Norma Sklarek (1926-2012) had many \u201cfirsts\u201d. She was often credited at the start of her career as the first Black Women architect to be licensed in the United States. That distinction actually goes to Beverly Greene \u2013 Norma was the 3rd. But it didn\u2019t matter. Young Black girls read her name in the likes of Ebony Magazine \u2013 a staple publication in Black households at the time \u2013 when she was included in their 1958 article on \u201cSuccessful Young Architects.\u201d As more and more discovered her career, she became their role model.
\n\nBorn in 1926, in Harlem, Sklarek was the only child of Walter Ernest Merrick, a doctor, and Amy Merrick, a seamstress, both of whom had immigrated from Trinidad. She grew up in Harlem and Brooklyn, and attended predominately white schools, including Hunter College High School, a selective public school for girls, where she excelled in math and science and showed talent in the fine arts. Her aptitude for math and art prompted her father to suggest architecture as a career.
\n\nShe attended Barnard College and the School of Architecture at Columbia University. Many of her classmates were veterans of World War II, some had bachelor\u2019s or master\u2019s degrees . \u201cThe competition was keen,\u201d she said. \u201cBut I had a stick-to-it attitude and never gave up.\u201d
\n\nAfter graduating from Columbia, Sklarek faced discrimination in her search for work as an architect, applying to and being rejected by nineteen firms. In 1954 she took the architecture licensing examination, passed it on her first try and became the first licensed African American woman architect in the state of New York.
\n\nIn 1955, Sklarek was offered a position in the architectural firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill. During this period, she was a single mother of two children. Her mother cared for her children while Sklarek worked. 1959, she became the first African American woman member of the American Institute of Architects. In 1960, after five years at SOM, she took a job at Gruen Associates in Los Angeles. She also served on the architecture faculty at University of California, Los Angeles, and the University of Southern California.
\n\nin 1985, she cofounded the woman-owned firm, Siegel Sklarek Diamond, with Margot Siegel and Katherine Diamond. At the time, it was the largest woman-owned architectural firm in the United States, and Sklarek was the first African American woman to co-own an architectural practice.
\n\nThis story was produced by New Angle: Voice, a production of the Beverly Willis Architecture Foundation with host Cynthia Phifer Kracauer, AIA. Podcast production by Brandi Howell.