Robert D. Farquhar
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Robert David Farquhar (23 February 1872 – 6 December 1967) was an architect working in California from 1905 to 1940.


Early life

Farquhar was born in Brooklyn, the son of David Webber Farquhar (1844–1905) and Sarah Malvina Joslyn. He attended Phillips Exeter Academy, Phillips Exeter and Harvard University, Harvard (class of 1893). Farquhar completed an architectural degree at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1893–1895), and then attended École des Beaux-Arts in Paris (1896–1901), where he organized the 1897 École des Beaux-Arts vs. Académie Julian football game, first ever American football game played in Europe. He returned to New York and worked in the office of Hunt & Hunt, and of Carrère and Hastings.


Los Angeles practice

Farquhar moved to Los Angeles in 1905 and practised architecture there. He was appointed a member of the architectural commission of the Panama-Pacific International Exposition (1915), Panama-Pacific Exposition, held in San Francisco in 1915, and designed Festival Hall. He went to Italy with the American Red Cross in 1918, and re-opened his office in Los Angeles in 1919. The Southern California Chapter of the American Institute of Architects awarded Farquhar its Distinguished Honor Award for the William Andrews Clark Mausoleum, and Certificates of Honor for the design of the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library and the California Club. He worked with chief architect George Bergstrom, George Edwin Bergstrom on design of the The Pentagon, Pentagon in 1941. The archives of his architectural studies and drawings are maintained at the University of California, Los Angeles, UCLA Department of Special Collections. Image:PostcardSanFranciscoCAPanPacificExpoFestivalHall1915.jpg, Festival Hall, 1915 Image:Tomb william a clark jr.jpg, William Andrews Clark, Jr. Mausoleum, 1920 Image:ParamourMansion.jpg, Canfield-Moreno Estate, 1923 Image:clark main.jpg, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library, 1924 Image:California Club 1.JPG, California Club, 1930 File:Farquhar house Pasadena.jpg, House in Pasadena, 1914


Some projects


Family life

Farquhar married Marion Jones (tennis), Marion Jones (daughter of John Percival Jones) in New York City, in 1903. They had three children: David Farquhar (1904 - ), John Percival Farquhar (1912 - ) and Colin Farquhar (1913 - ). The family lived first in Santa Monica, then moved to Pasadena in 1929. Farquhar retired in 1953 and lived with his half brother Francis P. Farquhar in Berkeley, California, Berkeley.''Robert D. Farquhar; Retired Architect'', Obituary, Los Angeles Times, December 8, 1967, p. 28


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Farquhar, Robert David 1872 births 1967 deaths American neoclassical architects Beaux Arts architects Mediterranean Revival architects Spanish Revival architects Architects from Pasadena, California American alumni of the École des Beaux-Arts Harvard University alumni MIT School of Architecture and Planning alumni Phillips Exeter Academy alumni 20th-century American architects