Finding Aid of the Harriet Rochlin Collection of Material about Women Architects in the United States
Finding Aid of the Harriet Rochlin Collection of Material about Women Architects in the United States
UCLA Library, Department of Special CollectionsManuscripts Division
Los Angeles, CA
- Processed by:
- Manuscripts Division staff
- Encoded by:
- ByteManagers using OAC finding aid conversion service specifications
- Encoding supervision and revision by:
- Caroline Cubé
- Edited by:
- Josh Fiala, August 2004
Restrictions on Use and Reproduction
Provenance/Source of Acquisition
- Julia Morgan (Boxes 1-2).
- Early California women in architecture (Boxes 3-7).
- Contemporary women in architecture (Boxes 8-12).
Julia Morgan
General Background
Bilbiography of works on Julia Morgan and/or her projects.
“San Francisco Victorians: A Selected Reading List” (Bilbiography). Prepared 1974 by Judith Waldhorn.
“Historic Preservation in San Francisco's Inner Mission.” Judith Lynch Waldhorn. May 1973.
Call slips for works related to Julia Morgan bibliography.
Published Articles
“An Architect from the Inside Out,” by Thomas Hines. The Los Angeles Times. September 4, 1988.
“Women in Architecture: The Julia Morgan Colloquium,” by Diane Favro, Ph.D. in Architecture and Planning. Fall 1987.
“Julia Morgan of California,” by Mary Osman. AIA Journal. June 1976.
“Rediscovering A Forgotten Architect,” by Judith Anderson. San Francisco Chronicle. July 2, 1975.
“Julia Morgan: California's Mystery Architect,” by Margaret Koch. Santa Cruz Sentinel. June 29, 1975.
“The Architecture of Julia Morgan,” by Benjamin Clavan. The Daily Californian. February 20, 1976.
“Search on for Morgan Homes,” by Ellen Lieberman. June 28, 1975.
Article by Carmen Avelar. The Hayward, California Review. November 14, 1975.
Article on Julia Morgan (and Sara Boutelle). Tempo. July 2, 1975.
“Julia Morgan's Undiscovered Work,” by Ro Logrippo.
“The Legacy of Julia Morgan,” by Bernice Scharlach. San Francisco Examiner and San Francisco Chronicle. Sunday, August 24, 1975.
“Remodeling Julia Morgan,” by Catherine Maclay. California Monthly. June 1988.
“Woman Architect Who Helped Build the Fairmont Hotel,” by Jane Armstrong. The Architect and Engineer of California.
Book review on Remain to Be Seen, by Elinor Richey.
Fabulous San Simeon (excerpt). The California Historical Society.
“Some Examples of the Work of Julia Morgan.” by Walter T. Steilberg. The Architect and Engineer of California (vol.55, no.2). November 1918.
Frontispiece, The Architect and Engineer of California. March 1910 (Tower of Mills College).
Note on Berkeley Divinity School. The Architect and Engineer of California. September 1918.
“Berkeley Women's City Club,” by Julian C. Messick. The Architect and Engineer of California (vol.105, no.1). April 1931.
Call slips and checkout cards for The Architect and Engineer of California. Library of Congress Main Reading Room.
“Educational Buildings,” by Julia Morgan. The Architect and Engineer, [n.d.].
Berkeley Women's City Club.
Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians (excerpt), (vol.10, no.3).
The Golden Days of San Simeon (copy 8), by Ken Murray. Garden City, New York: Doubleday and Company, Incorporated.
Notes from The Golden Days of San Simeon, by Ken Murray.
“Lord of San Simeon,” by W.A. Swanberg. American Heritage (vol.12, no.5). August 1961.
“Living it up with W.R. and Marion,” by Anita Loos. Reprinted excerpt from Kiss Hollywood Goodbye. 1974.
“Julia Morgan (1872-1957); Some Introductory Notes,” by Richard W. Longstreth (for Architecture class 299). December 14, 1972.
Bibliography (with call slips and checkout cards) from Los Angeles Public Library.
Biography of Bernard Maybeck (from the Bancroft Library).
Five California Architects (copy 3), by Esther McCoy. New York: Reinhold Publishing Corporation.
“Morgan & Maybeck at Mills,” organized by Georgia S. Wright. Mills College Art Gallery. October 29-November 17.
Mills College Material.
“The Enchanted Hill, part 2” San Francisco Examiner. Sunday, August 25, 1974.
“Berkeley's Architectural Heritage,” November 6, 1974.
“Mediterranean Moods, Motifs,”by Ruth Gilkey. California Sunday Tribune Home Magazine.
“Berkeley's Architectural Heritage.” Four examples of Morgan's work.
“Julia Morgan's Enduring Legacy,” by Louise Wright. The Oakland Tribune, Sunday. March 27, 1966.
Article on Berkeley Women's City Club by Marion Dietrich.
Newspaper articles on Julia Morgan.
Note
Correspondence and 3 newspaper clippings (Herb Caen - Examiner Sunday Punch - March 23, 1975) from Marian Marquadt.
“Taffeta and Steel.” Review: Julia Morgan Symposium by Laura M. Gardner. Los Angeles Architect. September 1987[?].
California Monthly (vol.86, no.6). April 1976.
Scope and Content Note
Pamphlets, Booklets, Postcards etc., re Julia Morgan and J. Morgan Projects.
Flyers and pamphlets on the Urban Care Architectural Heritage Committee's tour of Bernard Maybeck and J. Morgan homes. 1972.
Asilomar at Sixty, a unit of the California State Park System.
Asilomar: The First Fifty Years, 1913-1963 (2nd printing). Asilomar Conference Grounds (Pacific Grove, California, 93950). Monterey: Lee Printing Company. August 1972.
Brochure on the restoration of the Merchants Exchange Trading Hall (originally by Julia Morgan). 465 California Street.
Guidebook to Hearst Castle (purchased on site).
“Architectural Drawings by Julia Morgan: Beaux-Arts Assignments and Other Buildings.” The Oakland Museum Art Department. January 1976.
Pamphlet for the Julia Morgan House Tour, Sunday. March 14, 1976.
Eexhibit: “Julia Morgan: Architect 1872-1957,” January 20-March 14, 1976, Oakload Museum.
Postcard featuring 1902 photograph from Hearst Castle, McCloud River.
Notes on conversation with Sara Boutelle. October 8, 1975.
Oversize postcard featuring aerial view of Hearst Castle and grounds.
Conversations, Speeches, Interviews, Oral History Excerpts re J. Morgan
Comments on Lillian Forney from her secretary.
Phoebe Apperson Hearst correspondence and papers, 72/204.
Scope and Content Note
Interview with Walter Steilberg. 30 August 1974.
Scope and Content Note
Morgan North. February 22, 1975.
Scope and Content Note
Oral history, Morgan and Flora North, from Bancroft oral regional history. February 1976.
