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Gertrude Sawyer

Gertrude Sawyer
Born (1895-04-02)April 2, 1895
Tuscola, Illinois, U.S.A.
Died February 2, 1996(1996-02-02) (aged 100)
California, U.S.A.
Nationality American
Alma mater Cambridge School of Domestic and Landscape Architecture for Women
Occupation Architect

Gertrude Sawyer (1895–1996) was one of the earliest American women architects to practice in Maryland and the Washington, D.C., area.

Sawyer was born April 2, 1895, in Tuscola, Illinois. She knew she wanted to be an architect from an early age. After high school in Missouri and Indiana, she got a bachelor's degree in landscape architecture from the University of Illinois in 1918 and went on to become one of the first women students at the Cambridge School of Domestic and Landscape Architecture for Women, where she met landscape architect Rose Greely.

After graduating in 1922 with a master's degree in architecture, Sawyer worked for an architectural firm in Kansas City, Missouri, for a few months and designed her first house. In 1923, she moved to Washington, D.C., where she worked for architect Horace W. Peaslee (for whom Greely also worked around the same time).

In 1925, Sawyer traveled around Europe. On her return, in 1926, she became registered to practice architecture in the District of Columbia. In subsequent decades, she would become licensed in the states of Maryland, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Florida.

Sawyer taught architecture at Vassar College in the summers of 1930 and 1931. She opened her own architectural practice in Georgetown, Washington, D.C., in 1934, specializing in historic restoration and buildings in the Colonial Revival style, although she also built at least one building in the Streamline Moderne style. She became especially admired for her eye for detail.

Starting in 1932, Sawyer designed over two dozen residential and farm buildings for Point Farm, the estate of career diplomat Jefferson Patterson in Calvert County, Maryland. Her designs include a main house in Colonial Revival style with such elements as a formal pillared entry, side porch, and classical moldings in the interior. She enlisted Rose Greely to design the landscaping. The Patterson estate was later given to the state by Patterson's widow and turned into the 560-acre Jefferson Patterson Park & Museum.

During World War II, from 1943 to 1945, Sawyer served in the navy’s Civil Engineer Corps (the Seabees), with the rank of lieutenant commander. Among her wartime tasks was designing housing from some 14,000 people. After the war, she was the only woman to be designated a reserve Seabee officer.


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