Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Carl Frelinghuysen Gould (24 November 1873 - 4 January 1939) also spelled Carl Freylinghausen Gould, was a leading architect in the Pacific Northwest, and founder and first chair of the architecture program at the University of Washington. As the lead designer in the firm Bebb & Gould, with his partner, Charles H. Bebb, Gould was responsible for many notable Pacific Northwest buildings, such as the Seattle Art Museum, and for the campus plan of the University of Washington. He was born in New York to Charles Judson Gould. He graduated from Harvard in 1898, then spent five years at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris. After his return to New York, he apprenticed with McKim, Mead and White, D. H. Burnham & Company, and George B. Post and Sons.