- Thomas M. Price
Thomas M. Price (
March 17 ,1916 –November 6 ,1998 ) has been called "Galveston 's foremost modernarchitect " by historian andRice University faculty member Stephen Fox, an Adjunct Lecturer of the School of Architecture. His portfolio of designs encompass a diverse variety of building types. Almost all of the buildings that were built from his designs are located insoutheastern United States .Early life and education
Price was born in
Blacksburg, Virginia on March 17, 1916. Price attended theVirginia Polytechnic Institute until he received hisbachelor's degree in 1938. [ [http://www.vtmagazine.vt.edu/sum99/classnotes.html Virginia Tech Magazine Class Notes] ] He received hismaster's degree from theHarvard Graduate School of Design in 1941. While at Harvard he studied under modern masters likeMarcel Breuer andWalter Gropius .Prof. Fox, Stephen. Unpublished manuscript of a biography based on Thomas M. Price. Used with permission.]Career
Galveston
Price was primarily active from the 1950s to the late 1970s, designing private residences,
hotel s,motel s,school s, asocial club , abeach house andcommercial building s. His preference for trimly-detailed buildings with walls treated as planes of glass or solidly paneled surfaces is evident in many of the buildings he designed in Galveston. These include the Seahorse Motel (1956, now demolished) and the Beachcomber Motel (1963) on Seawall Boulevard, the Galveston Artillery Club (1959) on Avenue O, the gymnasium of Gladneo Parker Elementary School (1960) on 69th Street, and his largest project that he worked on in the city, the 10-story Sealy & Smith Professional Building (1964, demolished in 2007) on University Boulevard. Price designed several of the most distinctive modern houses built in Galveston, among them the Caravageli House (1954) on Caduceus Place, the Stirling House on South Shore Drive (1956), the Mehos House on Harbor View Drive (1958), the Yen House on Marine Drive (1959), and the Kelso Camp on Offatts Bayou (1963). Price was involved in early efforts to preserve Galveston's 19th-century architectural heritage. He was responsible for two pioneer preservation planning studies prepared for the city: "Galveston, Texas: Historical District Guide" (1970) and "Historical Development Plan for Galveston, Texas" (1973).Other cities
Outside Galveston, Price designed the Lasher House (1956) in the Memorial section of
Houston, Texas which has been renovated and restored byRay Bailey architects and the Bauer House outsidePort Lavaca, Texas (1958). Including Houston, he designed banks in Alvin, Bay City, Freeport, Hitchcock, andWebster, Texas in the 1960s. He also designed hotels inAsheville, North Carolina ,Biloxi, Mississippi ,Marathon, Florida andSan Francisco, California around the same time.Retirement and death
Thomas M. Price retired to 320 W. Burbank St. in
Fredericksburg, Texas where he designed theNimitz Museum . He died on November 6, 1998 at the age of 82. Price's house designs are among the most distinctive in Galveston, and are listed in the Galveston Architectural Guide.References
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