Roger Hayward (1899-1979) was a talented artist, architect and inventor who collaborated extensively with Linus Pauling as illustrator of many of Pauling's books and journal publications. Hayward is also remembered as an expert on the subject of optics who played an important role in the development of the Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope. His papers contain a large volume of correspondence, dozens of manuscripts and a number of sketchbooks that document both his artistic skill and his scientific acumen.
Scope and Content Notes
The Hayward Papers are comprised primarily of sketch books dating from 1910 to the late 1970s, and correspondence related to the various projects with which Hayward was involved. Of particular note are materials describing a series of inventions that Hayward proposed over the course of his life, a photo- and sketch-filled biographical scrapbook compiled by the Hayward family, and collections of materials documenting Hayward's scientific collaborations with a number of renowned scientists, including Linus Pauling.
Biographical / Historical Notes
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.
Arrangement
The Hayward Papers have been organized into five series which are further arranged either alphabetically or chronologically, as appropriate.