Scope and Content Note
Oral interview of Dorothy Coblentz conducted by Suzanne Reiss.
Scope and Content Note
Notes on conversation(s) with Allen Temko. February 1975.
Address by Mr. Walter Steilberg. August 1966. Corrected transcription: March 29, 1968.
Scope and Content Note
Hearst correspondence.
Scope and Content Note
Notes on Morgan and Maybeck from Five California Architects.
Julia Morgan Reading at Bancroft. February 24, 1975.
Julia Morgan job lists.
Correspondence with Sara Boutelle.
Scope and Content Note
Morgan's letters to Phoebe A. Hearst.
Scope and Content Note
Citizen Hearst: A Biography of William Randolph Hearst, W.A. Swanberg. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. 1964.
Scope and Content Note
Notes on the Hearsts.
Letters to the editor and photograph in Life.
Scope and Content Note
Los Angeles Public Library book call slips for books on Hearst and San Simeon.
“Hearst Castle“ by George Elich.
Article on Hearst San Simeon State Historical Monument (not complete).
School Records, Vital Statistics, Family History
Julia Morgan Beaux-Arts Record.
Notes from French archives.
Scope and Content Note
Charles Morgan obituary. Oakland Tribune. February 15, 1924.
1894 Great Registry showing Charles Bell Morgan and Parmelee Morgan.
Not listed Julia Roberts listing in Who's Who in California, 1928-29.
Certificate of death of Julia Morgan.
Scope and Content Note
Not listed-Info/Statistics on Julia Morgan. From Marian Marquaidt. March 19, 1975.
Last will and testament of Julia Morgan.
Estate of Julia Morgan - Inventory & Appraisal.
Notes and statistics on Morgan family.
Julia Morgan entry in National Encyclopedia of American Biography (vol.G). 1943-1946.
Julia Morgan directory listings: 1931, 1921, 1948-49, and n.d.
Photographs and Photocopies
Photographs and mailing label from Chapel of the Chimes.
Photograph: Casa del Sol (guest house). Hearst State Historic Monument.
Proof sheet and negatives including: Asilomar, Mills College, San Simeon, Julia Morgan portrait, Chapel of the Chimes and H. Rochlin at her desk.
Photographs of the First Presbyterian Church, Berkeley.
Phone numbers and one contact for Hollywood Studio Club and Hearst Castle.
Photographs from Mills College, Oakland.
Postcard featuring the Mary Andrews Clark residence of the YWCA.
Brochure for Hollywood Studio Club (ca. 1965-1970).
Scope and Content Note
Photographs (from the Hollywood Studio Club?).
Postcard featuring Hollywood Studio Club.
Sketches and notes (on the Hollywood Studio Club?).
“Studio Club Closes Doors on Memories,” by Lynn Simross. Los Angeles Times. Sunday, February 9, 1975.
Story and chronology of the Hollywood Studio Club.
Letter from Sara Boutelle (Julia Morgan Association). February 6, 1977.
Photo - Julia Morgan portrait.
Photo - Merrill Hall - Asilomar YWCA conference grounds.
Photograph - Administration Building - Asilomar.
Photograph - Asilomar Chapel.
Photograph - Crocker Dining Hall (front entrance) Asilomar.
Photographs - Julia Morgan and Mills College Bell Tower.
Photograph - Asilomar Lodge (1914).
Photograph - Merrill Hall, Asilomar - YWCA conference grounds.
The Hacienda Pleasanton, ”The Castle on the Hill.”
Photographs - Julia Morgan and Mills College Bell Tower; list of photographs sent to NCT.
Mailing envelope to H. Rochlin from Hearst Castle concession. April 30, 1975.
Photographs - Hearst San Simeon
[No further description available].
Neptune Pool.
Assembly Hall.
Morning Room.
Roman Pool.
Kitchen.
Roman Pool.
200,000 gallon indoor Roman Pool.
Under construction.
Under construction (long-shot).
Under construction (interior).
Under construction.
Under construction (below ground-level).
Under construction.
Panoramic view.
Casa del sol (guest house).
[No further description available].
Oversize postcards featuring, interior and exterior.
Slide set (in original packaging).
Aerial view.
[No further description available].
La Casa Grande.
Photograph - Hearst Castle
Photograph - Hearst Castle.
The Fabulous Hearst Castle. 1962.
Photograph - Interior patio, YWCA Hollywood Studio Club, Los Angeles.
Berkeley Architectural Heritage - An Appointment Calendar. 1975 (JM, Bernard Maybeck and others).
Correspondence between H. Rochlin and Ms. magazine. April-July 1975.
Scope and Content Note
Correspondence from H. Rochlin to Frances Ring. Westways. January 20, 1976.
Scope and Content Note
“Designed by Julia Morgan.” Westways. March 1976.
Footnotes and bibliography on Julia Morgan.
Notes on sources for Julia Morgan article.
Draft of Julia Morgan.
Final manuscript corrected, “Reconstructing Julia Morgan” with tearsheets.
Early California Women Architects (ECWA)
General Background Materials
Correspondence
H. Rochlin correspondence re ECWA.
H. Rochlin Correspondence with AIA Journal re ECWA.
H. Rochlin correspondence with Alec Lambie re his mother, Edla Muir.
H. Rochlin correspondence with Olive Chadeayne re ECWA.
Brief Profiles of six proposed subjects for ECWA article.
Articles and Documents
List: undergraduate degrees in architecture awarded to women.
Scope and Content Note
Correspondence to H. Rochlin from Marian Maraquadt. April 15, 1976.
Proof sheets/negatives/photocopies: architecture, library, Special Collections, UC Berkeley. Accompanying book of notes.
Notes on articles in San Diego journal.
“On the Fringe of the Profession: Women in American Architecture,” by Gwendolyn Wright.
“The Ecole des Beaux Arts and the Architectural Profession in the U.S.: The Case of John Galen Howard,” by Joan Draper, UC Berkeley.
Architectural Association Yearbook (excerpts). 1914[?]. Including John Galen Howard's introduction.
Architectural Association Yearbook (excerpts). 1912. Including John Galen Howard's introduction.
Statistics on women with architecture degrees, survey by graduate students in the Department of Architecture at Berkeley. 1972.
“The Profession of Architecture in the U.S.A.,” AIA pamphlet. June 1975.
Notes - other established women architects.
List - photographs, UC Berkeley Documents Collection, Sprague Scrapbook, and notes.
“The Bay Region Styles: 1890-1930.” Heritage. December 6, 1973.
Here Today: San Francisco's Architectural Heritage, by Roger Olmsted and T.H. Watkins (sponsored by the Junior League of San Francisco, Incorporated) Excerpts.
Background article on Early California Women Architects.
Library Guide: UCLA Architecture and Urban Planning Library.
Scope and Content Note
Letter from H. Rochlin to Dr. Rosario Hodgson, School of Architecture and Allied Arts, University of Oregon. May 12, 1977.
