Carleton
Winslow,
Sr
., who is known for his work on the Panama-California Exposition of 1915 in San Diego, the Los Angeles Public Library headquarters
building, as well as churches and residences in Southern California and Santa Barbara.
Restrictions on Use and Reproduction
Carleton
Winslow,
Sr
. Papers, Special Collections, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo.
Carleton Monroe
Winslow,
Sr
. was born in Damariscotta, Maine, on December 27, 1876, the son of Edwin and Clara Winslow. He studied architecture at the
Art Institute of Chicago and did additional coursework at the École des Beaux Arts in Paris. He married Helen Hume in New
York in 1910. They had a son, Carleton Winslow, Jr., in 1919.
Carleton
Winslow,
Sr
. The collection is comprised of personal and professional correspondence in Box 1, project files and photographs in Box 2,
and oversized project drawings housed in one flat file. The collection includes correspondence from World War I, the 1920s
and early 1930s, with the bulk of records dating from 1935 to 1945.
Carleton
Winslow,
Sr
., from his hospital bed in 1944, to his son Carleton, Jr., and letters from Carleton, Jr. to his mother and father when he
was deployed in the Pacific during World War II.
Carleton
Winslow,
Sr
. and Carleton Jr. were found in the same client file, the work by Carleton Jr. was extracted and placed in the more extensive
Carleton Winslow, Jr. Collection.
Carleton
Winslow,
Sr
. designed Cottage Hospital and residences like the Bliss House. In San Marino, he designed a Spanish style, studio residence
for portrait painter Adolf Muller-Ury, for which there is correspondence in the collection. There is also a publicity list
of Carleton Winslow's work, dated 1921 and 1924, and an invitation list, which includes colleagues and clients.
Carleton
Winslow,
Sr
. Papers are housed in 2 boxes and one flat file. It is divided into four series: