Background
Almy grew up in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Almy grew up in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
In 1905 she graduated from Radcliffe College.
As a child, she had polio and so walked with crutches throughout her life. She taught in local private schools and became interested in architecture. This interest led her family to encourage her to design and build a summer house for them in Cape Cod.
In 1917 she went to study architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
She graduated from Massachusetts Institute of Technology with a Bachelor of Science in 1919. After graduation she worked as a drafter at a London based architectural firm called Collcut and Hamp, for two years.
In the 1920s she became a drafter for the Boston firm owned by Lois Lilley Howe and Eleanor Manning, who had also attended Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Manning and Almy continued in private practice and Almy also worked with landscape architect Henrietta Pope. Mary Almy"s papers reside in the collection for Howe, Manning and Almy at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The Almy family papers are located at the Schlesinger Library at Radcliffe College.
In 1926 she became a member of the American Institute of Architects and a partner at Howe, Manning & Almy, Incorporated. Despite surviving the Great Depression, the firm closed in 1937 after Howe retired.