User:JPRiley/McKim
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Background
[edit]The office of McKim, Mead & White was organized in 1879, and was formally dissolved on February 20, 1961. It was suceeded by the office of Steinman, Corrigill, Cain & White, itself soon superceded by Steinman, Cain & White.
Partners of the firm were:
- Charles Follen McKim (1847-1909), 1879 to 1909.
- William Rutherford Mead (1846-1928), 1879 to 1920.
- Stanford White (1853-1906), 1879 to 1906.
- William Mitchell Kendall (1856-1941), 1906 to 1941.
- Burt Leslie Fenner (1869-1926), 1906 to 1926.
- William Symmes Richardson (1873-1931), 1906 to 1920.
- Teunis J. van der Bent (1863-1936), 1909 to 1936.
- Lawrence Grant White (1887-1956), 1920 to 1956.
- James Kellum Smith (1893-1961), 1929 to 1961.
At the reorganization in 1961 the new partners were former participating associates Milton Bode Steinmann (1899-1987), Alexander Stevenson Corrigill (1891-1961), Walker Oscar Cain (1915-1993) and Cornelius J. White (1894-1962).
Some employees
[edit]- Frederick J. Adams, 1896 to 1945.
- J. Howard Adams, 1899-1907, later of Jackson, Robertson & Adams of Providence, Rhode Island.
- Lewis Colt Albro, 1895-1906, later of Albro & Lindeberg and eponymous practice.
- Will S. Aldrich, 1905-1910, later of Eckel & Aldrich of St. Joseph, Missouri.
- Grosvenor Atterbury, later of eponymous practice.
- Louis Ayres, 1896-1901, later of York & Sawyer.
- Henry Bacon, 1885-1889 and 1891-1897, later of Brite & Bacon and eponymous practice.
- J. Williams Beal, before 1879, later of eponymous practice in Boston.
- John Prentiss Benson, later of Benson & Brockway and eponymous practice.
- Thorsten E. Billquist, 1892-1895, later of eponymous practice in Pittsburgh.
- Walter Danforth Bliss, 1895-1898, later of Bliss & Faville of San Francisco.
- William A. Boring, 1890-1891, later of Boring & Tilton and eponymous practice.
- Charles Lewis Bowman, 1911-13. later of eponymous practice in Westchester County.
- James Brite, 1886-1889 and 1891-1892, later of Brite & Bacon and eponymous practice.
- A. Page Brown, 1879 and 1882-1884, later of eponymous practice in San Francisco.
- John Merven Carrère, 1882-1885, later of Carrère & Hastings.
- George Cary, later of eponymous practice in Buffalo, New York.
- William E. Chamberlin, before 1879, later of Chamberlin & Whidden and Chamberlin & Austin of Boston.
- Joseph Everett Chandler, later of Cabot & Chandler and eponymous practice in Boston.
- Royal Cortissoz, 1885-1891, later art critic.
- William Francis Deegan, later tenement house commissioner.
- William J. Dodd, 1884-1886, later of eponymous practice in Louisville, Kentucky and Los Angeles.
- John duFais, later of eponymous practice in Newport, Rhode Island.
- Frederick Earl Emmons, 1930-1932, later of Jones, Emmons & Associates of Los Angeles.
- Arthur Greene Everett, 1880s, later of Cabot, Everett & Mead of Boston.
- Lyman Farwell, 1892-1894, later of Dennis & Farwell of Los Angeles.
- William Baker Faville, 1895-1898, later of Bliss & Faville of San Francisco.
- H. Edwards Ficken, later of eponymous practice.
- John Allyne Gade, later of Foster, Gade & Graham and Foster & Gade.
- Cass Gilbert, 1880-1882, later of eponymous practice.
- William H. Gompert, later Superintendent of School Buildings for the New York City Board of Education.
- Albert S. Gottlieb, 1892-1900, later of eponymous practice.
- Carl Frelinghuysen Gould, 1905, later of Bebb & Gould of Seattle.
- Alfred Dwight Foster Hamlin, 1881-1883, later professor of architecture at Columbia University.
- Fitch Harrison Haskell, 1912-1916, later of Bennett & Haskell and eponymous practice in Pasadena, California.
- Thomas Hastings, 1883-1885, later of Carrère & Hastings.
- Alfred B. Harlow, 1881-1885, later of Longfellow, Alden & Harlow and Alden & Harlow of Boston and Pittsburgh.
- James Monroe Hewlett, 1891-1894, later of Lord & Hewlett et al.
- Arthur Loomis Harmon, 1902-1911, later of Shreve, Lamb & Harmon.
- Alexander James Harper, 1908-1910 and 1911-1912, later of McClure & Harper of Wilmington, Delaware and the office of James Gamble Rogers.
- Wallace K. Harrison, 1916-1917 and 1919, later of Harrison & Abramovitz.
- Gerald A. Holmes, 1905-1923, later of Thompson, Holmes & Converse.
- Eric Gugler, later of eponymous practice.
- Francis L. V. Hoppin, 1886-1890, later of Hoppin, Read & Hoppin of Providence, Rhode Island and Hoppin & Koen.
- John Galen Howard, 1889-1891, later of eponymous practice in San Francisco.
- Washington Hull, before 1894, later of Lord, Hewlett & Hull and eponymous practice in Brooklyn.
- James A. Johnson, 1890-1892, later of Esenwein & Johnson of Buffalo, New York.
- Louis Kamper, 1880-1888, later of eponymous practice in Detroit.
- Eric Kebbon, 1956-1958, as associate.
- Thomas M. Kellogg, 1884-1891, later of Rankin & Kellogg et al. of Philadelphia.
- Frederic Rhinelander King, 1914-1917, later of Wyeth & King.
- Terence A. Koen, 1880-1894, later of Hoppin & Koen.
- Warrington G. Lawrence, 1886-1889, later of eponymous practice.
- Christopher La Farge, 1924-1931, later of C. Grant La Farge & Son and novelist.
