Bertha Whitman

Name: Bertha Whitman (Yerex)
Birth Date: 1892
Birth Place: Newago Michigan, USA
Death Date: November 1984
Death Location: Cass City Michigan, USA

Summary

Architect Bertha Yerex Whitman (1892-1984) received her degree in architecture from the University of Michigan in 1920. At the time, fewer than 1% of practicing architects in the U.S. were women. Whitman began practicing architecture in Evanston in 1926, eventually designing dozens of homes, churches, schools and apartment buildings in Evanston and the North Shore. She was employed at Perkins, Fellows, and Hamilton, and a founding member of the Women’s Architectural Club of Chicago.

Significance

Architect Bertha Yerex Whitman (1892-1984) received her degree in architecture from the University of Michigan in 1920. At the time, fewer than 1% of practicing architects in the U.S. were women. Whitman began practicing architecture in Evanston in 1926, eventually designing dozens of homes, churches, schools and apartment buildings in Evanston and the North Shore. She was employed at Perkins, Fellows, and Hamilton. At Michigan, she was a member of the T-Square Society of women architecture students. Whitman was more significantly one of the nine founding members of the Women’s Architectural Club of Chicago, which began in 1928 and ran until 1940, when it became a part of the AIA Chicago chapter and turned into a group for members’ wives. The group was inspired by the Woman’s World Fair in 1927. She was the first female draughtsman at many architectural firms and had her own firm for many years. She also designed the Woman’s Booth at the 1933 Century of Progress World’s Fair in Chicago.

Quotes: "I enjoy showing men that we women are just as good as they are in whatever we do"
Children: Two: Suzanne, Charles
Education: University of Michigan at Ann Arbor: 1914-1917, 1920. Eastern Michigan University: Teaching Certificate, 1911.
Years in Evanston: 1921-1975

Sources: Archives and Collections: Biographical Files, Evanston History Center, Evanston Illinois. Drawing kept at University of Michigan, Art Institute of Chicago and the US Dept of Housing & Urban Development. Research paper on her published in Architectural Discussions by Lorri Sipes ProQuest Historical Papers Book: The First American Woman Architects by Sarah Allaback (2008)


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