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| Maybeck's Supervision and College's Landmark Status Although Maybeck supervised most of the three-and-one-half year construction project from his office in San Francisco, he remained deeply involved in the details of the work, reviewing daily photographs and weekly field reports from the construction site.
On April 19, 1993, thanks largely to the efforts of Principia history professor Charles B. Hosmer, Jr. (1932-1993), Principia College was granted National Historic Landmark status by the United States Department of the Interior. The text that follows for the historic district and description of Maybeck buildings is excerpted from the Landmark application written by Charles Hosmer. Accompanying the text are extensive color photographs of architectural details taken by Jeanne Colette Collester. Hopefully they will assist the researcher and website user in visualizing the extraordinary richness of this commission. I also wish to acknowledge generous institutional support from President George Moffett and Dean G. Curtis Martin; valuable encouragement and technical supervision from Marty DeWindt and Jonathan Hosmer; inestimable archival assistance from Jane H. Pfeifer, and talented expertise from site designer Samuel Ramaji.
The College's designation as a National Historic Landmark is a fitting tribute to the inspiration of both the College's administrators and its architect. Maybeck once remarked: "If the architectural composition which is to be Principia College lives up to the ideals of the institution and properly expresses them, the physical form of the college will have the power to move the hearts of men and to lift their spirit-and the world will care."
Jeanne
Colette Collester < previous
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