- Ion Lewis, 1885-1889, later of Whidden & Lewis of Portland, Oregon.
- Harrie T. Lindeberg, 1885-1906, later of Albro & Lindeberg and eponymous practice.
- Austin W. Lord, 1890-1894, later of Lord & Hewlett et al.
- Harold Van Buren Magonigle, 1888-1891, later of eponymous practice.
- Stanley McCandless, after 1924, later lighting designer.
- Lionel Moses, 1887-1931.
- Arthur C. Nash, 1922, later of Atwood & Nash of Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
- Norman G. Nims, later of York & Sawyer.
- Gordon B. Pike, before 1914, later of Starrett & van Vleck.
- Willis Polk, later of Willis Polk & Company of San Francisco.
- T. Henry Randall, 1886-1890, later of eponymous practice.
- Lorimer Rich, 1922-1928, later of eponymous practice.
- Albert Randolph Ross, 1891-1898, later of Ackerman & Ross and eponymous practice.
- Charles M. Rousseau, 1881-1886, later of eponymous practice in San Francisco.
- Philip Sawyer, 1891-1898, later of York & Sawyer.
- Robert S. Stephenson, 1880s, later of Stephenson & Greene and Stephenson & Wheeler.
- Edward F. Stevens, 1890, later of Stevens & Lee et al. of Boston.
- Charles K. Sumner, before 1906, later of eponymous practice in San Francisco.
- Egerton Swartwout, 1891-1900, later of Tracy & Swartwout et al.
- John Ambrose Thompson, later of Rockrise & Thompson and Thompson, Holmes & Converse.
- Edward Lippincott Tilton, 1881-1887 and 1890-1891, later of Boring & Tilton and eponymous practice.
- Evarts Tracy, 1890-1892 and 1894-1896, later of Tracy & Swartwout et al.
- Robert von Ezdorf, before 1956, as senior designer.
- H. Hobart Weekes, later of Hiss & Weekes.
- Joseph Morrill Wells, 1879-1890.
- Edmund M. Wheelwright, 1879, later of Wheelwright & Haven of Boston.
- William M. Whidden, 1882-1885, later of Chamberlin & Whidden of Boston and Whidden & Lewis of Portland, Oregon.
- Harry J. White, 1899-1909, later of Wilder & White.
- Edward Payson Whitman, 1890s, later of Whitman & Hood of Boston and eponymous practice in Hayward, California.
- Thomas Wight, 1891-1904, later of Wilder & Wight and Wight & Wight of Kansas City, Missouri.
- William D. Wight, 1900-1911, later of Wight & Wight of Kansas City, Missouri.
- Walter R. Wilder, later of Wilder & White.
- Edmund R. Willson, before 1879, later of Stone, Carpenter & Willson of Providence, Rhode Island.
- Frederick James Woodbridge, 1921-1922 and 1925-1928, later of Adams & Woodbridge et al.
- Edward P. York, 1890-1898, later of York & Sawyer.
Works by Charles F. McKim and William R. Mead, 1872 to 1877
[edit]- House for Joseph Sargent, 16 Hammond St, Worcester, Massachusetts (1872, demolished)[1]
- House for Francis Blake, Park Rd, Weston, Massachusetts (1873, demolished)[1]
- School for Rev. William S. Child, 11 1/2 Chestnut St, Newport, Rhode Island (1873)[2]
- Alterations for J. Dwight Ripley, 14 W 37th St, New York City (1876, unlocated)[3]
- Elberon Hotel, Elberon, New Jersey (1876, demolished)[2]
- House for Moses Taylor, Elberon, New Jersey (1876, demolished)[2]
- House for Katherine Prescott Wormeley, 2 Red Cross Ave, Newport, Rhode Island (1876, addition 1881)[4]
- Stable for John W. Bigelow, 79 2nd St, Newport, Rhode Island (1876)[1]
- House for Dwight S. Herrick, 124 Union Ave, Peekskill, New York (1877)[5]
- "Oakwood" for Samuel Gray Ward,[a] Richmond Mountain Rd, Lenox, Massachusetts (1877, burned 1903)
Works by McKim, Mead & Bigelow, 1877 to 1879
[edit]- House for Edward N. Dickerson, 64 E 34th St, New York City (1877-78)[6][7]
- "Redtop" for William Dean Howells, 90 Somerset St, Belmont, Massachusetts (1877, NRHP 1971)[8]
- House alterations for Charles Cotesworth Beaman, 27 E 21st St, New York City (1878, unlocated)[9]
- Alterations for William Cooper, 113 E 21st St, New York City (1878, unlocated)[10]
- Alterations for Edward N. Dickerson, 62 E 34th St, New York City (1878-79)[11][12]
- Alterations for James Havemeyer, 50 W 37th St, New York City (1878, unlocated)[13]
- "Gusty Gables" for Mary de Peyster Carey, 58 Yokun Ave, Lenox, Massachusetts (1878)[14]
- The Benedick, 80 Washington Sq E, New York City (1879)[15]
- House for Frederick Ferris Thompson, 283 Madison Ave, New York City (1879, demolished)[16]
- "Fort Hill" for Anne C. (Coleman) Alden, Lloyd Harbor, New York (1879, altered 1900, NRHP 1988)[17]
-
Redtop, Belmont, Massachusetts, 1877.
