Alexandra Fuller
Alexandra Fuller (1918–1922), Buckminster Fuller's first child, who died just before her fourth birthday.
Alexandra was born in 1918 and died in 1922, after illnesses (infantile paralysis and spinal meningitis) worsened by the cold, damp housing the young family could afford. Her death was a lasting grief for Fuller and is frequently linked, in the biographies, to his later preoccupation with adequate shelter and human health — and to the despair that culminated in his 1927 decision to remake his life in service of humanity.
Relationship to Fuller
Relationship: family (daughter). Alexandra is R. Buckminster Fuller and Anne Hewlett Fuller's first daughter. Though she lived only four years, her death recurs across the corpus as a pivotal emotional event: the biographers connect it both to Fuller's crisis-and-resolve narrative of the mid-1920s and to the moral urgency he attached to housing, energy, and "doing more with less." Her younger sister Allegra Fuller Snyder was born in 1927.
See Also
- R. Buckminster Fuller (R. Buckminster Fuller) — her father
- Anne Hewlett Fuller (Anne Hewlett Fuller) — her mother
- Allegra Fuller Snyder (Allegra Fuller Snyder) — her younger sister
Sources
- Compiled from general knowledge and corpus mentions (referenced in the biographies and the timeline); no single work in this corpus anchors this figure.