Maj Louis Bancel LaFarge, USAAF

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Maj Louis Bancel LaFarge, USAAF

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts, United States
Death: July 02, 1989 (89)
Newtown, Schuylkill, Pennsylvania, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of John Louis Bancel LaFarge, glass artist and Mabel LaFarge
Husband of Hester Alida LaFarge and Margaret Hockaday
Father of Private; Private and Private
Brother of Edward Hooper LaFarge; Henry Adams LaFarge and Lt. (j.g.) Thomas Sergeant La Farge, USCGR, artist

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Maj Louis Bancel LaFarge, USAAF

  • From The New York Times, published: July 04, 1989 and available at http://www.nytimes.com/1989/07/04/obituaries/l-b-la-farge-89-an-arc...
    • "L. Bancel La Farge, an architect, president of the New York chapter of the American Institute of Architects from 1958 to 1960 and a founding member of the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission, died Sunday at his home in Pennswood Village in Newtown, Pa. He was 89 years old.
    • "Louis Bancel La Farge, a tall, cultivated man, specialized in designing homes, first in the Beaux Arts style and later in modified contemporary and English country manor styles. He designed residences in Charlestown, S.C., the Hamptons on Long Island, the Hudson Valley in New York and in the New Haven area. He also shaped the Caneel Bay resort in the Virgin Islands. A Grandson of the Painter
    • "Mr. La Farge, a grandson of John La Farge, the noted painter, was born in Boston and grew up in Lausanne, Switzerland, and Paris. He was a graduate of the Choate School, Harvard College and the Yale Architectural School.
    • "During World War II, he served on Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's general staff as chief of the monuments, fine arts and archives section. After the war, Major La Farge was decorated by the United States, France, Belgium, the Netherlands and Czechoslovakia for supervising the return of art works looted by the Nazis and stored in more than 500 sites in American-occupied Germany.
    • "He was president of the Municipal Art Society of New York from 1954 to 1956, a director of the executive committee of the American Arbitration Association from 1961 to 1969, a member of the city's Landmarks Preservation Commission from 1965 to 1970 and chairman of the Historic Districts Commission for Nantucket, Mass., from 1971 to 1976.
    • "Surviving are his wife, the former Margaret Hockaday; two sons, Timothy, of Atlanta, and Benjamin, of Barrytown, N.Y.; a daughter, Celestine La Farge Nicolas of the Netherlands, and five grandsons.
  • From https://www.monumentsmenfoundation.org/lafarge-maj-l-bancel:
    • "Louis Bancel LaFarge (1900-1989)
    • "Accomplished architect Louis Bancel LaFarge was born in Boston, Massachusetts on May 17, 1900. Descended from a long line of architects and painters, his relatives included the noted muralist John LaFarge and the art collector Edward W. Hooper. When he was eight years old, his artist parents moved the family to Paris. There, he regularly came into contact with Gertrude Stein and other avant garde artists who defined the modern style. During the family’s extensive travels throughout Europe, a visit to Mont St. Michel at the young age of eleven inspired him to become an architect. Returning to the United States for his education, he attended The Choate School, an elite boarding school in Connecticut, before studying architecture at both Harvard and Yale. In the years before the start of World War II, he was a practicing architect with multiple firms in New York City, including his own, LaFarge & Knox.
    • "In May 1942 LaFarge enlisted in the U.S. Army Air Force and was assigned to an Air Corps camouflage unit. He served in North Africa and Algiers alongside his friend from Connecticut, Monuments Man Maj. Theodore Sizer. LaFarge first became involved with the MFAA through Sizer, who arranged for his transfer to SHAEF headquarters in London. There, using a map of France and a list of historic monuments, LaFarge created the so-called “French Handbook,” an overview of the country’s rich cultural heritage. This pamphlet proved to be a valuable resource to soldiers in the field.
