Birge Clark

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Birge Malcolm Clark (18931989) was an American architect, called “Palo Alto's best-loved architect” by the Palo Alto Weekly; he worked largely in the Spanish Colonial Revival style.[1] He was the son of Arthur B. Clark, a professor of art and architecture at Stanford and the first mayor of Mayfield, California, later part of Palo Alto.[2]

Clark was born April 16, 1893, in the Women’s and Children’s Hospital in San Francisco, California, though his birth certificate was destroyed in the San Francisco earthquake. He graduated from Palo Alto High School in 1910, and from Stanford University in 1914. He served as an observation balloon pilot in World War I; he was shot down by a German pilot and won the Silver Star for gallantry. He was married to the former Lucile Townley, daughter of Stanford mathematician and astronomer Sidney D. Townley for sixty-three years, until her death in 1986. His principal architectural works at Stanford are the Lou Henry Hoover House (assisting his father), now the residence of the university president, the three John Stauffer laboratories (1960’s), and the Seeley G. Mudd Chemistry Building (1977). His principal works in Palo Alto include the old police and fire station (now the senior citizen’s center), the Lucie Stern Community Center, the President Hotel, the Palo Alto Post Office, the Palo Alto Medical Clinic,[3], and much of the 500 block of Ramona Street.[4]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Palo Alto Online: Birge Clark: the man behind the blueprints - Palo Alto: The First 100 Years
  2. ^ Birge Clark (1893-1989)
  3. ^ “Birge: After the war.”
  4. ^ http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2003/07/05/HO183193.DTL, http://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/santaclara/ram.htm
  • Birge Clark (1982). An Architect Grows Up in Palo Alto: Memoirs of Birge M. Clark, F.A.I.A. Privately published, 158pp. 
  • “The Daring Young Men in the Tethered Balloons,” article by Frederic O. Glover, in “Sandstone and Tile,” journal of the Stanford Historical Society, Spring 1986 pp. 3–7; reprinted in An Architect Grows Up in Palo Alto,.
  • “Birge: After the war,” article by Frederic O. Glover, ibid. pp. 8–9; reprinted in An Architect Grows Up in Palo Alto,.
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