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Humphrey Carver
Canadian planner From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Humphrey Stephen Mumford Carver, OC (1902–1995) was a Canadian architect and urban planner, who served as the first urban policy advisor of the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation. He was also instrumental in reviving the Canadian community planning profession and shaping Canada into a suburban nation.

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Early life and education
Humphrey Carver was born in Harborne, a suburb of Birmingham, UK in 1902. His father, Frank (1860–1943), and his mother, Ann Creswell, were born in Gibraltar and ran a small export business. Humphrey followed his brothers to Rugby School, and then Oxford, where he was inspired to become a housing advocate by reading about the founding of London's Hampstead Garden Suburb and the Garden City Movement.[1] From 1924 to 1929, Carver studied at the Architectural Association School of Architecture in London, living in a settlement house in East London, then Hampstead Garden Suburb and Chelsea. Although it taught architecture in the classical style, Carver was influenced by Le Corbusier's books and became an early convert to Modernism. In 1930, after a dull year as a junior architect in London, he emigrated to Canada.
Carver got a job at Wilson, Bunnell & Borgstrom, Town Planners and Landscape Architects, but he was out of work within a year, after the Canadian planning movement collapsed early in the Depression. He formed a small landscape firm with Carl Borgstrom and was one of the founding members of the Canadian Society of Landscape Architects in 1934.
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