Wellsboro High School Class Ring Design, 1931
Following high school graduation, Phil entered Penn State (then a College), hoping to become an art major. This major was not then available, and art teacher Dorothy Stover encouraged him to consider architecture. The rest is history, as the saying goes.
As an undergraduate, Phil became a member of Acacia, a social fraternity. He was also inducted into Scarab, the architecture honorary society, and Pi Gamma Alpha, the fine arts honorary society. In 1935 he was art editor of La Vie, Penn State’s yearbook. He also became a member of Pi Delta Upsilon, a journalism honorary society.
While in school, Phil occasionally indulged in pastries from a bake shop on Allen Street. On one visit he was entranced by an attractive clerk, but when he shopped again she was no longer there. Fortunately, however, when he later needed dental services, he found her again as the receptionist in the dentist office above the bakery. They shared interests in design and dancing and Florence (Kitty) Franks became Mrs. Philip Hallock.
In 1937 Phil obtained his first client and designed a traditional home for him in his hometown. That same year he began work for J. M. Wickersham, Engineer, in Lancaster. At a Penn State Alumni Club there he met William Moorhouse, a fan of modern architecture. The Moorhouse’s engaged Phil to design a home for them in that mode. In designing this home Phil perfected a system of radiant heating in a poured concrete slab. His design was used often in later homes and has stood the test of time immensely well.
In 1939 Phil returned closer to home, joining Raymond V. Hall in a partnership, Hall and Hallock, Architects, in Port Allegany. (Hall’s father, Walter, was the general contractor for Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fallingwater at about the same time. Ray designed a Fallingwater inspired home at the corner of South Allen Street and Whitehall Road and has another home in the area at Panorama Village.)
Phil left Pennsylvania with Kitty in 1941 for the Chicago firm of Schmidt, Garden & Erikson, Architects. While in Chicago they journeyed to Taliesen in Spring Green, Wisconsin to meet the famous master himself. Wright greeted them warmly. “You know, Mr. Wright,” Kitty said, “meeting you is the highlight of Phil’s life.” “Oh, no,” Wright graciously replied. “I’m sure the highlight of Phil’s life was meeting you.”
Phil presented Wright with a portfolio of his works, including the Moorhouse home. (See the sketch following.) Wright was enthusiastic. “How soon can you two join my fellowship?” he asked. Unfortunately, World War II was still raging and Phil was 1-A. Phil entered the Navy that year, and served from 1944 to 1947. In the Navy Phil was assigned to Photo Intelligence and was stationed in the Aleutian Islands at Adak Navy Base. With time on his hands, Phil honed his skills as a painter as well as a photographer.
Upon his discharge from the Navy in 1947, Phil returned to State College and set up shop in a small, windowless room on the second floor of an office building on the Southwest corner of Beaver and Allen Streets (across from the Schlow Library, for which Phil did the original conversion from the Post Office). He then designed his own first home for a lot at Prospect and Frazer Streets and applied to the banks for a loan. All turned him down on the grounds that his house was too radical to sell if foreclosed. Finally Gene Lee of People’s National Bank (now Omega) approved a Veterans’ Administration loan and the house was built. Phil also got his first local clients, Robert and Helen Savard Galbraith. Phil had been a student in Helen’s interior design class while an undergraduate.