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Fuller, Buckminster | Encyclopedia.com
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Fuller, Buckminster 1895-1983 BIBLIOGRAPHY
Richard Buckminster “Bucky” Fuller defined himself as a “random element,” and he has been described variously as an American visionary, architect, mathematician, inventor, designer, philosopher, and a “poet of technology” (Cruikshank 1981). He was the son of Richard Buckminster Fuller (who died when he was 12 years old) and Caroline Wolcott Andrews. He grew up in Maine (/places/united-states-and-canada/us-political-geography/maine) and attended Milton Academy in Massachusetts. Later he was expelled twice from Harvard University (/social-sciences-and-law/education/colleges-us/harvard-university). In his youth, he worked as a mechanic in a textile mill and as a laborer in a meatpacking plant. In 1917 he married Anne Hewlitt. After serving in the navy during World War I (/history/moderneurope/wars-and-battles/world-war-i), Fuller and his father-in-law, the architect James Monroe (/people/history/us-history-biographies/james-monroe) Hewlitt, developed a company that produced lightweight, weather-proof, fireproof structures, but the company was unsuccessful and by 1927 Fuller was 32, bankrupt, and jobless. Living in substandard housing in Chicago (/places/united-states-and-canada/us-political-geography/chicago), Fuller’s young daughter, Alexandra, died of a contagious disease. Fulled blamed himself, became suicidal, and contemplated jumping into Lake Michigan (/places/united-states-and-canada/us-physical-
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