Cambridge School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture
The School was founded in 1915 as the Cambridge School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture and was the first to produce women graduate training in these two professions. Due to Harvard University's all male policy, the school ran as a "little experiment" in the office of Henry Frost, professor of architectural design at Harvard University. In 1924 it was incorporated under Massachusetts law as an educational institution. In 1934 the School was affiliated with Smith College as a graduate school, retaining its own name and independent organization, but with the privilege of recommending its students to the College for the graduate degrees of Master in Architecture and Master in Landscape Architecture. Two years later the undergraduate degrees of Bachelor of Architecture and Bachelor of Landscape Architecture were introduced. In 1938 the School became a part of Smith College's Graduate School. The school remains in Cambridge, Mass.
From the description of Cambridge School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture records, 1919-1986. (Smith College). WorldCat record id: 52235039
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