Guide to archival collections (excerpts) - U.S. Geography and History and Fine, Graphic, and Applied Arts.
“Exhibit Recognizes Women's Largely Obscured Architectural Contributions,” by Jocelyn Paine. Los Angeles Times. Sunday, April 30, 1978.
“The Last Profession to be 'Liberated' by Women,” by Ada Louise Huxtable. New York Times. Sunday, March 13, 19__?.
“Case Built by Women Architects,” by Joan Shepard. Daily News. Sunday, February 27, 1977.
SCAN (vol.1, no.3). April 1978.
Scope and Content Note
“Women's Work in Architecture,” by John Dreyfuss. Los Angeles Times. Thursday, May 18, 1978.
“Designing Women,” by Douglas Davis. Newsweek. March 7, 1977.
Notes on articles related to early modern California women architects.
“Ojai writer leads way to local History” by Allan Parachini. Los Angeles Times.
Correspondence re “Among the First and Finest.”
“Elizabeth R. of Kansas City.” AIA Journal. June 1976.
“Perspective - Women in Architecture,” by Peggy Cochrane Bowman. Los Angeles Architect. February 1975.
Perspecta 15: Yale Papers on Architecture. William Versace, ed. 1975.
“1868 to 1968: Architecture in California, an exhibit.” Organized by David Gebhard and Harriette Von Breton, UC Santa Barbara. April 16-May 12, 1968.
Tour Guide to Old Town and Old Town San Diego State Historic Park.
AIA Fellowships (Bentel, Vernon, Halpin).
Draft of Women's Architectural and Professional Organizations. June 30, 1975.
“Minorities and Women as Government Contractors,” a report of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. May 1975.
Yearbook of the Architectural Association. University of California. 1914.
Images of American Living (excerpts), by Alan Gowans (New York: J.B. Lippincott Company. 1971).
State Board of Architectural Examiners: History - A Record of Seven Decades of Progress.
The Architect and Engineer. April 1926.
Los Angeles Architect, the AIA newsletter. April 1978, November 1976, March 1976, April 1976.
The Journal of San Diego History (vol.17, no.4), James E. Moss, ed. Fall 1971.
“The Positive Side of No-Frills Housing.” American Home. September 1975.
Notes on UCLA - Avery index on ECWA.
“Women at Work: Research is Power,” by Susan Sands. California Monthly. June/July 1976.
“About Women: Dramatic Discrimination.”
“AIA Pledges Open Field for Women Architects by 1979,” correspondence from H. Rochlin to Ms. Gazette.
“The House That Jill Built,” by Harriet Stix. Los Angeles Times. Thursday, August 19, 1976.
Scope and Content Note
Avery Index to Architectural Periodicals.
“Six California Women Architects.”
“Woman as a Domestic Architect: from the Standpoint of a Britisher,” by Edwin Gunn, A.R.I.B.A. The Architect and Engineer.
“A Woman Architect.” The Architect and Engineer. 1910.
“Novel Apartment House Planned by Woman Architect.” The Architect and Engineer. 1910.
Notices regarding women architects in The Architect and Engineer.
“Color in Relation to Walls,” by Josephine Wells Richardson. The Architect and Engineer. 1910.
San Diego AIA Guide for the 1977 National Convention.
“Perspective: Architecture, with a Capital 'A', is Alive and Well in California,” by Michael F. Ross. Los Angeles Architect. January 1977.
Progress Report - 1977 AIA National Convention / San Diego / June 5-8” with business card attached - Francis X. Brown.
AIA. 1977 Convention/Exhibit, Fact Sheet.
“The Early Domestic Architecture of the San Francisco Bay Region,” by Elisabeth Kendall Thompson. Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians (vol.10, no.3).
“Country House Architecture on the Pacific Coast,” by Louis Christian Mullgardt. Architectural Record (vol.30). October 1915.
“A Thousand Women in Architecture” (Parts 1-2). Architectural Record (vol.3). March 1948 and June 1948.
“Asilomar... A Seaside Retreat for Seminars and Study.”
“Julia Morgan '94 Makes Name in Architecture.” The California Alumni Weekly (vol.8, no.10). October 23, 1915.
Julia Morgan obituary. AIA Journal. May 1957.
“The Berkeley Women's City Club,” by Mira Maclay. California Arts and Architecture.
“Four Houses Designed by Women” Los Angeles Times Sunday Magazine. August 11, 1957.
“What Makes It American: Architecture in Southwest and West,” by Talbot F. Hamlin. Pencil Points (vol.20). December 1939.
March 8, 1976 Memo re Julia Morgan, license from State Board.
Notes on Lilian J. Rice.
“The Inn at Rancho Santa Fe,” by Phyllis and Robert White. Los Angeles West. February 1988.
Rea Mowry on Rancho Santa Fe.
Note
Notes on California women architects.
“1,000 Women in Architecture” (excerpt). Architectural Record. March 1948.
Scope and Content Note
“The Mentor Connection: The Secret Life in the Successful Woman's Life,” by Gail Sheehy. New York. April 5, 1976.
“What We're Finding Out About Sexual Stereotypes,” by Claire Safran. Today's Health. October 1975.
Correspondence from H. Rochlin to Eileen Nichols, ACSA. March 29, 1976.
Correspondence from David Clarke, ACSA, to H. Rochlin. April 6, 1976.
Memo: Newsletter of the American Institute of Architects. January 1976 / Special Issue “Women in Architecture.”
“A Brief Essay on Architectural Education in Noreth America for Prospective Students.”
Photograph - Department of Architecture. School - ? Class of - ?.
Correspondence from H. Rochlin to Elaine ______. March 1, 1976.
Los Angeles Architect: Newsletter of the Southern California Chapter of the AIA. December 1976.
Biographical Questionnaires (forms).
“Beyond the Femininity of Eileen Gray,” by John Pastier. Los Angeles Times (part 4). March 10, 1975.
Invitation to lecture by Mimi Lobell on “Archetypal Architecture's Celebrations of the Feminine,” at Columbia University. September 17, 1975.
“Women Virtually Absent in Field of Architecture,” by Barbara Gius. Los Angeles Times. March 16, 1975.
“A Matter of Art, Not Sex.” Time. November 10, 1975.
“Myths Mar Women's Movement,” by Merle S. Goldberg. Los Angeles Times (part 5). June 22, 1975.
“The Feminist Front,” by Dorothy Sinclair. West Coast Review of Books. June 1975.
“In Search of a Female Ethic,” by Georgie Anne Geyer. Los Angeles Times (part 4). June 17, 1975.
“What is Female Imagery?” (discussion). Ms.. n.d.
“The Rise and Fall of the Suffrage Movement,” by Waltraud Ireland.
“The New Woman, 1972: A Time Special Issue.” Time. March 20, 1972.
“Erikson Revisited.” Time. March 17, 1975.