Works in the United States
[edit]In progress
[edit]- Houses for Charles T. Barney,[b] 10 and 12 E 55th St, New York City (1880, burned 1900)[18]
- Church of the Holy Communion parish house alterations, 49 W 20th St, New York City (1880, NRHP 1980)[19]
- House for Theodore R. Davis, 43 MacDonough St, Brooklyn (1881, demolished)[20]
- House for Charles Lewis Tiffany, 898 Madison Ave, New York City (1882, demolished 1936)[21]
- American Safe Deposit Company offices and apartments, 501 Fifth Ave, New York City (1882, demolished)[22]
- House for Phillips Phoenix and Lloyd Phoenix, 21 E 33rd St, New York City (1882-83, demolished)[23]
- House for Mary A. (LeRoy) King,[c], 724 Fifth Ave, New York City (1882-83, demolished)[24]
- House for Alfred M. Hoyt, 934 Fifth Ave, New York City (1883, demolished)[25]
- House for Charles J. Osborn, 555 S Barry Ave, Mamaroneck, New York (1885)[26][27]
- Goelet Estate Office Building, 9 W 17th St, New York City (1885, demolished)[28]
- House for James C. Miller, 47 W 119th St, New York City (1885)[29]
- The Wanaque, 359 W 47th St, New York City (1886)[30]
- House for John S. Bush, Carter and E Tremont Aves, Tremont, Bronx (1886, demolished)[31]
- Houses for Theodore G. Thomas, 140 through 158 St Anns Ave, Mott Haven, Bronx (1886, demolished)[32]
- Freundschaft Society, 755 Park Ave, New York City (1886-87, demolished)[33]
- The Yosemite, 550 Park Ave, New York City (1888, demolished)[34]
- Hotel Imperial, Broadway and W 32nd St, New York City (1889-90, demolished 1947)[35]
- [[Robb House (New York City)|House] for J. Hampden Robb, 23 Park Ave, New York City (1889-92)[36][37]
- Deutscher Verein, 110 Central Park S, New York City (1889-90, demolished)[38]
- Riding and Driving Club, 10 Plaza St E, Brooklyn (1890, demolished)[39]
- The Tecumseh (later Welden), 1970-1972 Broadway, New York City (1891, demolished)[40]
- New York Herald Building, W 35th St and Broadway, New York City (1892-93, demolished 1908)[41][37]
- Vanderbilt Building, 15 Beekman St, New York City (1892, demolished 2020)[42][43]
- "Woodlea" for Elliott Fitch Shepard, 777 Albany Post Rd, Briarcliff Manor, New York (1892-95)[44][45]
- Garden City Casino, 45 7th St, Garden City, New York (1893-95)[46]
- House for Ruth Arabella (Loney) Brown, 888 Fifth Ave, New York City (1893, demolished 1951)[47][37]
- House for Henry A. C. Taylor, 3 E 71st St, New York City (1894, demolished)[48]
- Houses for Henry A. C. Taylor, 4 and 6 E 72nd St, New York City (1894, demolished)[49]
- Cosmopolitan Building, 50 S Buckhout St, Irvington, New York (1894)[50]
- "Whitehall" for David H. King Jr., Catherine St, Newport, Rhode Island (1895, burned)[51]
- "Sherrewogue" for Devereux Emmet, 77 Harbor Rd, Head of the Harbor, New York (1895)[52]
- Houses for Prescott Hall Butler and William Dameron Guthrie, 22 and 28 Park Ave, New York City (1895, demolished)[53][54]
- Clubhouse of Saint Andrew's Golf Club, 10 Old Jackson Ave, Hastings-on-Hudson, New York (1896)[55]
- Gould Hall, New York University (former campus), University Heights, Bronx (1896)[56]
- 1 Worth St warehouse, New York City (1896)[57]
- House for Thomas Nelson Page, 1759 R St NW, Washington, DC (1896, NRHP 1975)[58]
- Hartford Medical Society, 38 Prospect St, Hartford, Connecticut (1897-98, demolished)[59]
- Sherry's, 522 Fifth Ave, New York City (1897, demolished)[60]
- House for Levi P. Morton, 681 Fifth Ave, New York City (1897, demolished)[61]
- Mausoleum for Robert Goelet and Ogden Goelet, Woodlawn Cemetery, Woodlawn Heights, Bronx (1898)[62]
- 298 Broadway building, New York City (1898, demolished)[63]
- Cornell University Medical College,[d] 477 First Ave, New York City (1899-1900, demolished)[64]
- Garden City Hotel, 45 7th St, Garden City, New York (1900, demolished)[65]
- Hall of Fame for Great Americans, New York University (former campus), University Heights, Bronx (1900-01)[66]
- Knickerbocker Trust Company Building, 358 Fifth Ave, New York City (1902-04 and 1920-21, altered)[67]
- Naugatuck High School (former), 51 Hillside Ave, Naugatuck, Connecticut (1902-05)[68][69]
- White House remodeling and addition of West Wing and East Wing, 1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW, Washington, DC (1902)[70][71]
- House for Charles Dana Gibson, 127 E 73rd St, New York City (1902)[72]
- Entrance porch of St. Bartholomew's Episcopal Church, 109 E 50th St, New York City (1902)[73]
- New York Public Library Chatham Square Branch, 33 E Broadway, New York City (1902-03)[74]
- New York Public Library 125th Street Branch, 224 E 125th St, New York City (1903-04)[75][37]
- Morgan Library and Museum, 225 Madison Ave, New York City (1903-06)[76][37]
- Gorham Building, 390 Fifth Ave, New York City (1903-06)[77][37]
- Tiffany Building, 401 Fifth Ave, New York City (1903-06)[78][37]
- House for Mr. Preston, Jericho, New York (1903, unlocated)[79]
- New York Public Library Tompkins Square Branch, 331 E 10th St, New York City (1903-04)[80][37]
- House for Philip M. Lydig, 38 E 52nd St, New York City (1903, demolished)[81]
- House for Herbert L. Satterlee, 37 E 36th St, New York City (1903, demolished)[82]
- New York Public Library 135th Street Branch (former), 103 W 135th St, New York City (1903-05)[83][37]
- Madison Square Presbyterian Church, Madison Ave and E 24th St, New York City (1904-06, demolished 1919)[84]
- House for James Stillman, 910 Fifth Ave, New York City (1904, demolished)[85]
- House for T. Jefferson Coolidge, Coolidge Point, Manchester, Massachusetts (1905, demolished 1958)[86]
- Lambs Club, 128 W 44th St, New York City (1904-05)[87][37]
