A well-known
Philadelphia architectural designer, Abele was the first black graduate of what
is today the Graduate School of Fine Arts. Julian Francis Abele, born in Philadelphia
on April 30, 1881, was the youngest of eight children born to Charles and Mary
Adelaide Jones Abele. Through his mother Adelaide, Julian was a descendant of
Reverend Absalom Jones (1746-1818), founder of the Free African Society and of
St. Thomas Episcopal Church. His older brothers included Joseph B. Abele, an engineer
with the Philadelphia Electric Company; Robert Jones Abele, who graduated at the
top of his 1895 class at Hahnemann Medical College; Charles Abele, a brass sign
maker who worked with artisan Sam Yellin.
Young
Julian Abele was educated at the Institute for Colored Youth, Brown Prep School
and the Philadelphia Museum School of Industrial Art before enrolling at the University
of Pennsylvania in 1898. An outstanding student, Abele received a number of prizes
during his undergraduate years at Penn, including first prize in competition for
the Library Tablet to commemorate alumni gifts, first prize in competition for
the Conklin Memorial Gateway at Haverford College, first mention from the Beaux
Arts Society, the Arthur Spayde Brooke Memorial Prize and the T-Square Club Prize.
During his senior year, Abele served on the student yearbook committee and as
president of the Architectural Society. He did all this while working all four
years as a designer with the Louis Hickman Architectural Firm, juggling his job
with afternoon and evening classes at the University.
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Source: Penn University Archives and Records Center
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