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Charles Murphy (architect)
American architect (1890–1985) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Charles Francis Murphy (February 9, 1890 – May 22, 1985) was an American architect based in Chicago, Illinois.[1]
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Biography
Born in Jersey City, New Jersey, Murphy was educated at the De La Salle Institute in Chicago. His first job was as a secretary, joining the offices of D.H. Burnham & Company in 1911 and he was steadily promoted to become personal secretary to the architect Ernest Graham.
After Graham died in 1936, Murphy moved on to co-found the architectural practice Shaw, Naess & Murphy with Alfred P. Shaw and Sigurd E. Naess (1886 - 1970). Murphy had no formal training as an architect at the time. He was next part of Naess & Murphy. The practice was later renamed C. F. Murphy Associates and later Murphy/Jahn Inc. in 1983 when Helmut Jahn took over as president.
Murphy was awarded an honorary degree from St. Xavier University in 1961, and became a fellow of the American Institute of Architects in 1964.
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Selected buildings
- Miami Herald building (1960) demolished in 2014
- Richard J. Daley Center (1965)
- Blue Cross-Blue Shield Building (1968)
- McCormick Place, Chicago (1970) convention center rebuilt following a fire in 1967
- O'Hare Airport’s original Terminal 1, and current Terminals 2 and 3
- J. Edgar Hoover Building
Gallery
- Miami Herald building, Miami
- Richard J. Daley Center, Chicago
- J. Edgar Hoover Building, Washington, DC
- Blue Cross-Blue Shield Building, Chicago
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References
External links
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