Biographical Note
Born in New Hampshire, Roger Hayward (1899-1979) was educated at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he studied architecture. Following his graduation from M. I. T., Hayward lived and worked on the east coast of the United States for the first several years of his professional life, employed by a handful of architectural firms.
A move to southern California in the early 1930s, followed by the onset of the Great Depression, saw Hayward branch out beyond the world of architecture to new avenues in both the fine and practical arts. A man of many talents, Hayward is credited with having designed and constructed a model of the moon for the Griffith Planetarium, a nut-cracking machine for the California Walnut Growers Association and the Schmidt-Cassegrain optical arrangement for telescopes, to name just a few of his artistic and industrial innovations.
Following the conclusion of World War II, Hayward helped found the architectural design firm Lunden, Hayward and O’Connor, a successful enterprise up until its dissolution in 1957. From there, Hayward began to focus more on his ambitions as a fine artist, signing contracts with both the Disney company as well as the book publisher W. H. Freeman to work as illustrator and model-maker. Hayward enjoyed a long collaboration with Dr. Linus Pauling in both roles, culminating in the 1964 publication of their co-authored book The Architecture of Molecules.
Roger and his wife Betty were married for nearly fifty-seven years. Their relationship came to a close with his death in 1979.
Timeline for Roger Hayward
1899 | Roger Hayward is born into an artistic family (his grandfather is the painter William Preston Phelps) on January 7 in Keene, New Hampshire. His father, Robert Peter Hayward, is a local businessman whose hobbies include building and repairing time pieces. His mother, Ina Kittredge (Phelps) Hayward, is an artist. The Hayward family will come to include four children - a daughter, Hilda, and three sons, Roger and twins Julian and Peter. |
1906 | Receives his first sketchbook. |
1917 | Graduates from Keene High School and enters the Naval Reserve. |
1918 | Enters the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he studies architecture. |
1922 | Graduates from MIT, after taking a year off due to illness. Receives a number of awards
and accepts a position at Bellows and Aldrich, a Boston architectural firm. In September, marries Elizabeth ("Betty") Hatfield, originally of Green County, Iowa. |
1925 | Begins working at Cram and Ferguson, a Boston architectural firm specializing in gothic design. |
1926 | Sponsored by Cram and Ferguson, Roger and Betty travel to Europe to sketch classical buildings and learn more about European gothic architecture. |
1928 | Hayward's watercolor paintings are first shown to the public, an event which reinforces his growing reputation as a talented artist. Soon, he becomes a mainstay in the Boston art scene. |
1929 | Moves to Pasadena, California to assume the position of chief designer at the S.E.
Lunden architecture firm in Los Angeles. He becomes friends with various members of
the Caltech faculty and, before long, meets Linus Pauling with whom he will collaborate
on several projects. Aided by his new acquaintances at Caltech, Hayward educates himself
in atomic theory and molecular structure. In his later life, he will also be involved
in the construction of several buildings on the Caltech campus. The U.S. stock market crashes and the Great Depression is soon to arrive. During the Depression years, work in architecture disappears. Hayward seeks out employment any way possible, including as a puppeteer. |
1933 | Receives an award from the American Institute of Architects for his artwork displayed over the main entrance to the Doheny Memorial Library at the University of Southern California. |
1934 | Sculpts a 38-foot model of a section of the moon which was commissioned by the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles. |
1936 | Develops a walnut cracker for the California Walnut Growers Association. |
1938 | Procedures in Experimental Physics, written by John D. Strong and illustrated by Roger Hayward, is published. Becomes the basic designer for the University of Southern California's Allen Hancock Biology Laboratories. |
1939 | Accepts a year-long position as consulting physicist with National Technical Laboratories, which would later become Beckman Instruments. |
1941 | Accepts a position as consultant for A. O. Beckman and National Technical Labs. Relocates to a different address in Pasadena, California. After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Hayward volunteers to assist the war effort at the Mount Wilson optics laboratory by designing gun-sight optics, anamorphic lenses, roof prisms and other optical devices for use in warfare. |
1946 | General Chemistry, written by Linus Pauling and illustrated by Hayward, is published. It is the first of four books that the duo will develop together. |
1948 | Illustrates Harper Frantz's book A Laboratory Study of Chemical Principles and George Beadle's article The Genes of Men and Molds . |
1949 | Hayward becomes a partner in the architectural firm Lunden, Hayward, and O'Connor. That same year, Hayward is hired as replacement artist for the "Amateur Scientist" column in Scientific American. |
1950 | College Chemistry, authored by Linus Pauling and illustrated by Hayward, is published. |
1954 | A popular audience paper titled "The Structure of Protein Molecules" is published in Scientific American. This paper is the first to include Hayward as a co-author - with Linus Pauling and George Beadle - rather than an illustrator. |
1956 | Hayward is hired as a consultant to Disney Productions |
1957 | The architectural firm Lunden, Hayward, and O'Connor dissolves. |
1958 | Signs a ten year contract to illustrate exclusively for W.H. Freeman Publishers. Although the arrangement provides Hayward with a fair amount of freedom and financial stability, he grows tired of it and prematurely ends the deal. |
1964 | The Architecture of Molecules by Linus Pauling and Roger Hayward is published. |
1968 | Begins writing articles and drawing for the Worm Runners Digest, a publication with which he will be associated for almost ten years. |
1973 | Hayward's involvement with the Amateur Scientist column is terminated due to his deteriorating eyesight. Roger and Betty move to Merced, California. |
1975 | Hayward is hospitalized for an extended period of time; he returns home in a weakened state. |
1979 | On October 11, at age 80, Roger Hayward dies of complications from emphysema. He is survived by Elizabeth Hayward, his wife of nearly fifty-seven years. |
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