    • "Because of his extensive knowledge of France’s cultural objects and monuments, LaFarge was the first Monuments Officer to reach France, arriving in Normandy just one week after the D-Day landings. As Monuments Officer for British 2nd Army, he undertook inspections of cultural monuments and investigated looted works of art in the damaged cities of Bayeux and Caen. One of his first investigations concerned the location of the Bayeux Tapestry, the famed 11th-century embroidery depicting the Norman conquest of England. LaFarge discovered that the cloth had been secretly removed from its hiding place in the basement of Château de Sourches, near Le Mans, France, to the basement of the Louvre in Paris. Gestapo officers had removed the Bayeux Tapestry in early July 1944 on direct orders from Nazi Reichsführer Heinrich Himmler.
    • "LaFarge served in a number of prominent leadership positions within the MFAA. He headed the SHAEF Mission to the Netherlands toward the end of 1944 until his promotion to Chief of the MFAA Branch at SHAEF Headquarters in early 1945. Following the end of hostilities, he was named Chief of the MFAA for the Office of Military Government, U.S. Zone (OMGUS) in Frankfurt, Germany. In this position, he supervised the work of the Monuments Men in the field and was an integral part of early plans for the postwar restitution effort. One of his first challenges involved finding storage for the tens of thousands of works of art and other cultural objects the Monuments Men were discovering in salt mines, castles, and repositories across the U.S. Zone of Occupation. He recommended to SHAEF that collecting points be established to store, sort, catalog, rehabilitate, and eventually return these objects to the countries from which they had been stolen. Along with Monuments Man Lt. Cdr. George Stout, he devised plans for the first and largest of these, the Munich Central Collecting Point. LaFarge went on to open other collecting points including the Wiesbaden Central Collecting Point in Wiesbaden, Germany.
    • "In November 1945, controversy gripped the Monuments operation and its officers.In protest of an order to transport 202 German-owned paintings to the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. for “safe-keeping,” 32 Monuments Officers signed or supported a document known as the Wiesbaden Manifesto. While his high-ranking position prevented him from actually signing the document, LaFarge agreed with the sentiments of his colleagues. Concerned that his friends and colleagues’ actions would result in court martial, LaFarge hid the signed document in his desk rather than submitting it to his superiors.Determined to find a solution, LaFarge persuaded Monuments Man Lt. Lamont Moore to assist the National Gallery’s representative, Col. Henry McBride, with the painting selection, supervise the packing, and then accompany them on their long journey to Washington.
    • "For his role in the recovery and return of Europe’s cultural patrimony, LaFarge was awarded the Legion of Merit, the Bronze Star, the Croix de Guerre (France), Order of Merit First Class (Czechoslovakia), and named a Chevalier of the Legion of Honor (France), Officier of the Ordre de la Couronne (Belgium), and Officer of the Order of Orange-Nassau (the Netherlands).
    • "Upon his return to the United States, LaFarge resumed his career as a practicing architect. He was a partner in two successful New York City architectural firms, LaFarge, Knox & Murphy, and LaFarge & Morey. Most famous for his residential designs, he created houses in the Beaux Arts style as well as modified contemporary and English manor styles. His work can be seen in homes in the Hamptons, Hudson Valley, New Haven, Charleston, and the Caneel Bay resort in St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands.
    • "An influential member of the architecture community, LaFarge was Fellow, Secretary Director, and President of the New York chapter of the American Institute of Architects, member and trustee of the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design, President and Director of the Municipal Art Society, and a member of the advisory committee for the Cooper Union School of Art and Architecture. He was Director of the executive committee of the American Arbitration Association, a founding member of the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission, Chairman of the Historic Districts Commission for Nantucket, Massachusetts, and a member of the Century Association in New York City.
    • "Bancel LaFarge died in Newtown, Pennsylvania on July 2, 1989. He is buried in Newport, Rhode Island."
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Maj Louis Bancel LaFarge, USAAF's Timeline

1900
May 17, 1900
Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts, United States
1989
July 2, 1989
Age 89
Newtown, Schuylkill, Pennsylvania, United States