- University Cottage Club, 51 Prospect Ave, Princeton, New Jersey (1904-06)[88][89]
- New York Public Library Rivington Street Branch (former), 61 Rivington St, New York City (1904-05)[90]
- House for John Innes Kane, 610 Fifth Ave, New York City (1904, demolished)[91]
- "Deep River Lodge" for Clarence Mackay, Guilford College Rd, Jamestown, North Carolina (1904, demolished)[92]
- House for William Kissam Vanderbilt II, 666 Fifth Ave, New York City (1905, demolished)[93]
- Munsey Building, 1329 E St NW, Washington, DC (1905, demolished 1982)[94]
- Second Narragansett Pier Casino, 35 Ocean Rd, Narragansett Pier, Rhode Island (1905-06, burned 1965)[95][96]
- Colony Club, 120 Madison Ave, New York City (1905-08)[97][37]
- Bellevue Hospital, 462 First Ave, New York City (1906 et seq., altered)[98][37]
- Pennsylvania Station, 393 Seventh Ave, New York City (1906-10, demolished 1963)[99]
- New York Public Library Harlem Branchm 9 W 124th St, New York City (1907)[100]
- Knickerbocker Trust Company Building, 60 Broadway, New York City (1907, demolished)[101]
- Harvard Club of New York, 27 W 44th St, New York City (1893-94, 1902-05 and 1913-16)[37][102]
| 1906 || St. Gabriel's Park Branch Library || 303 E 36th St || New York || New York || Demolished. || |- | 1907 || Harlem Branch Library || 9 W 124th St || New York || New York || || |-
- "Ferncliff Farm" casino for John Jacob Astor IV, 189 River Rd, Rhinebeck, New York (1902)
- House for E. D. Morgan, Westbury, New York
- Edward F. Caldwell building, 40 W 15th St, New York City
Alabama
[edit]- Alabama State Capitol south and north wings,[e] 600 Dexter Ave, Montgomery, Alabama (1906 and 1911, NRHP 1966)
California
[edit]- "Arden" for Helena Modjeska, Modjeska Canyon, California (1888, NRHP 1972, NHL 1980)
- Court of the Universe, Panama-Pacific Exposition, San Francisco, California (1915, temporary structure)
-
Arden, Modjeska Canyon, California, 1888.
-
Court of the Universe, Panama-Pacific Exposition, San Francisco, California, 1915.
Connecticut
[edit]- Wolf's Head Old Hall, 77 Prospect St, New Haven, Connecticut (1884)[103]
- Russwin Hotel, 27 W Main St, New Britain, Connecticut (1886, conversion to City Hall 1908-09)[104]
- House for John Howard Whittemore, Naugatuck, Connecticut (1888, demolished)
- Naugatuck National Bank Building, Church St, Naugatuck, Connecticut (1893, demolished)[105]
- "Hill-Stead" for Alfred Atmore Pope, 35 Mountain Rd, Farmington, Connecticut (1898)
- Bristol Bank and Trust Company Building, 200 Main St, Bristol, Connecticut (1920-23)[106]
- Home Bank and Trust Company Building, 16 Colony St, Meriden, Connecticut (1922)[107]
- Olin Memorial Library, Hall and Shanklin Laboratories and Harriman Hall, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut (1926-27, Olin Library addition 1938, Hall Laboratory demolished 1967)[108]
- Alumni Athletic Building, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut (1931)[108]
- Cook and Hamlin Halls, Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut (1931)
- Fayerweather Gymnasium addition, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut (1934, demolished)[108]
- Boger Hall, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut (1935)[108]
- Clement Chemistry Building, Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut (1936)
- Memorial Chapel rebuilding, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut (1939)[108]
- North and Northwest dormitories, University of Connecticut (1948-50)[109]
- Salem School, 124 Meadow St, Naugatuck, Connecticut (1893)[110]
- Howard Whittemore Memorial Library, 243 Church St, Naugatuck, Connecticut (1894)[69]
- Memorial Fountain, Naugatuck Green, Naugatuck, Connecticut (1895)[69]
- Congregational Church of Naugatuck, 9 Division St, Naugatuck, Connecticut (1903)[69]
- Buckingham Building, Grand and Bank Sts, Waterbury, Connecticut (1905-06, demolished)[111]
- Waterbury Union Station (former), 389 Meadow St, Waterbury, Connecticut (1906-09)[111]
- "Tranquility Farm" for John Howard Whittemore, Tranquility Rd, Middlebury, Connecticut (1895, NRHP 1982, main house demolished)[112]
-
Wolf's Head Old Hall, New Haven, Connecticut, 1884.
-
Russwin Hotel, New Britain, Connecticut, 1886.
-
Salem School, Naugatuck, Connecticut, 1893.
-
Service buildings at Tranquility Farm, Middlebury, Connecticut, 1895.
-
Howard Whittemore Memorial Library, Naugatuck, Connecticut, 1894.
-
Hartford Medical Society, Hartford, Connecticut, 1897-98.
-
Hill-Stead, Farmington, Connecticut, 1898.
-
Congregational Church of Naugatuck, Naugatuck, Connecticut, 1903.
-
Waterbury Union Station, Waterbury, Connecticut, 1906-09.
-
Home Bank and Trust Company Building, Meriden, Connecticut, 1922.
-
Harriman Hall, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut, 1926-27.
-
Olin Memorial Library, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut, 1926-27.
-
Shanklin Laboratory, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut, 1926-27.
-
Boger Hall, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut, 1935.
-
Clement Chemistry Building, Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut, 1936.
-
Memorial Chapel rebuilding, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut, 1939.
Delaware
[edit]- St. Paul Episcopal Church remodeling, 122 E Pine St, Georgetown, Delaware (1880, attributed, NRHP 1979)[113]
- Lane and Thompson Halls, Squire Hall and Sypherd Hall, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware (1958)[114][115]
-
St. Paul Episcopal Church remodeling, Georgetown, Delaware, 1880.
