. Studied at Haverford Col. '27"28.
48th
St., Phila. b. Phila. Mar. 29, 10. B. of Arch. Studied U. of P. (Col. Dept.) '29-30. Arch. Soc.
MALAKIE,
127 Coulter
Ardmore, Pa.
SPAGNUOLO,
JOSEPH
ERNIO,
141
Gordon
Ave., Campbell, O. b. Aquila, Italy, June 5, '09. B. of Arch. Dipl. Royal Acad. F-A., Rome '28. Studied at Royal Acs. Bologne & Turin.
M I L N E , CALEB JONES, JR., 6 6 1 1 W i s s a h i c k o n
SPARKS,
Ave., Gmtn., Phila.
Foulkrod St., Phila. b. Catasauqua, Pa. May 1, '08. B. of Arch. Studied T. Sq. Atelier. Office experience.
MOFFAT, W I L L I A M LLOYD, 3 5 4 B a t a v i a A v e . ,
Toledo, O. MONSARRAT,
JOHN,
1613
Richmond
Ave.,
Columbus, O. MULLER,
OSCAR
WILLIAM,
Tamarack
Rd.,
Port Chester, N.Y. b. Paterson, N.J. Mar. 12, '08. B. of Arch. C. Pratt Inst. '32. Office experience.
GRANT
MARMADUKE,
JR.,
1333
STAAB, WILLIAM D U P O N T , 2 1 F o r r e s t A v e . ,
Glen Ridge, N.J. b. Bronx, N.Y. Aug. 3, '06. B. of Arch. Arch. Soc. Office experience. STEELE, WILLIAM, 3D, 126 Maple Ave., BalaCynwyd, Pa. STEINMETZ,
212
HENRY
DARLINGTON,
410
ALUMNI RECORD 1934 Greenwood Ave., Wyncote, Pa. b. Wyncote, Mar. 7, '11. B. of Arch. SWINBURNE, HERBERT HILLHOUSE, Elko, Nev. b. Los Angeles, Cai. Dec. 6, '12. B. of Arch. Arch. Soc. T O W N S E N D , J O S E P H BREVITT, JR., Swedesford Rd., Paoli, Pa. b. Phila. Mar. 20, '11. B. of Arch. V A N D E R BOGERT, G I L E S YATES, i l l Union St., Schenectady, N.Y. b. Schenectady, May 29, '07. B. of Arch. B.A. '30 (Williams Col.). Arch. Soc. VIDLER, R A L P H F R A N K , 4 7 1 A Oriole Pkwy., Toronto, Ont. W A G N E R , CHARLES EARNEST, 7 3 1 5 Briar Rd., Phila. C. W E B S T E R , EVAN LEWIS, 1 0 6 Penna. Ave., Binghamton, N.Y. B. of F.A. W H I T C O M B , J O H N M E R R A L L , Common St., Dedham, Mass. b. N.Y. July 12, "07. B. of
213
1934 Arch. B-A. '30 (Yale). TZA. Arch. Soc. Office experience. W H I T E , D U D L E Y H E A R N , 19 E. Main St., West Point, Miss. b. West Point, Mar. 24, '10. B. of Arch. Arch. Soc. Office experience. W H I T E , ERSKINE LEWIS, 144 Golf View Rd., Merion Golf Manor, Ardmore, Pa. B. of F.A. W I L L I A M S , E . STEWART, 1124 W . Harvard Blvd., Dayton, O. M. of Arch. B. of Arch. '33 (Cornell). Chandler Fello.; 1st Prize Rome Collaborative Prob. Arch. Soc. Office experience. W I L S O N , EARL M A N S E L L , 6016 Cobbs Creek Pkwy., Phila. B.S. in Econ. W I S T A R , T H O M A S , JR., 166 School House Lane, Gmtn., Phila. b. Phila. July 14, '08. B. of Arch. B.S. '30 (Haverford). Arch. Soc.; Art Alliance. Office experience. YARDLEY,
THOMAS
Penn St., Phila. C.
HENRY,
JR.,
3216
W.