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side_sponsors.php
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The AIA gratefully
acknowledges the following sponsors of our 150th Anniversary
celebration:
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Founders Circle: $1,000,000:
McGraw-Hill Construction,
Official Media
Sponsor
Autodesk,
Official Software Sponsor |
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Year Awarded: 1925
Born: April 28, 1869;
Pomfret, Connecticut
Died: 1924;
New York City
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1924: Nebraska State Capitol, Lincoln, Neb.
1924: Los Angeles Public Library, Los Angeles
1924: National Academy of Sciences Building
1920: Rockefeller Chapel, University of Chicago,
Chicago
1920: Oahu College and Kamehameha School, Honolulu
1917: Grolier Club Library, New York City
1915: El Prado Quadrangle, Balboa Park, San Diego
1914: Virginia Military Institute, Lexington, Va.
1913: Hotel Washington, Colon, Panama
1909: First Baptist Church, Pittsburgh
1906: Chapel and original campus, U.S. Military Academy,
West Point, N.Y.
1904: Grace Church Chapel, Chicago
1902: Hunt Memorial Library, Nashua, N.H.
1892: All Saints' Church, Ashmont, Mass. Biography
Bertram Goodhue was home-schooled by his mother until he was 11
years old. He then attended Russell's Collegiate and Military
Institute, completing his education at the age of 15. In 1884 he
became an apprentice at Renwick, Aspinwall, & Russell, where he
studied with Renwick for six years.
In 1891 he won a design competition for the Cathedral Church of
Saint Matthew in Dallas. He moved to Boston and became involved
with the Society of Arts and Crafts. That year, he cofounded the
firm Cram, Wentworth, & Goodhue; in 1898 the firm became Cram,
Goodhue, & Ferguson. Goodhue revitalized Spanish Colonial
architecture through his work on plans for Balboa Park at the 1915
Panama-California Exposition in San Diego.
In 1911 Trinity College gave Goodhue an honorary degree. In 1917 he
was made a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects. Goodhue
is remembered for his innovative Neo-Gothic designs, though he is
often classified as an American Modernist for the simpler classical
design he evidenced in his later work. |
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