District of Columbia
[edit]- House for Robert W. Patterson, 15 Dupont Cir NW, Washington, DC (1901-03, NRHP 1972)
- Roosevelt Hall, officers' quarters, barracks and service buildings, National War College, Washington, DC (1903-07, NRHP 1972)
- Arlington Memorial Bridge and Arlington National Cemetery Hemicycle[f] and gates, Washington, DC and Arlington, Virginia (1926-32 and 1931-36, NRHP 1980)
- National Museum of American History, Constitution Ave NW, Washington, DC (1958-64)[116]
-
Hemicycle and gates, Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Virginia, 1931-36.
-
National Museum of American History, Constitution Ave NW, Washington, DC, 1958-64.
Georgia
[edit]- "Greenwood Plantation" additions and alterations for Oliver Hazard Payne, GA-84, Thomasville, Georgia (1899, NRHP 1976)[117]
- Bon Air Hotel,[g] 2101 Walton Way, Augusta, Georgia (1922-24)[118]
-
Bon Air Hotel, Augusta, Georgia, 1922-24.
Illinois
[edit]- Setting and pedestal of Abraham Lincoln: The Man, Lincoln Park, Chicago, Illinois (1887)[119]
- Agricultural Building, World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, Illinois (1891-93, temporary building)
- New York State Building, World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, Illinois (1891-93, temporary building)
- House for Bryan Lathrop, 120 E Bellevue Pl, Chicago, Illinois (1892, NRHP 1972)[120]
- Puck Pavilion, World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, Illinois (1892-93, temporary building)
- White Star Line Pavilion, World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, Illinois (1892-93, temporary building)
- House for Robert W. Patterson,[h] 20 E Burton Pl, Chicago, Illinois (1893)[119]
- English Building, University of Illinois, Champaign, Illinois (1905)
- Tomb of Henry Honoré, Graceland Cemetery, Chicago, Illinois (1906)[121]
- Tomb of William Wallace Kimball, Graceland Cemetery, Chicago, Illinois (1907)[121]
- Setting of Abraham Lincoln: The Head of State, Grant Park, Chicago, Illinois (1908)[119]
- Tomb of Potter Palmer and Bertha Palmer, Graceland Cemetery, Chicago, Illinois (1921)[121]
- House for Edward T. Blair, 1516 N Lake Shore Dr, Chicago, Illinois (1914)[119]
-
Agricultural Building, World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, Illinois, 1891-93.
-
New York State Building, World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, Illinois, 1891-93.
-
House for Robert W. Patterson, Chicago, Illinois, 1893.
Kentucky
[edit]- Fayette National Bank Building, 167 W Main St, Lexington, Kentucky (1913-14, NRHP 1980)
Louisiana
[edit]- Colonial Sugars Company power house, 1230 5th St, Gramercy, Louisiana (1929)[122]
- Commercial National Bank Building,[i] 333 Texas St, Shreveport, Louisiana (1938-39)[123]
-
Commercial National Bank Building, Shreveport, Louisiana, 1938-39.
Maine
[edit]- Bowdoin College Museum of Art, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine (1893-94)[124]
- Class of 1875 Gate, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine (1902)[124]
- Curtis Pool (former), Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine (1927-28)[124]
- Moulton Union, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine (1928)[124]
- Memorial Flagpole, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine (1930)[124]
- Moore Hall, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine (1941)[124]
- Sills Hall and Smith Auditorium, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine (1949-50)[124]
- Parker Cleaveland Hall, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine (1951-52)[124]
- Gibson Hall, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine (1954)[124]
- Pickard Theatre,[j] Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine (1955)[124]
- Coleman Hall, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine (1958)[124]
-
Class of 1875 Gate, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine, 1902.
-
Curtis Pool, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine, 1927-28.
-
Moulton Union, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine, 1928.
-
Gibson Hall, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine, 1954.
-
Pickard Theatre, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine, 1955.
Maryland
[edit]- House for Ross R. Winans, 1217 St Paul St, Baltimore, Maryland (1882)[125]
- First M. E. Church, 2200 St Paul St, Baltimore, Maryland (1884-87)[126]
- House for Robert Garrett, 11 W Mount Vernon Pl, Baltimore, Maryland (1884)[2]
- Bennett Hall, Goucher College (former campus), Baltimore, Maryland (1888)[126]
- House for John F. Goucher, 2313 St Paul St, Baltimore, Maryland (1892)[126]
- Catherine Hooper Hall, Goucher College (former campus), Baltimore, Maryland (1893)[126]
- Munsey Building,[k] 7 N Calvert St, Baltimore, Maryland (1911)[127]
-
House for Ross R. Winans, Baltimore, Maryland, 1882.
-
Bennett Hall, Goucher College (former campus), Baltimore, Maryland, 1888.
-
House for John F. Goucher, Baltimore, Maryland, 1892.
-
Munsey Building (right), Baltimore, Maryland, 1911.