Scope and Content Note
Feminism: The Essential Historical Writings (excerpts), Miriam Schneir, ed. (New York: Vintage Books. 1972).
“Time Spent in Housework,” by Joann Vanek.
Early California Women Architects Individual Subjects
Note
Gertrude C. Morrow
Notes and correspondence.
Who's Who entries.
“With the Architects.” The Architect and Engineer. September 1925.
Scope and Content Note
“A Place for Everything in Place,” by John Cushman Fistere. Ladies' Home Journal.
“Bay Woman is Associate Eastern School Architect.” Oakland Tribune. Monday, June 7, 1937.
“Why Modern Architecture?” by Irving F. Morrow. Architecture and Design.
Gill Irving (biographical entry).
Irving F. Morrow (death certificate).
Irving F. Morrow and Gertrude E. Comfort (marriage license).
San Juan Bautista (article).
“Mission San Juan Bautista,” by Irving F. Morrow. California Arts and Architecture.
“A California Bungalow Designed by a California Woman.” The Architect and Engineer of California. February-October 1907.
Article in The Architect and Engineer of California. June 1919.
“Kudos for a Crest Designer.” Oakland Tribune. Sunday, December 7, 1958.
“The Oakland Architectural Exhibition,” by Irving F. Morrow. The Architect and Engineer of California (vol.47, no.1). October 1916.
Edla Muir
H. Rochlin notes on Edla Muir.
H. Rochlin interview of Olive Chadeayne (friend of EM). December 13, 1976.
Notes on Beverly Hills, West Los Angeles and Santa Monica architecture.
“House in Santa Monica Canyon, California, Edla Muir, Architect.” Architectural Forum (vol.9). August 1943.
“Four Houses with Excellent Sites, 1. California: Landscaped Canyon.” Architectural Record (vol.3). March 1952.
“1,000 Women in Architecture” (excerpt). Architectural Record. March 1948.
Scope and Content Note
EM's listing in American Architects Directories of 1962 and 1970.
EM obituary by David Gebhard. November 1971.
Notes on EM. File at UC Santa Barbara.
Note
H. Rochlin notes on EM.
“Home on the Horizon,” by Persis E. Cassiday. Los Angeles Times Magazine. April 3, 1949.
“4 Houses Designed by Women” (excerpts). Los Angeles Times Sunday Magazine. August 11, 1957.
Photographs of EM, apprentice, in front of John Byers' office.
EM photograph negatives.
The John Rex House - Photographs.
The Russell Law House - Photograph.
EM portrait - Photograph.
Lambie residence - Photograph.
Lambie residence - Photograph.
John Rex House - Photograph and negatives.
Russell Law House - Photograph and negative.
EM portrait - Photograph.
Lilian J. Rice
H. Rochlin interview of Sam Hill (on L. Rice).
Oral history: R. Mawry on Rancho Santa Fe.
H. Rochlin notes on Lilian J. Rice.
“Architecture: A Community Asset,” by Lilian J. Rice. Architect and Engineer. July 1928.
Correspondence and vital statistics from San Diego County Clerk on Lilian J. Rice. March 1976.
Scope and Content Note
Julius A. Rice (bibliography), from San Diego Library.
Note on “Mr. Rice of National.” San Diego Union. September 27, 1882.
Note on J.A. Rice. The San Diego Union. August 9, 1883.
Note on J.A. Rice in San Diego Union. August 28, 1883.
Note on J.A. Rice in San Diego Union. January 24, 1884.
Note on J.A. Rice in San Diego Union. July 30, 1884.
Note on J.A. Rice in San Diego Union. August 9, 1884.
Note on J.A. Rice in San Diego Union. August 12, 1884.
Note on J.A. Rice in San Diego Union. June 10, 1886.
Notice of birth of Lilian J. Rice in San Diego Union. June 13, 1889.
“First Principal of Russ School Will Celebrate.” San Diego Union. November 20, 1932.
“Zlacs to Have New Clubhouse.” San Diego Union. April 27, 1932.
Sam Hamill on Lilian J. Rice.
Note
Lilian J. Rice entry in Biographical Dictionary - American Architects (deceased).
“Samuel Wood Hamill,” by Barbara Jones. September/October 1971.
“Information about Lilian J. Rice, Architect,” as gathered by S.W. Hamill, Architect, with some additions from Olive Chadeayne, Architect, and Elinor Frazer.”
Lilian J. Rice Collection (job lists).
“Julius A. Rice: Educator,” August 8, 1957.
Scope and Content Note
On Lilian J. Rice, San Diego and Los Angeles (personal research).
AIA Guide - project list of (San Diego?) residences, offices, etc.
Journal of San Diego History. Fall 1983 (reference note).
Miscellaneous notes (and floor plan) on Lilian J. Rice research.
Excerpt of history on Zlacs by Mabel Grant Hazard.
Rancho Santa Fe by Karyl Shenton (Rancho Santa Fe, California: The Village Press.
Rancho Santa Fe (map).
Rancho Santa Fe Protective Covenant: Adopted by Rancho Santa Fe Association. July 4, 1927. Amended June 30, 1930, April 7, 1939, May 15, 1973.
Hamilton Carpenter Residence - Photograph.
1600 Ludington Lane Residence - Photograph.
Interior, Hamilton Carpenter Residence - Photograph.
Rancho Santa Fe - Photograph.
Lilian J. Rice projects - Photograph.
Lilian J. Rice negatives.
A week-end House Camp - Photograph.
Lilian J. Rice proof sheet.
Architectural class [?] - Photograph.
Lilian J. Rice portrait - Photograph and negatives.
A week-end House Camp - Photograph.
Lilian J. Rice portrait - Photograph.
Rancho Santa Fe - Photograph.
Hamilton Carpenter Residence - Photograph.
Interior, Hamilton Carpenter Residence, Rancho Santa Fe, Lilian J. Rice, architect - Photograph.
Lutah Maria Riggs
Santa Barbara Architecture from Spanish Colonial to Modern.
Lutah M. Riggs interviewed by H. Rochlin. November 1, 1975.
“Woman of the Year: Lutah Riggs Lines Up Future,” by Art Seidenbaum. Los Angeles Times (part 5). January 4, 1967.
Los Angeles Times Woman of the Year - “Capsule Reports on 1966 Award Winners, Achievements,” Los Angeles Times (part 4). December 13, 1966.
“Lutah Riggs - A Designing Woman,” by Kim Blair. Los Angeles Times. October 17, 1966.
Brief biography on Lutah M. Riggs.
Lutah M. Riggs biographical entry in American Architects Directory. 1962 and 1970.
“Lutah M. Riggs - Advanced in 1960 for Design,” (AIA Form S38).
Biography of Lutah M. Riggs (Names. June 1962).
Correspondence - H. Rochlin to Ms. Harriet Lyons. July 24, 1975.
Lutah M. Riggs listing in ______[?] (biographical entry).
