- Mary Almy - Wikipedia
Almy worked as a drafter at a London based architectural firm called Collcutt and Hamp, for two years In the 1920s, she became a drafter for the Boston firm owned by Lois Lilley Howe and Eleanor Manning, who had also attended MIT
- Records of Howe, Manning Almy, Inc. and the papers of Lois Lilley . . .
Howe, Manning Almy, Inc was an American architectural firm in Boston, Massachusetts that was formed in 1926 by three women, all graduates of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Featured Special Collection: Howe, Manning Almy papers
A third MIT alumna, Mary Almy, joined them in 1926 The architectural firm that grew into Howe, Manning Almy is believed to be the first architectural firm in Boston founded by women and the second in the United States
- A Woman-Owned Firm - History Cambridge
In 1926, “The Firm,” as it came to be known, was rounded out with the addition of Mary Almy, another Cambridge native who had come to architecture as a career in her mid-30s For nearly forty years, Howe and later her associates operated one of the nation’s only woman-owned architectural firms
- Almy, Mary – BWAF Dynamic National Archive
After graduating she worked as a drafter at a London-based architectural firm called Collcut and Hamp for two years In the 1920s, she became a drafter for the Boston firm owned by Louis Howe and Eleanor Manning who had also attended MIT
- Mary Almy (1407-1712-1), Architect
The firm's specialty was domestic architecture -- robust, graceful and typically American houses -- but the women also designed commercial spaces, professional clubs and public housing
- Mary Almy (1883 — 1967) | World Biographical Encyclopedia
After graduation she worked as a drafter at a London based architectural firm called Collcut and Hamp, for two years In the 1920s she became a drafter for the Boston firm owned by Lois Lilley Howe and Eleanor Manning, who had also attended Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Records of Howe, Manning and Almy, Inc. and the papers of Lois . . . - Dome
The collection also includes personal papers of the three architects including illustrated travel diaries, watercolors, sketchbooks, and architectural scrapbooks
|