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Julia Morgan
(1872 - 1957)

Julia Morgan was born in
San Francisco on January 20, 1872 and grew up in nearby
Oakland. She was the second child of Charles Bill
and Eliza Parmelee Morgan.
Miss Morgan was one of the first women to graduate
from University of California at Berkeley with a degree
in civil engineering. During her tenure at Berkeley,
Morgan developed a keen interest in architecture which
is thought to have been fostered by her mother's cousin,
Pierre Le Brun, who designed the Metropolitan Life
Insurance Tower in New York City. At Berkeley one
of her instructors, Bernard Maybeck, encouraged her
to pursue her architectural studies in Paris at the
Ecole Nationale et Speciale des Beaux-Arts.
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| Julia
Morgan's Studio
sits humbly against the wall of Casa Grande. |
Arriving
in Paris in 1896, she was initially refused admission
because the Ecole had never before admitted a woman.
After a two-year wait, Julia Morgan gained entrance
to the prestigious program and became the first woman
to receive a certificate in architecture. While in
Paris, Morgan also found a mentor in her professor,
Bernard Chaussemiche, for whom she worked as a drafter.
Soon after her graduation from the Ecole, Julia Morgan
returned to her native San Francisco and began working
for architect John Galen Howard. At the time Howard
was the supervising architect of the University of
California's Master Plan, the commission of which
he won by default from Phoebe
Apperson Hearst. Morgan worked on the Master
Plan drawing the elevations and designing the decorative
details for the Mining Building built in memory of
George Hearst. During this time Morgan also designed
the Hearst Greek Theater on the Berkeley campus.
Miss Morgan opened her own architectural firm in 1904,
quickly establishing herself as a fine residential
architect, and securing a number of commissions in
the Piedmont, Claremont and Berkeley neighborhoods.
One of Morgans first residential commissions
was to remodel and complete Phoebe Hearsts Hacienda
del Pozo de Verona in Pleasanton, California. Morgan's
style was characterized by her use of the California
vernacular with distinct arts and crafts attributes,
including exposed support beams, horizontal lines
that blended with the landscape and extensive use
of shingles, California Redwood and earth tones. One
of her first independent projects was the bell tower
on the campus of Mills College in Oakland, which withstood
the great 1906 San Francisco earthquake.
Other notable projects included the rebuilding of
the Fairmont Hotel after the 1906 quake, the Asilomar
Conference Center in Pacific Grove, California and
a series of YMCA buildings in California, Hawaii and
Utah. Throughout her career she designed nearly 800
projects in California and Hawaii.
In 1919 William
Randolph Hearst hired Julia Morgan to design
a main building and guest houses for his ranch in
San Simeon, California. Mr. Hearst instructed her
to build "something that would be more comfortable"
than the platform tents which he previously used at
the ranch. Hearst's mother, Phoebe, had recently died
in the influenza epidemic and Hearst had inherited
this land as well as other Hearst property and an
estimated $11 million. Morgan's classical training
in Paris, her background in engineering, and her use
of reinforced concrete, suited her well for the project.
Over the course of the next 28 years, Morgan supervised
nearly every aspect of construction at Hearst
Castle including the purchase of everything
from Spanish antiquities to Icelandic Moss to reindeer
for the Castle's zoo. She personally designed most
of the structures, grounds, pools, animal shelters
and workers' camp down to the minutest detail. Additionally,
Morgan worked closely with Hearst to integrate his
vast art collection into the structures and grounds
at San Simeon. She also worked on projects for Hearst's
other properties including Jolon, Wyntoon, Babicore,
the "Hopi" residence at the Grand Canyon, the Phoebe
Apperson Hearst Memorial Gymnasium at Berkeley, the
Los Angeles Examiner Building, several of his Beverly
Hills residences and Marion
Davies' beach house in Santa Monica.
In the late 1930's Mr. Hearst's financial woes slowed
the pace of her Hearst commissioned work to a crawl.
However Miss Morgan had always maintained a sizable
client list, working on other commissions in conjunction
with the Hearst endeavors. In 1947, upon Hearst's
leaving the Castle for the last time, Julia Morgan's
work at San Simeon was finished although the Castle
was never completed in its entirety.
Julia Morgan retired in the early 1950's and led a
quiet life until her death in 1957.
© 1996, © TEXT 1985
Cal Poly Special Collections Department. Robert E.
Kennedy Library Cal Poly State University, San Luis
Obispo, CA.
"Hearst Castle", "Hearst San Simeon State Historical Monument", "La Cuesta Encantada",
and "The Enchanted Hill" are registered trademarks of Hearst Castle®/California State Parks.
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