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Finding Aid for the Maynard Lyndon papers, circa 1929-circa 1980 0000155
0000155  
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Collection Details
 
Table of contents What's This?
  • Access
  • Custodial History note
  • Preferred Citation note
  • Biographical/Historical note
  • Scope and Content note

  • Title: Maynard Lyndon papers
    Identifier/Call Number: 0000155
    Contributing Institution: Architecture and Design Collection, Art, Design & Architecture Museum
    Language of Material: English
    Physical Description: 70.0 Linear feet (30 boxes and 10 flat file drawers)
    Date (inclusive): circa 1929-circa 1980
    creator: Lyndon, Maynard, 1907-1999

    Access

    Partially processed collection, open for use by qualified researchers.

    Custodial History note

    Gift of Donlyn and Maynard Hale Lyndon, 2000.

    Preferred Citation note

    Maynard Lyndon papers, Architecture and Design Collection. Art, Design & Architecture Museum; University of California, Santa Barbara.

    Biographical/Historical note

    Maynard Lyndon was born in Detroit Michigan on September 6, 1907. In 1928, he graduated from the University of Michigan, with his Bachelor’s degree in Architecture. Right out of school, Lyndon got a job working as a draftsman for Albert Kahn in Detroit. Two years later Lyndon left Kahn’s firm and begun to work for N. O. Gould as a designer, a job he held until 1933. From 1933-1935, Maynard Lyndon worked as a designing architect and site planner for the department of the interior in Washington, D.C. During this time, Lyndon designed museums and administration units. In 1935, Lyndon went into practice with the engineer Eberle Smith. The firm of Lyndon and Smith, is credited with designing the first modern school in the United States, in Northville, Michigan in 1936. During seven years of practice, Smith and Lyndon completed thirty schools and two public housing projects. In 1942, when Smith and Lyndon’s firm dissolved, Lyndon started an independent practice in Los Angeles. His projects consisted primarily of educational buildings and hospitals. In 1973, both Lyndon and his wife moved to Kusseberg, Germany. Over the course of his career however, his more notable projects include: the 28th Church of Christ, Scientist in Los Angeles, Bunche Hall at the University of California, Los Angeles, Northville Elementary School, and Vista Elementary School. Maynard Lyndon died at the age of 92 on November 15, 1999.

    Scope and Content note

    The Maynard Lyndon collection spans 70 linear feet and dates from circa 1929 to circa 1980. The collection consists of black-and-white photographs organized by project or subject, glass-plate negatives, correspondence, travel sketches, newspaper and magazine clippings, architectural drawings and reprographic copies, as well as presentation boards.

    Subjects and Indexing Terms

    Lyndon, Maynard, 1907-1999
    Architectural drawings
    Correspondence
    Negatives
    Photographic prints
    Presentation drawings (proposals)
    Reprographic copies
    Sketches