Greene, LaRoche, and Dahl

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The Dallas firm of Greene LaRoche and Dahl spanned seven decades and evolved from the typical late 19th century firm to a modern full-service office. The firm has gone through numerous name changes:

  • c. 1900 - c. 1918 : Hubbell and Greene
  • c.1919 - 1927 : Herbert M. Greene Company. Title block of a 1927 set of drawings show the office located in the Santa Fe Building, Dallas, Tex. with principals: Herbert M. Greene, FAIA, W. Brown Fowler, E. Bruce LaRoche, and George L. Dahl. Between 1927-28 the office moved to 307 Construction Building, Dallas.
  • 1927 - 1928 : Greene and LaRoche
  • 1928 - 1933 : Greene LaRoche and Dahl
  • 1933 - 1943 : LaRoche and Dahl
  • 1943 - 1973 : George L. Dahl, Inc., Architects and Engineers. Title block of a 1951 set of drawings show the principals: George L. Dahl, Terrell R. Harper, Harris A. Kemp, H. George Gregerson, D.L. Yater, Walter A. Gray, T.K. Hutchins, J.A. Murlin, and W. B. Kellogg.
  • 1973 - 1973 ? : Dahl Braden Jones Chapman, Inc., Architects and Planners Dahl Braden PTM Inc.

no information available

Herbert Miller Greene (1871-1932) was born in Huntington, Pennsylvania and spent his childhood in Peoria, Illinois. After receiving his B.S. in architecture from the University of Illinois in 1893, he practiced architecture in Peoria for several years and married Annie Williams in 1895. Greene moved to Dallas in 1897 where he began a partnership with James Hubbell. Hubbell and Greene were responsible for some of the earliest Sullivanesque designs in Texas, such as the Kingman Texas Implement Company Building. By 1919, Hubell had left the firm. Other important works by the firm included the Nieman-Marcus Building, the Dallas News Building, and Scottish Rite cathedrals in Dallas, El Paso, and San Antonio, Texas and Joplin, Missouri.

In 1922 he was appointed "university architect" for the University of Texas, a post he held for the next ten years. During this time, he designed 10 buildings including the Biology Building (1925), Garrison Hall (1926), and Littlefield Dormitory (1927). After Paul Cret became consulting architect in 1930, his firm was in charge of producing working drawings for an additional 7 buildings on campus. In order to undertake such a large commission, Greene found it necessary to add partners to his firm. Edwin LaRoche became a partner in 1927 and George Dahl was made a partner the following year.

Greene was elected a Fellow in the American Institute of Architects in 1923 and served on the Committee for the Beautification of Washington D.C. and Environs as well as the AIA Standing Committee on Competitions. Greene died suddenly in 1932 during a trip to Chicago.

Edwin Bruce LaRoche (1885-c.1943) was born and educated in South Carolina. He attended the University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee before receiving a Bachelors degree in architecture from Cornell University in 1912. He worked for several years with the New York firm of Trowbridge and Livingston before accepting a teaching position at Texas A&M University in 1919. He served as chairman of the department until resigning in 1925 to return to private practice. He moved to Dallas and became partners with Herbert M. Greene.

Born in Minneapolis, George Leighton Dahl (1894-1987) received a BS in architecture from the University of Minnesota in 1920 and an MS in architecture from Harvard in 1923. He received the prestigious Nelson Robinson Traveling Fellowship in 1922, enabling him to travel throughout Europe and Africa and to attend the American Academy in Rome. Upon his return to the United States, he worked as a designer for Myron Hunt in Los Angeles until being offered a job in Dallas by Herbert M. Greene in 1928.

Dahl is perhaps best known as the chief architect for the Texas Centennial Exposition in Dallas (1935-1936) where he was responsible for the design of 26 buildings. Commonly known as Fair Park, it is now listed as a National Historic Landmark. Dahl was able to make the transformation from the traditional design approach to Modernist tenets that dominated the post-World War II profession. Included among the buildings his firm designed are the RFK Stadium in Washington D.C., First National Bank of Dallas, Earle Cabell Federal Building and the Dallas Morning News Building

Under Dahl's leadership, the firm was transformed into a modern office with a highly developed marketing system and that included such specialists on staff as engineers, estimators, superintendents, inspectors and interior designers. Dahl pioneered "fast-tracking" in Texas, a technique whereby construction is begun even before working drawings are complete. It is claimed that he designed the first drive-in bank in 1938.

He served as the second president of the Texas Society of Architects and was elected a Fellow in the American Institute of Architects in 1958. Dahl retired in 1973. During the scope of his career, he designed over 3,000 structures. He died in 1987.

From the guide to the Greene LaRoche and Dahl Collection, Drawings, GLD Accession number(s): 0000006., 1902-1953, (Alexander Architectural Archive, University of Texas Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin.)

The Dallas firm of Greene LaRoche and Dahl spanned seven decades and evolved from the typical late 19th century firm to a modern full-service office.

Firm permutations include: Hubbell and Greene; Herbert M. Greene Co.; Greene and LaRoche; Greene LaRoche and Dahl; LaRoche and Dahl; George L. Dahl Inc., Architects and Engineers; Dahl Braden Jones Chapman Inc., Architects and Planners; Dahl Braden PTM Inc.

From the description of Greene LaRoche and Dahl drawings, 1913-1951. (University of Texas Libraries). WorldCat record id: 28757369

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf Greene LaRoche and Dahl Collection, Drawings, GLD Accession number(s): 0000006., 1902-1953 Alexander Architectural Archive, University of Texas Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin.
creatorOf Greene LaRoche and Dahl. Greene LaRoche and Dahl drawings, 1913-1951. University of Texas Libraries
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith A.H. Belo and Co. corporateBody
associatedWith A.T. Lloyd Residence (Dallas, Tex.) corporateBody
associatedWith Carpenter Paper Co. or Rolfe, R.L.? corporateBody
associatedWith Cary Schneider Investment Co. corporateBody
associatedWith Community Natural Gas Co. corporateBody
associatedWith Dahl, George Leighton, b. 1894 person
associatedWith Dallas National Bank corporateBody
associatedWith Dallas News corporateBody
associatedWith Dallas Park Board corporateBody
associatedWith Dealey Plaza (Dallas, Tex.) corporateBody
associatedWith First National Bank corporateBody
associatedWith Greene, Herbert M., 1871-1932 person
associatedWith Hereford, J. B. person
associatedWith Hereford Residence (Dallas, Tex.) corporateBody
associatedWith Hubbell, James P. person
associatedWith Jackson, R. R. person
associatedWith Kingman Texas Implement Co. person
associatedWith LaRoche, E. Bruce, 1885-1943 person
associatedWith Linz, Clarence person
associatedWith Lloyd, A. T. person
associatedWith Neiman-Marcus Building (Dallas, Tex.) corporateBody
associatedWith Neiman Marcus Co. corporateBody
associatedWith O'Neil, M. G. person
associatedWith Scottish Rite Cathedral corporateBody
associatedWith Scottish Rite Cathedral (Joplin, MO.) corporateBody
associatedWith Sherwin-Williams Co. corporateBody
associatedWith Texas Centennial (1936: Dallas, Tex.) corporateBody
associatedWith University of Texas corporateBody
associatedWith University of Texas. corporateBody
associatedWith University of Texas at Austin corporateBody
associatedWith University of Texas. Texas Memorial Stadium Association Inc. corporateBody
associatedWith Works Progress Administration corporateBody
Place Name Admin Code Country
Dallas (Tex.)
Texas
Dallas (Tex.)
Subject
Architecture
Architecture
Occupation
Activity

Corporate Body

Active 1913

Active 1951

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