“California Doctor's Office: Lutah M. Riggs, Architect” (excerpt). Architectural Record (vol.113). May 1953.
“Project for a House in Santa Barbara.” Arts and Architecture (vol.66). March 1949.
Rancho San Diegito - Map.
“Rancho Santa Fe: A Successful Experiment in Architectural Control as an Integral Part of Community Planning,” by S.R. Nelson. Architect and Engineer. January 1947.
“La Morada - An 'Adventure in Contentment' at the Rancho Santa Fe.” California Life. January 1925.
“Rancho Santa Fe - A Vision,” by Lillian J. Rice. The Modern Clubwoman. January/February.
Rancho Santa Fe Corporation (advertisement). San Diego Magazine. October 1929.
“The Village of Rancho Santa Fe,” by M. Urmy Scares. California Arts and Architecture. September 1930.
Notes on exhibit of the architecture of George Washington Smith (with introduction by David Gebhard[?]).
Standard Oil Company (Chevron) map of Santa Barbara.
San Ysidro Ranch (advertisement and notes). Los Angeles Times (Part 10). July 13, 1975.
Scope and Content Note
“An Aristocratic Mediterranean Estate; Montecito, Santa Barbara County, California.” January 1976.
Lutah M. Riggs interviewed by H. Rochlin. November 1, 1975.
Scope and Content Note
On Lutah M. Riggs (bibliography / biography / c. vitae).
Notes/list of Lutah M. Riggs photographs.
Vedanta Society Temple. Santa Barbara, California. 1956 - Photograph.
Vedanta Society Temple - Photograph.
Lutah M. Riggs portrait - Photograph.
Lutah M. Riggs - Photograph.
Lutah M. Riggs - Photograph.
Lutah M. Riggs - Photograph.
Lutah M. Riggs with fellow students (ca. 1918) - Photograph.
Lutah M. Riggs with fellow students (ca. 1918) - Photograph.
S. Wright Ludington Residence - Photographs.
S. Wright Ludington Residence - Photographs.
Alice Erving House - Photographs.
Alice Erving Residence - Photograph.
Vedonta Temple - Photograph.
Snapshots of Santa Barbara projects - Photographs.
Curtis Mutton residence - Photograph.
Lutah M. Riggs residence, Montecito - Photograph.
Lutah M. Riggs with fellow students (ca. 1918) - Photograph.
Lutah M. Riggs portrait - Photograph.
Hazel Wood Waterman
Notes on Hazel W. Waterman.
Notes on Wednesday Club.
La Casa de Estudillo. Old Town San Diego State Park.
Notes on Estudillo House.
Correspondence - From Spreckel's Company to Hazel W. Waterman.
“The San Diego Gills: Hillcrest and Uptown,” a project of the Save Our Heritage Organization Tour Committee. summer 1975.
Hazel W. Waterman correspondence. 1908, 1917, 1935.
Correspondence - From Hazel W. Waterman to the Board of Directors of the San Diego Children's Home Association. October 2, 1946.
Hazel W. Waterman clients and projects (project list).
“The San Diego Historical Society Presents: Mission Hills,” June 2, 1973.
San Diego Historical Society Newsletter (vol.13, no.5). May 1976.
Biographical notes.
Waterman interview. January 14, 1971.
Note
Oral history on Hazel W. Waterman, interviewed by Mary F. Ward. January 14, 1971.
Scope and Content Note
“San Diego's Favorite Flap: Old Town,” by Dave Smith. Los Angeles Times. Sunday, May 29, 1977.
San Diego history (article).
“The Garden Apartments of California: Irving J. Gill, Architect,” by E.M. Roorbach. The Architectural Record. December 1913.
“New Ideas About Concrete Floors,” by Irving J. Gill. Sunset Magazine.
“The Figure of the House,” by Hazel W. Waterman. The Federation. January 1921.
“On My Friend's Porch,” by Hazel W. Waterman. The House Beautiful. September 1902.
“The Influence of an Olden Time,” by Hazel W. Waterman. The House Beautiful. June 1903.
“A Granite Cottage in California,” by Hazel W. Waterman. The House Beautiful. March 1902.
“Views Alone Worth the Visit,” article mentions Hazel W. Waterman. March 1910.
“A Home for Children,” by Matilda Hunt.
Correspondence - From Mrs. George W. Marston. December 12, 1913.
Scope and Content Note
“The Influence of an Olden Time,” by Hazel W. Waterman. The House Beautiful. June 1903.
Correspondence - From Mrs. Caroline Darling to the State Board of Architects. December 27, 1913.
Scope and Content Note
Correspondence - From Mrs. N.I. Lawson to the State Board of Architecture. December 27, 1913.
Scope and Content Note
Correspondence - From the California State Board of Architecture to Hazel W. Waterman. January 30, 1914; October 20, 1914.
Correspondence - From Mrs. Alice Pratt to Hazel W. Waterman. July 23 (year?).
Correspondence - From Julis Wangenheim, President, Southern Syndicate of First National Bank Building, San Diego, to Hazel W. Waterman. March 12, 1920.
Correspondence - From the editor of House & Garden, to Hazel W. Waterman. May 25, 1920.
Correspondence - “A City Garden in Southern California,” by Hazel W. Waterman. House & Garden. August 1920.
“Reflections on La Jolla by the Humanities Classes, La Jolla,” by Betty Morrison. Copyright 1974.
“La Jolla: the Jewel City.” Union Title Insurance & Trust Company, San Diego. 1954.
Children's Home Administration Building - Photograph.
Hazel W. Waterman project negatives - Photograph.
Hazel W. Waterman portrait - Photograph.
Estudillo House, San Diego - Photograph.
Portrait and projects - Photographs.
Hazel W. Waterman[?] - Photograph.
Wednesday Club - Photographs.
Estudillo House - Photograph.
Children's Home Administration Building - Photograph.
Hazel W. Waterman portrait - Photograph.
“Distinguished Generation of Women Architects in California,” H. Rochlin article for AIA Journal.
Scope and Content Note
Ms. article, edited copy (contemporary).
Ms. article, 1st draft.
“A Generation of California Women Architects.” AIA Journal.
Scope and Content Note
Early draft Cloethiel Woodward Smith.
“A Generation of California Women Architects.” AIA Journal.
Scope and Content Note
Designed by Julia Morgan, as edited by Morgan North.
“Reconstructing Julia Morgan,” Ms. (with notes). Comments by Allan Temko.
L.M. Riggs rough.
“Women Design Space: Preview of a Major Museum Exhibition.” Ms.. 1963.
“Designed by Julia Morgan.” by H. Rochlin. Westways. March 1976.
Bought by Ms. for reprint.
Note
“Found Women in Architecture,” by H. Rochlin (title page and introduction).
“A Distinguished Generation of Women Architects in California” by H. Rochlin. AIA Journal. August 1977.
