Douglas Putnam Haskell (1899 – August 11, 1979) was an American writer, architecture critic and magazine editor.
Today he is widely known for his coinage of the term Googie architecture in a 1952 article in House and Home magazine.
The son of American missionaries, Haskell was born in the Ottoman Empire, in the Balkan city of Monastir, now Bitola in the Republic of Macedonia.
He wrote for numerous other publications, including the English journal Architectural Review and Harper's Magazine.
Under his editorship, the magazine published some of the early work of Jane Jacobs, whom Haskell hired as an associate editor in 1952.