William Lincoln Garver

William Lincoln Garver was an American architect, civil engineer, author, socialist leader, and political candidate from Missouri. He was primarily an architect by trade, and learned while working under his uncle, architect Morris Frederick Bell. Garver is probably best known for his work of occult fiction, Brother of the Third Degree. He was also a prolific political activist, authoring numerous pamphlets and articles on socialism.[1] He was an influential leader in the Socialist Party of Missouri and the Socialist Party of America’s candidate for Governor of Missouri in 1908. His papers are held by the State Historical Society of Missouri in Columbia, Missouri.

William Lincoln Garver
Born(1867-06-05)June 5, 1867
Died1953
NationalityAmerican
Alma materWestminster College, University of Missouri
Occupation(s)Architect, author
Years active1890s–1940s
Notable workBrother of the Third Degree
Francis Quadrangle
Political partySocialist Party of America, Socialist Party of Missouri
MovementSocialism, Theosophy

Early life

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Garver was born in 1867 in Martinsburg, West Virginia, but his family soon moved to a small farm outside Salina, Kansas. At the time of their arrival in the 1870s Kansas was sparsely populated and mostly untilled prairie. Garver's childhood in this natural environment gave him a lifelong love of nature. In the late 1870s the family moved Fulton, Missouri, where Garver graduated high school. He later attended Westminster College, and the University of Missouri. In 1891, he became associated with the Blavatskian school of Theosophy.[2] He spent several years in a utopian commune in Sinaloa, Mexico.

Architecture

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In Fulton, he met and came to work for architect Morris Frederick Bell. He was the assistant architect and superintendent of construction for David R. Francis Quadrangle and Jesse Hall on the University of Missouri campus.[3] Garver designed schools, civil buildings, homes, and business buildings around Missouri, eventually moving to Chillicothe.

Written works

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His longest and most popular work, Brother of the Third Degree, was first published in 1894, and later translated and published in several languages. His advocacy of socialism included articles such as "Free Socialism", "Socialism in Brief", and "Abolish Rent".[4] He was an advocate of free public higher education.

References

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  1. ^ Cracraft, E. Scott. "Show Me Socialists: Missouri's Early Radical Heritage, 1861–1920". Southeast Missouri State University Press. Retrieved 12 June 2018.
  2. ^ Herringshaw, Thomas William (1914). Herringshaw's American Blue Book of Biography. Chicago, American Publishers' Association. p. 411.
  3. ^ Curators of the University of Missouri. "New Statue and Award Announced at the University of Missouri". Office of Undergraduate Studies at the University of Missouri. Retrieved 12 June 2018.
  4. ^ Free Socialism