Irving & Gertrude Morrow Collection
Scope and Contents
The Morrow collection primarily documents the professional activities and architectural projects of Gertrude Comfort Morrow and Irving F. Morrow, including projects created by the firms of Morrow & Garren and Morrow & Morrow. The collection is organized into five series. Series I, Personal Papers, consists of resumes, awards, student works and clippings relating to both Irving and Gertrude Morrow. Series II, Professional Papers, contains records related to Irving’s involvement and membership in professional organizations such as the American Institute of Architects and the Commonwealth Club of California.
Series III, Project Records, is Arranged according to creator and chronology. It consists of photographs, correspondence, and drawings from project by Irving F. Morrow, Morrow & Garren, Gertrude Morrow, and Morrow & Morrow. Series IV consists of Irving Morrow’s Historical American Buildings Survey (HABS) records, including certificates, photographs and catalogs. The bulk of the collection was donated to the archives in 1992, however, the final series contains one drawing that was donated separately, in 1959.
Dates
- Creation: 1914 - 1958
Conditions Governing Access
Collection is open for research.
Conditions Governing Use
All requests for permission to publish, reproduce, or quote from materials in the collection should be discussed with the Curator.
Biographical / Historical
Irving F. Morrow (1884-1952)
Irving F. Morrow was born in Oakland, California in 1884. He graduated from UC Berkeley in 1906, and attended the Ecole des Beaux-Arts from 1908 to 1911.
Morrow began his practice in San Francisco and Oakland in 1916, designing schools, houses, banks, theaters, hotels, and commercial buildings. Highlights of his career include working on the Panama-Pacific International Exposition of 1915, consulting on the architecture of the Golden Gate Bridge from 1932 to 1937 (he chose its orange color), and participating in the San Francisco Golden Gate International Exposition from 1939 to 1940. He also designed the rectory and guest house of the San Juan Bautista Mission. During his career, Morrow worked for William Hays, John Galen Howard, and other Bay Area architects. He practiced with partner William I. Garren from 1916 to 1925. From 1925 until 1952, he was a partner in Morrow and Morrow with his wife Gertrude. (They married in 1920.)
Irving Morrow was a member of the American Institute of Architects and the American Society of Landscape Architects. He was the editor of Pacific Coast Architecture, San Francisco, from 1916-1919 and 1921-925, and contributed to the Architectural Record and various other periodicals. From 1930-1941 he was the chairman on the Section on Architecture of the Commonwealth Club of California. Morrow also served as the Director of the American Historical Building Survey (HABS) for California north of San Luis Obispo.
Gertrude Comfort Morrow (1888-1983)
A California native, Gertrude Comfort Morrow was born in San Francisco and attended Alameda High School. She received her bachelor’s degree in architecture from UC Berkeley in 1913, and her master’s degree a year later. As a student, she designed the Gamma Phi Beta sorority’s coat of arms in 1912. She worked for Henry H. Gutterson, supervising work in Saint Francis Wood, and on her own before partnering with her husband, Irving F. Morrow. Gertrude and Irving worked out of their San Francisco office from 1925 to 1940, closing their San Francisco office during the war. Following this closure, they continued to practice from their home in Oakland until 1952. She was the supervising architect for St. Francis Woods, a residential neighborhood in San Francisco, during World War I (under her maiden name, Gertrude E. Comfort). Other independent projects include the Women’s Athletic Club in Oakland and the music building at the Monrovian Seminary and College for Women in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. Together, Gertrude and Irving Morrow designed the Alameda-Contra Costa County Building for the 1939 Golden Gate International Exposition at Treasure Island. Gertrude retired from architecture in 1952, when Irving died. She then became an award-winning ballroom dancer and a landscape watercolorist, and died in Tucson at the age of 95.
Extent
15 Linear Feet: (5 document boxes, 2 flat boxes, 2 flat file drawers, 10 tubes)
Language of Materials
English
- Title
- Irving F. and Gertrude Comfort Morrow Collection
- Status
- Completed
- Author
- Joanne Miller & Waverly Lowell
- Date
- 1999
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
- Sponsor
- Arrangement and description of this collection was funded by a grant from the Getty Foundation.
Repository Details
Part of the University of California, Berkeley. College of Environmental Design. Environmental Design Archives Repository