“The Missing Record,” H. Rochlin article for Los Angeles Times (unpublished)
Unpublished article by H. Rochlin.
Contemporary Women Architects
General Background--Articles, Clippings, etc.
Factors in the Career Choices of Women in Environmental 1 Design Fields.” Rosario Hodgson, Department of Architecture, Univ. of Oregon, Eugene.
“The Education of Women Architects: Performance and Self-Concept.” Rosario Hodgson, University of Oregon. June 9, 1977.
Correspondence: to H. Rochlin from The Association of Women in Architecture. March 1976.
“A Library's History of U.S. Women.”
“Architecture on a Human Scale: Joan Goody's Innovative Designs Give a Small-Town Feel to Urban Space,” by Barbaralee Diamondstein. Ms.. October 1986
“Women and Success,” by Sonya Rudikoff. Commentary. October 1974.
“A Diamond in Architecture: Old Problems, New Ideas,” by Leon Whiteson. Los Angeles Times.
Exhibit notice from College of Environmental Design, Berkeley. “CED 1: Emerging Firms: Graduates of the '70's.” May 1986.
“Architecture is Still a No-Woman's Land: Margo Hebald-Heymann vs. Boys' Club,” by Leon Whiteson. Los Angeles Times.
“Liberation from Liberation,” by William Raspberry. Los Angeles Times. December 31, 1976.
“City Women: It's Risky Out There: Feminist Planners at UCLA Call for Safer Urban Public Places,” by Ann Japenga. Los Angeles Times. May 8, 1985.
“'Women Film-Makers' at Museum.” December 31, 1976.
A Statistical Portrait of Women in the U.S. Compiled by the U.S. Department of Commerce Bureau of the Census. Issued April 1976.
Occupational Outlook Handbook (Excerpts). U.S. Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics. 1976-77.
Scope and Content Note
Correspondence: between H. Rochlin and Rosario F. Hodgdon, University of Oregon School of Architecture and Allied Arts, Department of Architecture. May-June 1977.
Progressive Architecture. March 1977. (“Women in Architecture” issue).
Women's Architectural and Professional Organizations. June 30, 1975.
Scope and Content Note
“Architects Make Discrimination Against Women a Violation of Professional Ethics.” AIA News. February 23, 1976.
Affirmative Action Plan for the Integration of Women in the Architectural Profession and the AIA. Task force report submitted December 1975.
Status of Women in the Architectural Profession. A publication of the AIA task force report. February, 1975.
The AIA: Description of Memberships / The AIA: Its Chapters and State Organizations.
AIA Journal. July, 1976. Letters to the editor re the AIA affirmative action program for women.
Archive of Women in Architecture. From the Architectural League of New York. December, 1975.
Correspondence: to H. Rochlin from Judith Paine, Administrator, Archive of Women in Architecture. December 4, 1975.
Scope and Content Note
“AIA Implementing Affirmative Action Program for Women in Architecture.” F.W. Dodge Construction News. June 4, 1976.
“Living in a Dream World--and Losing.” Ellen Goodman. Also, “For Those Too Busy to Save the World.” Valerie Stevenson.
AWA News. The Association of Women in Architecture's newsletter. January and February 1977.
Participants Exposition: Non-Graphic Section. “Women and Minorities in Design.” University of Nebraska. March 25, 1975.
The American Architects Directory (Excerpts); women architects.
“UCLA Grad Students Get Architectural Study Grants.” Western Building Design. May 1975.
Brochure / membership information: Organization of Women Architects. ca. 1975.
“Women in Architecture.” Forum. September 1972. Ellen Perry Berkeley.
Modern Social Reforms: Solving Today's Social Problems. 1974, “Women and the Man-Made Environment.” Ellen Perry Berkeley.
“AIA Flocks to San Francisco in Record Numbers to Enjoy Convention and City.” December 1974.
AIA brochure: “The New Architect.” March, 1975.
“Archive of Women in Architecture.” From The Architectural League of New York.
“Women Artists: 1550-1950,” by Henry J. Seldis. Los Angeles Times. January 2, 1977.
“Women Artists: 1550-1950.” Exhibit at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. December 1976-March 1977.
“Building His Career Was a Snap: Architectural Photographer Launched Profession in '36,” by Sam Hall Kaplan. Los Angeles Times. September 11, 1985.
“Women's Caucus Hears Scheeler on AIA Plans.” F.W. Dodge Construction News. June 4, 1976.
Notes on AIA / Affirmative Action. 1976.
“AIA Finds Sex Discrimination in Architecture,” by John Betz. Los Angeles Times. February 8, 1976.
“AIA Finds Sex Discrimination in Architecture,” by John Betz. Los Angeles Times. February 8, 1976.
AIA Memo. May 27, 1976.
“Architects Make Discrimination Against Women a Violation of Professional Ethics.” The AIA Affirmative Action Plan. May, 1976.
Resolutions in the AIA Affirmative Action Program.
“The Role of Women in Architecture,” by Andrea O. Dean. AIA Journal. March 1975.
“Lawmakers Thrash Out an Agenda: Meat Loaf and Meatier Issues Occupy Forum for Women.” Los Angeles Times. December 8, 1983.
Affirmative Action Plan for the Integration of Women in the Profession and the AIA (Chart).
“NCAIA Affirmative Action Plan Statistical Data.” From the Northern California Chapter of th AIA.
“Affirmative Action: Is It All That Affirmative?” by Margaret Kilgore. Los Angeles Times. February 1, 1976.
Correspondence: from the National Trust for Historic Preservation. July-August 1975.
“Books: Selda, Lilia, Ursa, Great Gram, and Other Ladies in Distress.” The New Yorker. August 18, 1975.
“New Female Value System Throws the Men,” by Georgie Anne Geyer. Los Angeles Times.
“Congressional Widows: Beyond Their Husbands' Footsteps,” by Marlene Cimons. Los Angeles Times. February 12, 1976.
Women and Minorities in Environmental Design (1975 Teacher's Seminar). University of Nebraska.
Scope and Content Note
Transcript: An Address to the 1975 Teachers' Seminar by Robert Traynham Coles (AIA, Deputy Vice-President for Minority Affairs). Lincoln, Nebraska. March 26, 1975.
Minority affairs and the AIA.
Forum. December 1969, “Women in Architecture.” Beatrice Dinerman.
“How AIA Acguired It's First Woman Member, Mrs. Louise Bethune,” by George E. Pettengill. AIA Journal. March, 1975.
“The Board Acts on the Role of Women in Architecture,” by Andrea O. Dean. AIA Journal. March 1975.
The Women's School of Planning & Architecture. Summer Session. 1975.
Societies for women architects.
“A Thousand Women in Architecture: Part II.” Architectural Record. June 1948.
“A Thousand Women in Architecture: Part I.” Architectural Record. March 1948.
Correspondence re Ms. article. 1975-1976.
“Four Fine Fellows.” AIA Journal. September 1969.
