Elizabeth Lord

Elizabeth M. Lord was a Manitoba-based architect. Lord graduated from the University of Manitoba's School of Architecture in 1939. In 1944, she became the first woman to register with the Manitoba Association of Architects. That same year, she registered with the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada.[1]

Career

Lord held various positions in her early career, including with the North American Lumber Company, Crawford Painting, and Dominion Government Naval Treasury. Eventually, in the mid-1950s, Lord began her own architectural practice. Working out of her home in St Norbert, Lord worked on designs for homes, schools, and commercial buildings.[2] Lord was also the chairman of the Welfare Council committee on housing in the mid-1950s.[3]

Lord retired as a practicing architect in 1976.[1]

gollark: I'd actually not mind it as a server system if it was not for the bad cooling and lack of room for any HDDs.
gollark: It's smaller than my laptop, does not appear to have room for good fans, and has twice the CPU cores at higher clocks.
gollark: Very good CPU, bad GPU, likely awful thermal throttling.
gollark: It's a somewhat poorly balanced system.
gollark: And use the proprietary drivers to enforce artificial restrictions.

References

  1. "Winnipeg Architecture Foundation". www.winnipegarchitecture.ca. Retrieved 2017-03-04.
  2. "Where did all the bright young women go?". The Winnipeg Tribune. November 8, 1967.
  3. "Elizabeth M Lord finds architecture a profession women can practice as home". The Winnipeg Tribune. March 10, 1955.



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