Thomas Wilson Boyde, Jr. was born on December 25, 1905, in Washington, D.C.[3] Boyde was the third of four children. Denied 1923 entry to West Point United States Military Academy, he attended four universities in five years. Boyde graduating 1928 with a Baccalaureate in architecture from the School of Architecture of Syracuse University.
The next five years he had four employers, including a New York State agency.[5]
Career
When the Rochester architect who designed what later was renamed Monroe Community Hospital hired Boyde as one of his assistants,[6] the latter's decorative style of corner windows and curved walls[7] had a chance to develop.[1] This led to a series of other works and, later on, his own architectural firm.[2] His project list included over 30 commercial locations and a larger number of private properties.[8] The second largest category of his designs were restaurants.[5]
His papers are part of the Rochester Museum and Science Center's collections.[9] A 2020 local TV news article said "What exactly he's responsible for designing is still debated today."[10] A $300,000 project "to fund a cultural resource survey of the architecture of Thomas W. Boyde Jr." was announced later that year.[11]