



As for your writer, I've always loved architecture and have been a P&L fan for years. As a project of the Baltimore Architecture Foundation (where I was President), we are working on the "Dead Architects Society" and are exploring the architects of what Baltimore looks like today. In my everyday life, I am the Director of the History of Medicine in Maryland for the Maryland State Medical Society.





--Meg Fairfax Fielding

Welcome to Palmer & Lamdin, a place to learn about these early 20th century architects who mainly worked in Baltimore. Most of their work was residential, and it was very distinctive.The firm's principals are Edward L. Palmer and William D. Lamdin. The firm was in business in from the mid-1920's to the mid-1930's. They were part of a group of architects, including Laurence Hall Fowler, Howard Sill, John Russell Pope, Mattu & White and Bayard Turnbull who are responsible for the majority of houses in Guilford, as well as a number in Homeland, Roland Park, Dumbarton and Cedarcroft.