Two years later he received his master's degree in the same field from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
At the Texas Engineering Station, he was a research assistant and in 1941, following the influx of students following the war, wrote Space for Teaching.
[3] One of the country's largest architectural organizations, it designed houses, schools, hospitals, churches, and commercial and public buildings.
[4] Notable buildings included elementary schools in Washington, Parkside, Northside, and Houston, which were listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
His firm is noted for its work on school designs, beginning with a building constructed in Blackwell, Oklahoma.
[3] His books include Space for Teaching (1941),[1] Architecture by Team (1971) and The TIBs of Bill Caudill (1984).
[1][4] In 1973, Edith died and Caudill was married a second time in 1974 a friend from Oklahoma A&M College, Aleen Plumer Harrison.