"A spellbinding biography of Albert Bard, one of New York City’s greatest civic activists, laced with a fascinating twist of espionage. While Bard was helping to preserve the city — even fighting against the ‘power broker’ himself Robert Moses — he was privately dealing with an international scandal. Anthony Wood excavates a most extraordinary story from the shadows of history, not only rescuing a forgotten figure of American culture but discovering new and even provocative new details about his life. Servant of Beauty provides a captivating snapshot of public action and private lives in the mid 20th century."
— Greg Young, Writer, Co-creator and Host of the Bowery Boys Podcast
Anthony C. Wood not only provides a thorough history of pioneering preservationist Albert Bard whose advocacy ultimately created the New York City’s Landmarks Preservation Commission, but he uncovers the secret story of a gay man whose life had to be hidden from all of his colleagues. Wood adds an important layer to our understanding of the character of early preservation activists by making tangible the previously invisible life of a prominent civic leader.
— Andrew S. Dolkart, Co-Founder, NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project
Persistent and visionary, Albert Bard is responsible for the 1956 Bard Act that enabled New York to enact its tremendously influential landmarks preservation law. Wood’s enthralling biography highlights Bard’s deep commitment to beauty-and the legal tools that make it possible-while revealing the hidden history of his other great love and a queerness common to other influential preservation pioneers.
— Thomas M. Mayes, Chief Legal Officer and General Counsel, National Trust for Historic Preservation
Albert Bard’s name is not known to many people in 21st century New York, but it should be, because he laid the groundwork for the historic preservation movement in the city, and the legislation he fought for became the legal basis for allowing towns and cities in the state to protect their important buildings. But as Anthony Wood shows us, Bard was more than our forgotten advocate of civic beauty and architectural preservation. He was also a man who lived a rich, complicated, and unusual life of both public and private passions. His story, meticulously researched and recounted by Wood, is not just a tale out of New York’s past, it is a compelling story about the future, and about the long and patient struggle to shape a better city.
— Paul Goldberger, Architecture Critic and author of Why Architecture Matters
Anthony Wood has masterfully brought Albert Bard’s civic legacy to the fore while also giving us insight to his complicated personal life. Bard was a giant in the scenic conservation movement. The Bard Act in New York State alone is a signature law that should be duplicated throughout the country and indeed the world. Much of Bard’s philosophies and accomplishments lay the foundation for the work that Scenic America does today.
— Mark Falzone, President, Scenic America
"Albert Bard was denied a proper obituary in The New York Times because of a newspaper strike. Anthony Wood's book finally does justice to the legacy of a landmarks preservationist whose life, even belatedly, has deserved distinction and celebration."
— Sam Roberts, journalist and author