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Lewis Mumford
(1895-1990)
Photographs courtesy of the Sophia
Mumford Estate
 
| Urban planner,
historian, sociologist, local advocate, and architectural critic Lewis Mumford
is recognized as one of the greatest urbanists of the 20th Century. A lifelong
opponent of large-scale public works, much of his writings concern the effect of
buildings on the human condition and the environment. Most notable of such
works was The City in History, which received the National Book Award in
1961. Mumford taught at a number of prestigious universities, and served for
over 30 years as architectural critic for the New Yorker. In his later
years, he was awarded several distinguished honors, including the United States
Medal of Freedom and Knight of the Order of the British Empire. |
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| Born in Flushing,
NY, on October 19, 1895, Mumford was introduced to nearly every part of
Manhattan on weekend walks with his German grandfather. By the time he was 20,
he was systematically exploring the City on foot, making notes on its
neighborhood life, studying its buildings, bridges, and street plans, and taking
specimens for an amateur geological survey of Manhattan. He studied at City
College, Columbia University, and the New School, concentrating on subjects that
interested him rather than those required for a degree. |
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Mumford published his first
book, The Study of Utopia, in 1922 and became the editor of The
American Caravan in 1927. During those years, he co-founded the Regional
Planning Association of America. By the 1950s, he was battling with Robert
Moses over plans to put a roadway through Washington Square Park, and other
massive urban renewal projects he feared would destroy the quality of the
City. |
A lifelong humanitarian and
advocate, Mumford believed in speaking out against social injustices. In his
New Republic article, "Call to Arms" (1938), and his books Men Must
Act (1939) and Faith for Living (1940), Mumford urged the United
States to pledge its help to other democracies in repelling attacks by
totalitarian powers. After the Second World War, in which his son was killed,
Mumford spoke out against the atomic bomb at Stanford University, North Carolina
State University, and the University of Pennsylvania. He gave the Bampton
Lectures at Columbia University in 1951. In the early 1960s, Mumford protested
against U.S. involvement in Vietnam, and testified before the U.S. Senate
Subcommittee on the negative impacts of urban renewal.
Among his tremendous
achievements, Mumford was instrumental in preparing planning reports for cities
and towns from Honolulu to Oxford, England. He died at his home in Amenia, New
York, on January 26, 1990. The University of Pennsylvania Library is the
official keeper of his letters and papers, and it maintains a website that
includes a bibliography of Mumford's writings as well as a listing of other
major repositories of Mumford materials: http://www.library.upenn.edu/special/mumford
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