Massachusetts
[edit]Eastern Massachusetts
[edit]- House for Francis Lee Higginson, 22 Paine Ave, Beverly, Massachusetts (1879)[128]
- House for Charles A. Whittier, 270 Beacon St, Boston, Massachusetts (1881-82, demolished 1940)[129]
- House alterations for Richard Watson Gilder, 46 Spring St, Marion, Massachusetts (1883)[130]
- House for John F. Andrew, 32 Hereford St, Boston, Massachusetts (1884-85)[131]
- Pedestal of the Statue of William Lloyd Garrison,[l] Commonwealth Ave, Boston, Massachusetts (1885-86)[132]
- House for Alexander Cochrane, 257 Commonwealth Ave, Boston, Massachusetts (1886-87)[133]
- Manchester Public Library, 15 Union St, Manchester, Massachusetts (1886-87)[134]
- Algonquin Club, 217 Commonwealth Ave, Boston, Massachusetts (1887-88)[135]
- Boston Public Library, 700 Boylston St, Boston, Massachusetts (1888-95)[136]
- 66 Beacon Street apartments, Boston, Massachusetts (1890)[137]
- House for J. Arthur Beebe, 199 Commonwealth Ave, Boston, Massachusetts (1890-91)[138]
- Johnston Gate, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1889)[139]
- Houses for Francis I. Amory and Richard Olney, 413 and 415 Commonwealth Ave, Boston, Massachusetts (1891)[140][141]
- House for George A. Nickerson, 303 Commonwealth Ave, Boston, Massachusetts (1895)[142]
- "Eastover" for Ernest W. Bowditch, 65 Father Carney Dr, Milton, Massachusetts (1897-98)[143]
- Setting of the Robert Gould Shaw Memorial,[l] Boston Common, Boston, Massachusetts (1897)[144]
- Radcliffe Gymnasium (former), Radcliffe College, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1898)[139]
- Symphony Hall, 301 Huntington Ave, Boston, Massachusetts (1899-1900)[145]
- Harvard Union (former), Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1900-01)[139]
- Memorial Fence, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1901 et seq.)[139]
- Harvard Stadium,[m] Harvard University, Allston, Boston, Massachusetts (1901-03)[139]
- Robinson Hall, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1901-04)[139]
- New England Trust Company Building, 135 Devonshire St, Boston, Massachusetts (1904, demolished)[146]
- Free Christian Church, 31 Elm St, Andover, Massachusetts (1907)[147]
- Merrill Memorial Gate, Abbot Academy (former), Andover, Massachusetts (1921)[148]
- Pilgrim Hall Museum portico addition, 74 Court St, Plymouth, Massachusetts (1922)[149]
- Baker Library, Morgan Hall and dormitories, Harvard Business School, Harvard University, Allston, Boston, Massachusetts (1925-27)[139]
- John W. Weeks Bridge, Allston, Boston and Cambridge, Massachusetts (1926-27)[139]
- Posner Hall, Tufts University Boston Campus, Boston, Massachusetts (1953)[150]
- Ballou Hall restoration, Tufts University, Medford, Massachusetts (1955-56)[151]
- Plymouth Rock Portico, Court St, Plymouth, Massachusetts (1920)
- Peoples Savings Bank Building, 20 S Main St, Fall River, Massachusetts (1922)
Central and Western Massachusetts
[edit]- St. Paul Episcopal Church,[n] 29 Main St, Stockbridge, Massachusetts (1883-84)[153]
- "The Homestead" for Julia Appleton and Marian Alice Appleton, 65 Cliffwood St, Lenox, Massachusetts (1884, demolished)[27]
- St. Anthony Hall (former),[o] 1065 Main St, Williamstown, Massachusetts (1884)[154]
- "Kellogg Terrace" for Mary Frances Sherwood Hopkins, 389 Main St. Great Barrington, Massachusetts (1885-88, NRHP 1982)[155]
- Trinity Episcopal Church, 88 Walker St, Lenox, Massachusetts (1885-88)[156]
- "Naumkeag" for Joseph Hodges Choate, 5 Prospect Hill Rd, Stockbridge, Massachusetts (1886)[157]
- Stockbridge Casino (former), 83 E Main St, Stockbridge, Massachusetts (1887-88, NRHP 1976)[158]
- Fayerweather Hall, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1892-94)[159]
- Wilder Observatory, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1903-05)[159]
- College Hall remodeling, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1905)[159]
- Webster Hall, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1908-09)[159]
- Fraternity house for Delta Kappa Epsilon (former),[p] 82 Lessey St, Amherst, Massachusetts (1914)[159]
- Pedestal of the statue of Henry Ward Beecher,[q] Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1914)[160]
- Converse Hall, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1916-17 and 1937-38)[159]
- Norton House, Groton School, Groton, Massachusetts (1917)[161]
- Coolidge Cage, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1924-25)[159]
- Appleton Hall remodeling, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1925)[159]
- Morrow Dormitory, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1925-26)[159]
- Powerhouse, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1925 and 1926)[159]
- Pratt Field fence and gate, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1926)[159]
- Hadley Falls Trust Company Building, 58 Suffolk St, Holyoke, Massachusetts (1927)[162]
- Moore Laboratory of Chemistry, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1928-29)[159]
- Skinner Clinic, 30 Hospital Dr, Holyoke, Massachusetts (1928)[163]
- College garage, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1929)[159]
- Service Building, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1932)[159]
- Davenport Squash Courts, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1933-34)[159]
- Johnson Chapel addition and remodeling, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1933)[159]
- Octagon alterations, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1934-35)[159]
- Alumni Gymnasium, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1935-36)[159]
- Morgan Hall alterations, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1935)[159]
- Pratt Pool, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1936-37)[159]
- Kirby Memorial Theatre, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1937-38)[159]
- Little Red Schoolhouse, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1937-38, demolished 2016)[159]
- Milliken Hall, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1937-38, demolished 2002)[159]
- Valentine Hall, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1940-41)[159]
- Charles Pratt Hall remodeling, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1941-50)[159]
- World War II Memorial, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1945-46)[159]
- James and Stearns Halls, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1946, demolished 2004)[159]
- Mead Art Museum, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1948-49)[159]
- Williston Hall remodeling, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1951)[159]
- North Hall restoration, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1953)[160]
- South Hall restoration, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1954)[160]
- Amherst Alumni House, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1955)[160]
- Edward Whitman Chapin Hall, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts (1958)[160]
-
St. Paul Episcopal Church, Stockbridge, Massachusetts, 1883-84.
-
House for John F. Andrew, Boston, Massachusetts, 1884-85.
-
Kellogg Terrace, Great Barrington, Massachusetts, 1885-88.
-
Manchester Public Library, Manchester, Massachusetts, 1886-87.
-
Naumkeag, Stockbridge, Massachusetts, 1886.
-
Stockbridge Casino, Stockbridge, Massachusetts, 1887-88.
-
Algonquin Club, Boston, Massachusetts, 1888.
-
Boston Public Library, Boston, Massachusetts, 1888-95.
