Thomas Warren Sears
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Thomas Warren Sears (December 15, 1880 - June 1966) was a noted American landscape architect.
Sears was born in Brookline, Massachusetts to Alexander Pomeroy and Elizabeth Prescott (Jones) Sears. He received his A.B. in 1903 from Harvard College, followed in 1906 by his B.S. in Landscape Architecture as a member of Harvard's first graduating class in the field. After establishing an office in Providence, Rhode Island, Sears moved to Philadelphia and by 1917 had begun his own practice there, where he remained for the rest of his career.
[edit] Selected landscapes
- Mt. Cuba Center
- Reynolda Gardens
- Scott Outdoor Auditorium, Swarthmore College
[edit] References
- Ruth Dean, The Livable House: Its Garden, 1917
- Thomas W. Sears, Architecture and Design, September 1941 and November 1953.
This article about an American engineer, inventor or industrial designer is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |