Henry Clifford Boles (1910–1979), also known as Hank Boles, was an American architect.[1] He had his own architecture firm, as well as being a part of the Associated Architect and Engineer firm from 1957 to 1969 with civil engineer Paul Parks. Early in his career Boles worked on designing buildings in Monrovia, Liberia, through a United States Department of State program. In his later life he primarily designed in Massachusetts and worked on many civic and community projects in Boston, in the town of Dennis, and in the surrounding area.
Early life and education
Henry Clifford Boles was born on February 22, 1910, in Oxford, Mississippi, to parents Willa Wright Boles and William Robert Boles, a shoe cobbler.[1]
From 1929 until 1943, while in school, Boles worked as a clerk for the United States Postal Service to support his family.[1] After graduation he served for two years as an assistant plant engineer at the Aero Parts Manufacturing Company in Wichita, during the end of World War II.[1] He worked under architect Hilyard Robert Robinson for 6 months in 1945.[1]
He returned to school to get a his master's degree in 1949, which was followed by a few years employment for the federal government.[1]
from February 1950 to November 1951, Boles worked at the United States Housing Authority and the United States Army Corps of Engineers in Boston.[1] He moved to Monrovia, Liberia after, to work for the United States Department of State as the chief architect at the Point Four Program from late-1951 to 1954, a technical and economic assistance program for "developing countries" started in 1949.[1][2] While in Monrovia he created housing for the U.S. technicians (1952–1954), an Agricultural Experiment Station (1953), and the Monrovia Elementary School (1954).[1]
He moved back to Massachusetts in 1954, in order to found his own Boston-based architecture firm.[1] In 1957, he joined civil engineer Paul Parks to form the partnership called Associated Architect and Engineer.[1][3] Early commissioned projects were the Methuen Junior High School and Saint Stephan's Episcopal Church Parish Hall (1961) in the Roxbury neighborhood of Boston.[1][3][4] William Spilman, an engineer, later joined the firm.[1] In 1969, the firm dissolved and after in which Boles created the bulk of his design work.[1]