Ida C. Scott papers, 1944-1974.

ArchivalResource

Ida C. Scott papers, 1944-1974.

Photographs and drawings illustrate the education of Ida C. Scott as a student of architecture at the University of Texas. Manuscript material documents some aspects of Scott's architectural and professional interests.

<94> b&w photographs, <2> col. photographs, <1> b&w negative, <4> slides, <24> art originals (watercolor and charcoal sketches), <95> postcards (<28> photographic, <6> sets, <68> printed), <4> sound cassettes, <1.25> linear in. of printed material.

Information

SNAC Resource ID: 7019296

University of Texas Libraries

Related Entities

There are 3 Entities related to this resource.

University of Texas at Austin. School of Architecture

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6bg6cxp (corporateBody)

The School of Architecture was established within The University of Texas Engineering Department in 1910, when Dean T. U. Taylor of the Department of Engineering appointed Hugo F. Kuehne as the first faculty member of the School of Architecture. In 1920, the Department of Engineering became the College of Engineering, and the School of Architecture became the Department of Architecture within the College of Engineering. Architecture functioned as a "semiautonomous school" until it was granted fu...

Scott, Ida Calhoun, 1936-

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w68k971x (person)

Ida Scott was born Ida Calhoun Futch in Ft. Sill, Oklahoma in 1926. Her father was an officer in the U.S. Army and as a result, the family moved often. Ida attended six high schools, three different schools her senior semester. She was enrolled as a student in the School of Architecture at the University of Texas from February 1944 through June 1947. In the fall of 1946 she traveled to occupied Europe where her stepfather was in the military service. During this time Sco...

University of Texas at Austin.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6c0039h (corporateBody)

The University of Texas at Austin (UT) opened in 1883 with eight professors, four assistants, a proctor, and 221 male and female students. The first set of graduates, consisting of thirteen law students, attended UT commencement on June 14, 1884. By World War I, enrollment rose to 2,254 and by World War II to over 11,000. African Americans were admitted in 1950, and by 1966, there were 27,345 students. Over the next 40 years, the university continued to expand. In 2009 e...