Person

Henry Vincent Hubbard

Man in suit and glasses poses for picture
Henry Vincent Hubbard

Quick Facts
Significance:
Partner in Olmsted Firm
Place of Birth:
Taunton, MA
Date of Birth:
August 22, 1875
Place of Death:
Milton, MA
Date of Death:
October 6, 1947
Place of Burial:
Taunton, MA
Cemetery Name:
Mount Pleasant Cemetery

Notable Projects while at Olmsted Firm:
Newton City Hall and War Memorial, Newton, Massachusetts
Theodore Roosevelt Memorial, Roosevelt Island, Washington, D.C.
Thomas Jefferson Memorial, Washington, D.C.
Colony Hills Development, Springfield, Massachusetts

Henry Vincent Hubbard came to the Olmsted firm in 1901 with an undergraduate degree from Harvard University and training in architecture from MIT, to which he added one of the first professional degrees from Harvard’s newly inaugurated program in landscape architecture. His early work at the firm included a broad range of institutional and estate projects. He left in 1906 to form a partnership with James Sturgis Pray and Henry Preston White, and then returned to the Olmsted office in 1920 where he would remain as partner for the rest of his career. His major projects included designs for residential communities and urban planning, such as the 1926 report for the Baltimore park system. 

He left in 1906 to form a partnership with James Sturgis Pray and Henry Preston White, and then returned to the Olmsted office in 1920 where he would remain as partner for the rest of his career. His major projects included designs for residential communities and urban planning, such as the 1926 report for the Baltimore park system. In 1932 he replaced Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. as an influential member of the National Capital Park and Planning Commission in Washington, D.C.. Perhaps his greatest contribution to his profession came in book form. Hubbard teamed with Theodora Kimball, a Harvard librarian who would become his wife in 1924, to write An Introduction to the Study of Landscape Design, the field’s standard primer for decades to come. Hubbard’s legacy continues to this day in the form of the Hubbard Educational Trust, a foundation that funds significant publications related to landscape architecture.

Frederick Law Olmsted National Historic Site

Last updated: July 16, 2023