-
Fayerweather Hall, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts, 1890.
-
Radcliffe Gymnasium, Radcliffe College, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1898.
-
Symphony Hall, Boston, Massachusetts, 1899-1900.
-
Interior view of Symphony Hall, Boston, Massachusetts, 1899-1900.
-
Robinson Hall, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1901-04.
-
Fraternity house for Delta Kappa Epsilon, Amherst, Massachusetts, 1914.
-
Plymouth Rock Portico, Plymouth, Massachusetts, 1920.
-
Merrill Memorial Gate, Abbot Academy, Andover, Massachusetts, 1921.
-
Pilgrim Hall Museum alterations, Plymouth, Massachusetts, 1922.
-
Baker Library, Harvard Business School, Harvard University, Allston, Boston, Massachusetts, 1925-27.
-
Morrow Dormitory, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts, 1926.
-
Hadley Falls Trust Company Building, Holyoke, Massachusetts, 1927.
-
Moore Laboratory of Chemistry, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts, 1928.
-
Kirby Memorial Theatre, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts, 1938.
-
World War II Memorial, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts, 1946.
-
Edward Whitman Chapin Hall, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts, 1958.
Michigan
[edit]- Mausoleum for Frank J. Hecker, Woodlawn Cemetery, Detroit, Michigan (1897)[164]
- State Savings Bank Building, 151 W Fort St, Detroit, Michigan (1900, NRHP 1982)[164]
- Semi-centenial Obelisk, Brady Park, Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan (1905)[164]
Minnesota
[edit]- Minneapolis Institute of Art, 400 Third Ave S, Minneapolis, Minnesota (1912-15)[165]
Missouri
[edit]- New York Life Insurance Company Building, 20 W 9th St, Kansas City, Missouri (1887-88, NRHP 1970)[166]
Nebraska
[edit]- New York Life Insurance Company Building, 1650 Farnam St, Omaha, Nebraska (1888-89, NRHP 1972)[167]
Nevada
[edit]- Mackay School of Mines Building,[r] University of Nevada, Reno, Nevada (1906-08, NRHP 1982)[168]
New Hampshire
[edit]- "Blow-Me-Down Farm" casino for Charles Cotesworth Beaman, Wilson Rd, Cornish, New Hampshire (1888)[169]
- House addition and remodeling for Woodbury G. Langdon, 143 Pleasant St, Portsmouth, New Hampshire (1906, NRHP 1974)[170]
- The Temple, Saint-Gaudens National Historical Park, Cornish, New Hampshire (1914)[171]
-
House addition and remodeling for Woodbury G. Langdon, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, 1906.
-
The Temple, Saint-Gaudens National Historical Park, Cornish, New Hampshire, 1914.
New Jersey
[edit]- House for Horatio Victor Newcomb, 1265 Ocean Ave, Elberon, New Jersey (1880, altered 1946)[27]
- Short Hills Casino, 162 Hobart Ave, Short Hills, New Jersey (1880, burned 1978)[27]
- House for Henry B. Auchincloss, Glen and Honeysuckle Aves, Llewellyn Park, New Jersey (1883-84, demolished 1976)[172]
- House for William A. Street, 79 Rumson Rd, Rumson, New Jersey (1883)[173]
- House for Charles T. Cook, 20 Lincoln Ave, Elberon, New Jersey (1885, altered)[27]
- House addition for Stewart W. Hartshorn, 24 Oak Bend Rd, Llewellyn Park, New Jersey (1886-87)[172]
- "Rohallion" for Edward Dean Adams, 45 Bellevue Ave, Rumson, New Jersey (1887, altered)
- St. Peter Episcopal Church, 70 Maple Ave, Morristown, New Jersey (1887-1911)[174]
- Scotch Plains School, Park Ave, Scotch Plains, New Jersey (1890, NRHP 1978, burned 1984)[175]
- "Florham" for Hamilton McKown Twombly, Madison, New Jersey (1896-99)[176]
- Orange Public Library,[s] 348 Main St, Orange, New Jersey (1900-01)[177]
- YMCA Building, 129 Main St, Orange, New Jersey (1900, demolished)[178]
- "Hurstmont" for James T. Pyle, 679 Mount Kemble Ave, Morristown, New Jersey (1902)[174]
- FitzRandolph Gate, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey (1905)
- "Twin Oaks" for Peter H. B. Frelinghuysen, 6 Normandy Heights Rd, Morristown, New Jersey (1910-13)
- Pennsylvania Station, Raymond Plz, Newark, New Jersey (1935)
-
St. Peter Episcopal Church, Morristown, New Jersey, 1887-1911.
-
Florham, Madison, New Jersey, 1896-99.
-
Twin Oaks, Morristown, New Jersey, 1910-13.