“Energy and the Built Environment.” Bimonthly report, a service of the Energy Opportunities Notebook, an AIA publication.
AIA publications price list and order form. May 1975.
“The Economic Benefits of Preserving Older Buildings” (Program). Seattle conference. May 2, 1975.
“Art by Women.” An index of works in public collections. 1975.
Minutes from the first meeting of Washington Women Architects. June 17, 1975.
AWA News. September-October 1975.
Scope and Content Note
AWA brochure and membership form.
“Women in Engineering.” Sam Merrill.
“Brief Highlights of Major Federal Laws and Order on Sex Discrimination.” U.S. Department of Labor, Employment Standards, Women's Bureau. June 1974.
Federal Register (vol.36, no.234). U.S. Department of Labor, Office of Federal Contract Compliance, Equal Employment Opportunity, Department of Labor. December 4, 1976.
“Design Occupations-Architects.” Occupational Outlook Handbook. 1974-1975.
Contributors to Design and Environment. “Women in Design.” Spring 1974.
Design and Environment, “Women in Design.” Spring 1974.
Scope and Content Note
“Information on Women in Design.” Design and Environment. spring 1974.
“The Middle-Class Minority,” by Neil Kleinman. Design and Environment. Spring 1974.
“Race and Class,” by Frances Piven. Design and Environment. Spring 1974.
“Red Letter Countdown,” by Kathleen Agena. Design and Environment. spring 1974.
“Women--Thwarts and All,” by Ann Ferebee. Design and Environment. Spring 1974.
“Women in Design,” by Janet Vrchota. Design and Environment. Spring 1974.
Contemporary Women Architects
Spring Conferences co-sponsored by the Feminist Studio Workshop. March 20-30, 1975.
List/Women AIA Fellow.
AIA Staff telephone list. June 1975 and additional notes on names and phone numbers.
Notes on women architects.
“Some American Women Architects Today,” October 4-November 20, 1975 at the Long Beach Museum of Art.
“Women in Design: The Next Decade” March 20 & 21 at the Womans Building in L.A.
Positive/Negative implications of married architectural partners.
American Architects Directory listing for Joan de Ris Alle.
Nomination for Fellowship, AIA, Natalie G. de Blois.
Curriculum Vitae - Peggy Cochrane Bowman. June 1975.
“8 Robert Venturi “Denise Scott Brown.”
Nomination for Fellowship, AIA, Elizabeth S. Close.
Nomination for Fellowship, AIA, Elisabeth Coit.
Nomination for Fellowship, AIA, Betty Lou Custer.
Obituary for Jean R. Driskel. AIA Journal. November 1971.
American Architects Directory, entry for Eva Marie Dubnoff.
“Three Exceptional Women,” by Ursula Cliff. Design and Environment. Spring 1974 (Harkness, Howell, and Handler).
Brief biography Of Sarah P. Harkness (AIA Regional Director). New England. December 1973.
Nomination for Fellowship, AIA, Victorine du Pont Homsey.
Nomination for Fellowship, AIA, Gertrude L.P. Kerbis.
Nomination for Fellowship, AIA, Ellamae Ellis League
Nomination for Fellowship, AIA, Lillian Scott Leenhouts
Nomination for Fellowship, AIA, Willis & Lillian S. Leenhouts
“Levin Gives New Lease on Life to Landmarks.” Leon Whiteson.
Los Angeles Times. July 2, 1989.
Memo from Maureen Marx, AIA, National Chapter on women nominees.
Nomination for Fellowship, AIA, Marian Manley.
Nomination for Fellowship, AIA, Eleanor Raymond.
Article on Eleanor Raymond projects. (source?)
Margot Siegal, AIA Biography & Resumé.
Nomination for Fellowship, AIA, Chloethiel Woodward Smith.
Letter to H. Rochlin from Helen G. Kaspar, Administrative Assistant to Chloethiel Woodard Smith. April 19, 1976.
Virginia Ward Tanzmann, AIA Resumé.
Nomination for Fellowship, AIA, Elizabeth Thompson.
Nomination for Fellowship, AIA, Anne Griswold Tyng.
Nomination for Fellowship, AIA, Anne Griswold Tyng (Brief).
Subjects for H. Rochlin Article
Judy Edelman
Biography - Judith Edelman, AIA.
C.V. - Judith Edelman.
“AIA Task Force on Women in Architecture,” 29 October 1975.
Correspondence from Judith Edelman to H. Rochlin. 29 October and 6 November 1975.
American Architects Directory, entry for Judith Edelman.
Reclamation of the Gravyards, St. Mark's Church-in-the-Boweries (Judith Edelman).
Portrait photograph, Architect Judith Edelman, AIA, partner in Edelman & Salzman, Architects, New York City.
Photograph - Claremont Gardens; Low & Moderate Income Housing, Ossining, New York. Judith Edelman, architect.
Photograph - Nine-G Cooperative Apartments - low and moderate income housing, Judith Edelman, architect.
Notes on Judith Edelman.
Photograph - Nine-G Cooperative Apartments, Judith Edelman, architect.
Photograph - Claremont Gardens, Judith Edelman, architect.
Lynne Paxton
Lynne Paxton, AIA, brochure.
Lynne Paxton Biography.
Portrait, L. Paxton, Los Angeles Times.
Portrait photograph: L. Paxton, AIA, President of Lynne Paxton, A.I.>, Incorporated Architects, Santa Monica, California.
Resumé.
Photograph - The Observatory Nightclub, Marina Del Rey, California, Lynne Paxton, architect.
Photograph - 94th Aero Squadron Restaurant, Denver, Van Nuys, San Jose, Costa Mesa.
Photograph - The Claremont Depot (restaurant), Claremont, California.
News Release, Quiet Cannon, Dana Point.
Los Angeles Times Article. Claremont Depot. January 10, 1971.
94th Aero Squadron, Article.
94th Aero Squadron, Denver, Van Nuys, San Jose, Costa Mesa.
The Hungry Tiger Restaurant, Marina del Rey.
Photograph - The Observatory Nighclub, Marina del Rey, California.
Hungry Tiger Restaurant, Marina Del Rey.
Quiet Cannon Restaurant, Dana Point - Photograph.
Hungry Tiger Restaurant, Marina del Rey - Photograph.
Hungry Tiger, San Mateo.
Project resumé.
Building architect photo, Monica Hotel Remodeling - Photograph.
Photograph - The Observatory night club. Lynne Paxton, architect.
Photograph - 94th Aero Squadron Restaurant, Lynne Paxton, architect.
Open Design Office
Members of Open Design office, from Archive.
Open Design Office, H. Rochlin questions, O.D.O. answers. October 21, 1975.
Scope and Content Note
Open Design Office correspondence and brochure.
Query letter to Ms.. July 24, 1975, H. Rochlin to Harriet Lyons.
Composite photograph - Open Design Office.
