Raymond M. Kennedy
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Raymond McCormick Kennedy | |
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Raymond McCormick Kennedy (1891–1976) was the guiding light and architect of the
Early life
Raymond McCormick Kennedy was born in New Brighton, Pennsylvania, in 1891 to Thomas and Geneva Kennedy. He graduated from Cornell University in 1915 at the top of his class with a Bachelor's degree in Architecture for which he received the American Institute of Architects Medal for General Excellence in Architecture. At this time he was also awarded the John Plaut Fellowship which paid for his return to Cornell for post graduate work. In 1916 Kennedy earned his Master's in Architecture at Cornell. Upon his completion of this degree he was awarded the Rome Prize Scholarship in Architecture.[3] This coveted prize entitled the recipient to three years of resident study at the Academy in Rome and included a stipend to cover expenses. His studies in Italy were interrupted by World War I. He volunteered to serve for the American Red Cross of Italy. This service delayed his studies in Rome for a year. While in Rome he completed several classically styled projects and in 1920 he was awarded the Diploma as a Fellow of the American Academy in Rome.
Kennedy returned from his studies in Italy in 1920. He obtained his first employment with the firm of York and Sawyer in New York City. However, the prevailing architectural design philosophy of this firm gave Kennedy no opportunity to express his creative and artistic talents. Subsequently Kennedy had a more rewarding design opportunity with the Greenley firm in New York.
Meyer & Holler
His employment was to be short lived however since in 1920 Kennedy accepted the position of architectural designer within the "design and build" firm of
Selected buildings
- First Church Christian Scientists, Los Angeles
- First Church Christian Scientists, Glendale
- Fox Theatre (Fullerton), Fullerton
- Grauman's Chinese Theater, Hollywood
- Hollywood National Building, Hollywood
- International Mart Building, Los Angeles
- Ocean Center Building, Long Beach
- Petroleum Securities Building, Los Angeles
- Quinby Office Building, Los Angeles
- Twenty Sixth Church of Christian Scientists, Los Angeles
Grauman's Chinese Theater
The
Kennedy's design of the theater displayed his classical, sophisticated training and his exuberant use of color and unique styles. Kennedy, along with fellow architect
University of Southern California
Kennedy left the defunct firm of Meyer & Holler and secured a teaching position at the
Post USC
His teaching work at U.S.C. was interrupted during September and October 1941 when he left to be a Consulting Architect on the design of the future Pentagon in Washington, D.C.
At the completion of his employment at the University of Southern California in 1942, Kennedy again became active in strictly architectural work. This activity was divided between the offices of Robert E. Bennett of Pasadena and William H. Harrison of Los Angeles. In association with these two firms, Kennedy worked on many other projects including libraries, schools, a city hall, and a chapel.
Kennedy retired at the age of 69 in 1960. During his retirement years Kennedy enthusiastically pursued his many hobbies of model railroads, woodworking, travel, photography, painting and writing. He was an avid reader with a romantic appreciation of poetry and music.
At the age of 85, on May 11, 1976, Kennedy died leaving his wife Myrtle, two sons, Raymond Kennedy Jr., Thomas Kennedy, and a multitude of aesthetically pleasing and functional buildings in Southern California.
References
- ^ http://skyscraperpage.com/cities/?buildingID=2695 Ocean Center Building
- ^ Raymond McCormick Kennedy
- ^ Fellows American Academy of Rome (1919) Archived 2007-07-01 at the Wayback Machine