Architect
Myron Hunt Helped Build Boys Republic
Released on:November 15, 2008
Since Boys Republic's founding in 1907,
more than 27,000 troubled youth have gone through the
agency's programs to acquire the qualities of educational
competence, personal responsibility, and self-control.
This record of accomplishment was built on a foundation
of caring effort by early students, diligent professionals
and dedicated volunteers. The work of one such individual
literally laid Boys Republic's foundations.
Noted architect Myron Hunt began a long association
with Boys Republic in 1911, at the request of Boys Republics
Board of Directors. Hunt is perhaps best known for designing
such Southern California landmarks as Pasadenas
Rose Bowl, the Huntington Library, the Pasadena Public
Library, and buildings at Occidental College and Pomona
College. He was a leader in defining a regional idiom
for Southern California architecture and clearly left
a lasting impression upon Boys Republics main
campus.

Myron
Hunt
Hunts overall plan for the Boys
Republic village took inspiration from the colony of
George Junior Republic, in Freeville, New York, the
model for such programs at that time. The plan originally
called for a schoolhouse, twelve to fifteen cottages,
shops, an administration building, hotel and chapel.
The center of village life was and still is
a plaza 500 feet across. All of the roads connecting
different parts of the campus were looped and curved,
owing to the hillside contours upon which the settlement
was situated.
Boys Republics Board of Directors
adopted Hunts general plan and set about creating
a small school and farm environment that would function
as a self-sustaining community. Today, three of the
cottages Myron Hunt designed (Fowler Cottage,
McCormick Cottage and Laws Cottage) still define the
unique look and feel of the open Boys Republic campus.
Each accommodated twenty-four boys in twelve bedrooms,
ten sleeping porches, and large living and dining rooms.

Hunt's
Architectural
Drawing for
Moore Cottage, ca. 1918
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In 1915, Hunt designed for Mrs. Fowler,
a Boys Republic founder, her beautiful residence. Perched
upon a slight knoll overlooking the Republic village,
she called it Casa Colina. The design called
for a living room with a raised stage, so that the boys
might put on productions and so that musicians or other
artists might bring cultural enrichment to the students
educational experience.
The home was featured in a 1917 issue
of American Architect. After Mrs. Fowlers death,
the facility was used for the treatment of children
afflicted with polio. That program, under the direction
of Mother Smith, became known as Casa Colina Convalescent
Home for Crippled Children.

Casa
Colina, ca. 1916
The Margaret Fowler Auditorium, located
at the center of the Boys Republic campus, was also
a Myron Hunt design. It continues to host weekly student
Town Meetings. Three attached classrooms have provided
academic instruction for more than 20,000 students,
since the building was constructed in 1939.

Margaret
Fowler Memorial Auditorium
1939
Myron Hunt was married, in 1915, to Virginia
Pease, an educator and founding member of Boys Republics
Board of Directors. It is said that the Hunts spent
their honeymoon working with students at Boys Republic.
Both were active in Los Angeles area civic and philanthropic
life. In 1927, Myron Hunt was given the Arthur Noble
Award for outstanding service to the community.
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