Article: Open Design Office - Cambridge, Massachusetts. Source[?].
Letter from Open Design Office, Design and Environment. n.d.
Photograph - Open Design office.
Patricia Swan
Resumé.
Letter/Biography, to H. Rochlin. November 11, 1975 (father was an architect).
Pat Swan, SOM, Associate Partner (brief) resumé with photograph.
Photograph - Oxford Square, Calgary, Albert, Canada, Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, Architects; Patricia Swan, Design Associate.
Photograph - Denver Square, Denver, Colorado. Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, architects. Patrician W. Swan, Design Associate.
Photograph - Phoenix Center, Phoenix, AZ. Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, architects. Patricia Swan, Design Associate.
Photograph - Denver Square, Denver, Colorado. Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, architects. Patricia Swan, Design Associate.
Photograph - New York State University College, Oswego, New York. Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, architects. Patricia Swan, Design Associate.
Photograph - Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, Atlanta, Georgia. Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, architects. Patricia Swan, Design Associate.
Photograph - Mount Sinai Medical Center, Annenberg Pavilion, New York City. Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, architects. Patricia Swan, Design Associate.
Photos: University Meditation Center and Chapel (interior and exterior). Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, architects. Patricia Swan, Design Associate.
Photograph - Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, New York. Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, architects. Patricia Swan, Design Associate.
Portait photograph: Patricia Swan, AIA, associate partner, Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, New York City.
Denver Square, SOM; Pat Swan, photograph.
Patricia Swan, H.R. Notes.
Photograph - Patricia Swan, AIA.
Photograph - Denver Suqare, Denver, Colorado, Patricia Swan, architect.
Photograph - Oxford Square, Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Patricia Swan, architect.
Cloethiel Woodard Smith
Cloethiel Woodard Smith projects.
Scope and Content Note
“Everyday Places, Open, and Closed,” by Cloethiel Woodard Smith.
Listing: Cloethiel Woodard Smith in Who's Who?
American Architects Directory, Smith Cloethiel Woodard.
Cloethiel Woodard Smith, response to questionnaire.
Correspondence: Cloethiel Woodard Smith and H. Rochlin. July 1975.
Notes on interview with Cloethiel Woodard Smith by H. Rochlin.
Chestnut Lodge Mental Hospital, Rockville, Maryland.
Chestnut Lodge Mental Hospital, Rockville, Maryland.
Cloethiel Woodard Smith (photographs).
Photograph - Harbor Square, Washington, D.C. Cloethiel Woodard Smith.
Cloethiel Woodard Smith & Associates.
Photograph - model of Harbor Square Co-op Apartments, Washington, D.C.
Photograph - Capitol Park, Washington, D.C. (urban community for 4,000 apartments, townhouses, recreational facilities).
Photograph - Blake Building, Washington, D.C.
Cloethiel Woodard Smith.
Beverly Willis
Biographical Data
Resumé.
Brief biography.
Brochures/PR
Correspondence to H. Rochlin from Sylvia Freeman, Willis & Associates.
Correspondence from H. Rochlin. July 30, 1975.
San Francisco Examiner. March 15/70, B. Willis receives P.A. Hearst Award.
CCAIA Memorandum October 11, 1977, B. Willis, Vice-President, Designate.
Aliamanu Housing Project Report.
“Everyone Needs a Corner of the World.” National Observer. November 13, 1976.
B. Willis, business card and professional folder.
PR release: Willis & Associates, computer technology.
“Architect Goes Easy on Bulldozer.” The Washington Post. September 27, 1975.
Fact sheet: Willis & Associates, Incorporated.
Reprint from The Architectural Forum. April 1973.
Project description. Diamond Heights.
“Notes on Humanism - Changing Attitudes.” by B. Willis.
Brochure: CARLA. Willis & Associates, Incorporated.
After Dark, August 1974. Beverly Willis profile.
“Aliamanu Army-Navy Housing.” Military Sun Press. August 13, 1975.
PR Release: Willis & Associates, Housing in the Mideast.
Newsletter: Willis & Associates.
Letter on CARLA & Beverly Willis.
PR Release: Willis & Associates. Hillside development with CARLA.
Brochure: CARLA, Willis & Associates.
Computer and Design reprint. May 1974.
“Coffins-in-the-sky Decried.” Honolulu Advertiser. August 7, 1975.
“What Makes Beverly Run.” California Living. February 14, 1971.
Brochure: Willis and Associates, Incorporated.
Projects
Pacific Point, B. Willis, architect.
Vine Terrace, B. Willis, architect.
Photos
Photograph - B. Willis AIA.
Photograph - Diamond Heights, B. Willis, architect.
Photograph - Vine Terrace, B. Willis, architect.
Site plan: Aliamanu Valley Homes, Beverly Willis, architect.
Photograph - B. Willis portrait.
Photograph - B. Willis portrait.
Photograph - B. Willis portrait.
Photograph - Diamond Heights Townhouse, B. Willis, architect.
Photograph - Vine Terrace, B. Willis, architect.
Photograph - site plan, Aliamanu Homes, B. Willis, architect.
Photograph - B. Willis portrait.
Oral Interviews
H. Rochlin questionnaire for B. Willis interview.
B. Willis interviewed by H. Rochlin. October 23, 1975.
Margaret Young
Resumé: Margaret Zirkel Young, AIA.
Photograph - River Plaza, Chicago, Illinois. Gordon/Levin & Associates, architects. Margaret Young, manager.
Project description and photograph: River Plaza. Margaret Young, architect.
The Urban Land Institute Project Reference File: Newberry Plaza, Chicago.
“Architect Margaret Young Reaching Goal: Supervising Newberry Plaza Project.” Dodge Donstruction News. January 16, 1973.
Photograph - Margaret Z. Young in front of Newberry Plaza, Chicago, Illinois. November 1972.
Photograph - Margaret Z. Young.
Correspondence: to H. Rochlin from Margaret Young, AIA. November 10, 1975.
Ezra Gordon/Jack M. Levin & Associates, Architects. Margaret Young, associate.
Photograph - Newberry Plaza, Chicago, Illinois. Ezra Gordon/Jack M. Levin & Associates, architects.
Project description and photograph: Newberry Plaza. Margaret Young, architect.
“Shadows on the Landscape” project description and history.
Scope and Content Note
Photograph and project description: “Greenwood Park in Lake Village.” Margaret Young, Project Manager.
Correspondence: to H. Rochlin from Margaret Young. October 31, 1975.
“Moderate Housing with “More Appeal than Price'.” Chicago Today. February 7, 1971.
“Urban Renewal Project Under Way on South Side.” Chicago Tribune. April 12, 1979.
Correspondence: between H. Rochlin and Margaret Young. October, 1977.
H. Rochlin Published Article On Contemporary Women Architects
“From High Rises to Restaurants,” by H. Rochlin. Ms..
“Found Women in Architecture,” by H. Rochlin.
Scope and Content Note