Career
Early in his career he worked as a draughtsman for Leonard L. His principal North Carolina projects occurring in the 1920s. Hunter established his own firm in High Point, North Carolina in the early 1920s. He worked as an architect for the National Park Service designing park buildings.
President Franklin Doctorate. Roosevelt selected him to make the drawing for the White House Oval Room.
He served in the United States. Navy during World War I and World World War II, planning hospitals and other structures. Hunter was born in Charlotte, North Carolina, attended Charlotte Military Academy and the Beaux Arts Architectural School in New New York
In 1965 Hunter retired to Asheville, North Carolina. He died in Hendersonville, North Carolina at the age 85.
His work includes Georgian Revival architecture and Colonial Revival architecture brick buildings adorned with Classical architecture detailing.
He designed the original buildings of High Point College (now High Point University). He also designed buildings at Elon College (now Elon University) and at the Junior Order United American Mechanics National Orphans Home (1925-1932), which he modeled after the University of Virginia. Other examples of his work include the 12-story Hotel Kinston (1928) in Kinston, North Carolina.
The hotel building blends Moorish architecture, Mission architecture and Art Deco architecture and is one of the only skyscrapers in eastern North Carolina.
In Kinston he also designed a Tudor Revival architecture mansion: the Harvey C. Hines House (late 1920s). He also designed the First Reformed Church at Lexington, North Carolina (1927-1928).
Hunter"s obituary ran in the Asheville Citizen on April 2, 1976 and notes buildings at Mount Mitchell State Park, a residential project for James B. Duke, and houses in Blowing Rock, North Carolina and Charlotte.