Carter Manny

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Carter Manny
Carter Manny
Born(1918-11-16)November 16, 1918
DiedFebruary 1, 2017(2017-02-01) (aged 98)
NationalityAmerican
OccupationArchitect
Parent(s)Carter H.
Ada Barnes Manny
PracticeAssociated architectural firm[s]
Buildings

Carter Hugh Manny, Jr. (November 16, 1918[1] – February 1, 2017 in San Rafael, California[2]) studied architecture under Frank Lloyd Wright and Mies van der Rohe and spent his career as an architect and foundation administrator in Chicago. His work helped shape Chicago O'Hare International Airport,[3] the FBI Building[4] in Washington, D.C., the First National Bank of Chicago,[5] and the addition to the Chicago Board of Trade.

Education[edit]

Carter Manny in San Rafael, CA in 2006

Carter Hugh Manny, Jr., architect and foundation administrator was born in Michigan City, IN on November 16, 1918, the son of Carter H. and Ada Barnes Manny.[1] After attending public schools in Michigan City, he went on to Harvard where he was Phi Beta Kappa and graduated magna cum laude in 1941. During his last year as an undergraduate Manny began his architectural studies at the Graduate School of Design under Walter Gropius and Marcel Breuer. With war clouds gathering in mid-1941, he shifted to a special war production program at the Harvard Business School where he obtained a degree in Industrial Administration in 1942. During WWII he worked for a division of the War Production Board at Wright Field, Dayton, Ohio.

Architectural career[edit]

After the war Manny returned to architectural studies, first with a brief stint as an apprentice of Frank Lloyd Wright at Taliesin and then with two years under Mies van der Rohe[6] at the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago. Following graduation from IIT in 1948 he began architectural practice with the Chicago firm of Naess & Murphy, becoming a partner in 1957. He spent his entire professional career with this firm and its two successors, C.F. Murphy Associates and Murphy/Jahn, until he retired at the end of 1983.

Among the major projects in which he led the team of architects are Chicago O'Hare International Airport[3] (an unusually long assignment that lasted off and on for 27 years until his retirement), the FBI Building[4] in Washington, D.C., the First National Bank of Chicago,[5] and the addition to the Chicago Board of Trade.

Graham Foundation[edit]

In addition to his architectural practice, Carter Manny is widely known for his work over many years with the Graham Foundation of Chicago.[7] The foundation is internationally recognized for its support of educational activities in architecture and in related fields of the fine arts.

Manny served as a trustee of the foundation for several years after its formation in 1956 and later became its director, serving in this capacity for 22 years until his retirement in December 1993. He is credited with shaping many of the policies of this institution and with guiding it through a perilous period in the 1980s when the foundation's continued existence was seriously threatened. Following his retirement the foundation's trustees created a special grant in his honor to be awarded annually to a doctoral candidate in architectural history.

In the early 1990s Carter Manny was the subject of a lengthy oral history taken by the noted art and architecture critic, Franz Schulze, as part of a series on Chicago architects for the Art Institute of Chicago. It is now hosted online by the Art Institute, as is his childhood memoir: A Boyhood Revisited: 1918-1937. The Carter H. Manny, Jr. Papers, a collection of archival materials, is held by the Ryerson & Burnham Libraries at the Art Institute of Chicago.

Associations[edit]

Manny was a fellow of the American Institute of Architects and of the Illinois Society of Architects. He was a past president of the Chicago Chapter of AIA, a past director of the Society of Architectural Historians and is a Fellow of the Society. He also served on the advisory committee of both the Art Institute of Chicago and Illinois Institute of Technology. He was a member of the Tavern Club while living in Chicago and Michigan City as well as the Cliff Dwellers Club and the Arts Club.

Family[edit]

In 1942 he married Mary Alice Kellett who died in 1994. There were two children from this marriage, Elizabeth Manny and Carter H. Manny III, as well as a grandson William Manny. In 1995 Carter Manny married Maya Moran, née Uyterhoeven, an artist and writer. He resided in California.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b A Boyhood Revisited, hosted by The Art Institute of Chicago
  2. ^ Kamin, Blair (2017-02-03). "Carter Manny Jr., architect who also directed Graham Foundation, dies". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2017-02-17.
  3. ^ a b Oral History of Carter Manny by Franz Schulze, page 179
  4. ^ a b Oral History of Carter Manny by Franz Schulze, page 237
  5. ^ a b Oral History of Carter Manny by Franz Schulze, page 254
  6. ^ Oral History of Carter Manny by Franz Schulze, page 19
  7. ^ Oral History of Carter Manny by Franz Schulze, page 428

External links[edit]