He was born on October 24, 1888, in Boston, Massachusetts, to Joseph Brown Morse French (1854–1928) and Erlenia Helen Matilda Faulkner (1857–1939). He had four sisters: Frances Gertrude French (1877–1878) who died of cholera, Emma Matilda French (1879–1884), Nettie Eveline French (1886–1896) and Marion Ruth French (1897–1982). French attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and graduated in 1911.[5]
He first married Amie Gertrude Lathe (1885–1921), May 14, 1912 at St. Stephens Episcopal Church in Boston.[6] He was put in charge of the last stages of construction on Henry Ford's Fair Lane residence in Dearborn, Michigan in 1913.[1][7] In 1914 he started work for Albert Kahn's firm in Detroit as a draftsman, and then as an architect.[8] By 1916 he was living at 2098 Woodward Avenue in Detroit.[9] On June 10, 1921, his wife Amie died.[10] On June 8, 1926, he married Yolanda Christina Tandberg (1902–2003).[11] Yolanda was the daughter of Thorvald Martin Tandberg (1874-1970) and Alvilde Marie Magdalene Naess (1875-1933) of Norway. She was 14 years younger than Joseph. They had several children, including Joseph Nathaniel French, Jr.[12] While at Kahn he was chief architect for the Fisher Building in 1928.[1]
^ abcdef"Joseph N. French, Fairlane Architect". Detroit Free Press. March 2, 1975. p. C16. Retrieved 2011-03-21. A graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, he came to Detroit in 1913 to work as an architect on Henry Ford's home, Fairlane. He joined the architectural firm of Albert Kahn Associates in 1914 and retired from that company in 1967. In the meantime he had served as chief architect for the Fisher Building, taught methods of industrial construction in Russia and during World War II, designed installations for the Army and Navy throughout the world.
^The Society. Michigan Society of Architects. 1952. Joseph N. French ...
^ ab"Joseph Nathaniel French". American Architects. Third edition. Edited by John F. Gane. New York: R.R. Bowker. 1970.
^The Technology Review. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Alumni Association. 1912. Joseph Nathaniel French, '11
^The Technology Review. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Alumni Association. 1912. Along with the invitation to Dick's wedding, came the announcement from Joseph N. French, a Course IV man, of his marriage with Miss Annie [sic] Gertrude Lathe of ...
^The Technology Review. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Alumni Association. 1913. Joseph N. French, Course IV, patriotically wrote to the secretary on Independence Day. At present he has charge of construction work on Henry Ford's new ...
^The Technology Review. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Alumni Association. 1916. Joseph N. French, 2098 Woodward Ave., Detroit, Mich.
^The Technology Review. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Alumni Association. 1921. Here is the story as written by Joseph N. French in Detroit: 'I have met with the worst of sad blows and have not recovered from it and probably never will. My pal and wife died June tenth and the two kiddies and myself are trying to find a way to live without our teacher and guide.' ...
^The Technology Review. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Alumni Association. 1925. It is a pleasure to announce the engagement of Miss Yolanda Christina Tandberg and Mr. Joseph Nathaniel French of Detroit. But wait, you ain't heard nuthin' ...
^French, Jr., Joseph Nathaniel. Customs and Manners of Elizabethan London as Reflected in Thomas Dekker's ... Columbia University.
^"Industry's Architect". Time. June 29, 1942. Archived from the original on January 14, 2009. Retrieved 2008-04-04. In 1928 the Soviet Government, after combing the U.S. for a man who could furnish the building brains for Russia's industrialization, offered the job to Kahn. Twenty-five Kahn engineers and architects went to Moscow.