New York
[edit]Manhattan
[edit]- Madison Square Garden (former), 51 Madison Ave, New York City (1889-90, demolished 1926)[179]
- Office building for the Eastman Kodak Company, 235 W 23rd St, New York City (1906)[180]
Columbia University
[edit]- Low Memorial Library, Columbia University, New York City (1895-97)[181]
- Fayerweather Hall, Columbia University, New York City (1896-97)[181]
- Havemeyer Hall, Columbia University, New York City (1896-97)[181]
- Mathematics Hall, Columbia University, New York City (1896-97)[181]
- Schermerhorn Hall, Columbia University, New York City (1896-97)[181]
- University Hall, Columbia University, New York City (1896-97 and 1899-1900, demolished 1959)[181]
- Earl Hall, Columbia University, New York City (1900-02)[181]
- Hartley Hall, Columbia University, New York City (1904-05)[181]
- Wallach Hall, Columbia University, New York City (1904-05)[181]
- Hamilton Hall, Columbia University, New York City (1905-07)[181]
- Kent Hall, Columbia University, New York City (1909-10)[181]
- Philosophy Hall, Columbia University, New York City (1910-11)[181]
- Avery Hall, Columbia University, New York City (1911-12)[181]
- President's House, Columbia University, New York City (1911-12)[181]
- Pulitzer Hall, Columbia University, New York City (1912-13)[181]
- Furnald Hall, Columbia University, New York City (1912-13)[181]
- Faculty House, Columbia University, New York City (1922-23)[181]
- Dodge Hall, Columbia University, New York City (1923-24)[181]
- Hewitt Hall, Barnard College, New York City (1924-25)[181]
- Wien Hall, Columbia University, New York City (1924-25)[181]
- John Jay Hall, Columbia University, New York City (1925-27)[181]
- Pupin Hall, Columbia University, New York City (1925-27)[181]
- Chandler Hall, Columbia University, New York City (1925-28)[181]
- Casa Italiana, Columbia University, New York City (1926-27)[181]
- Schermerhorn Extension, Columbia University, New York City (1928-29)[181]
Other Boroughs
[edit]- House for John H. Cheever, Wave Crest, Far Rockaway, Queens (1885, demolished)[27]
- Hall of Languages, New York University (former campus), University Heights, Bronx (1892-94)[37]
- Gould Memorial Library, New York University (former campus), University Heights, Bronx (1894-99)[37]
- Houses for the Henderson Estate Company, 33 and 34 St Austins Pl, West New Brighton, Staten Island (1893)[37]
- Brooklyn Museum, 200 Eastern Pkwy, Brooklyn (1895-1915)[182]
- Grecian Shelter, Prospect Park, Brooklyn (1904-05)[182]
- Prison Ship Martyrs' Monument, Fort Greene Park, Brooklyn (1907-08)[182]
- Pennsylvania Railroad power house, 2-17 51st Ave, Long Island City, Queens (1909)[37]
- Administration Building, Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Brooklyn (1918)[182]
- House for Earle W. Murray, 4 Ardsley Rd, Douglaston, Queens (1919, attributed)[183]
- New York Institute for the Education of the Blind, 999 Pelham Pkwy N, Allerton, Bronx (1924)[37]
- Elks Building, 110 Livingston St, Brooklyn (1926)[182]
- New York City Department of Sanitation Bronx Grit Chamber, 158 Bruckner Blvd, Mott Haven, Bronx (1936-37)[37]
- Men's and Women's Residence Halls (former),[t] Pratt Institute, Brooklyn (1954)[184]
- College Union (former),[u] Pratt Institute, Brooklyn (1958)[184]
Lower Hudson and Long Island
[edit]- YMCA Building, 52 3rd St, Newburgh, New York (1882, demolished)[185]
- "Ophir Hall" for Whitelaw Reid, 2900 Purchase St, Purchase, New York (1888-92 and 1912, NRHP 1974)
- "Staatsburgh" for Ogden Mills, 75 Mills Mansion Dr, Staatsburg, New York (1895-96)
- "Hyde Park" for Frederick W. Vanderbilt, 119 Vanderbilt Park Rd, Hyde Park, New York (1896-99)
- Battle Monument, United States Military Academy, West Point, New York (1897)
- Cullum Memorial Hall, United States Military Academy, West Point, New York (1898)
- "The Orchard" for James L. Breese, 155 Hill St, Southampton, New York (1898)
- "Harbor Hill" for Clarence Mackay,[v] Roslyn, New York (1899-1902, demolished 1947)
- Wardenclyffe Laboratory, 5 Randall Rd, Shoreham, New York (1901)
- Trinity Episcopal Church, 1597 Northern Blvd, Roslyn, New York (1906, NRHP 1986)
- House for Hobart J. Park, 38 Westerleigh Rd, Purchase, New York (1907)[186]
- House for Thomas H. Kerr, 305 Ridgeway, White Plains, New York (1910)
- Blodgett, Levermore and Woodruff Halls, Adelphi University, Garden City, New York (1929)
- "Chastellux" for Ruth Hill Beard, 174 E Lake Road, Tuxedo Park, New York (1930)[187]
- "Four Chimneys", 10 Sheldrake Rd, New Rochelle, New York (1938)[188]
- Alumnae and Harvey Halls, Adelphi University, Garden City, New York (1943)[189]
- House remodeling for Frank A. Munsey,[w] 260 Country Club Dr, North Hills, New York
Upstate
[edit]- "Clayton Lodge" for Cyrus H. McCormick, Richfield Springs, New York (1882, demolished 1957)[190]
- House for Erzelia F. (Stetson) Metcalfe, 125 North St, Buffalo, New York (1882, demolished 1980)[2]
- Adams Power Plant, 1501 Buffalo Ave, Niagara Falls, New York (1890-93, mostly demolished, Transformer House NRHP 1975)[191]
- Echota housing development, Buffalo Ave and Hyde Park Blvd, Niagara Falls, New York (1894)[192]
- House for Robert K. Root, 650 Delaware Ave, Buffalo, New York (1894, demolished 1935)[193]
- House for Charles H. Williams, 690 Delaware Ave, Buffalo, New York (1895-96)[194]
- House for George L. Williams, 672 Delaware Ave, Buffalo, New York (1896-99)[195]
- House for Benjamin W. Arnold, 465 State St, Albany, New York (1902-04, NRHP 1982)[196]
- House for George Eastman,[x] 900 East Ave, Rochester, New York (1903-05, NRHP 1966)[180]
- Students' Building, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York (1913)[197]
- Eastman Theatre,[y] 26 Gibbs St, Rochester, New York (1920-22)[180]
- Foster Hall, State University of New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York (1920)[198]
- Rochester Gas and Electric Corporation Building,[y] 89 East Ave, Rochester, New York (1923-25)[199]
- Strong Memorial Hospital,[y] 260 Crittenden Blvd, Rochester, New York (1924-25)[180]
- Memorial Art Gallery addition, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York (1925-26)[200]
- Memorial Chapel, Union College, Schenectady, New York (1925)[201]
- Lincoln-Alliance Bank Building,[x] 183 E Main St, Rochester, New York (1926)[202]
- Rochester Savings Bank Building,[x] 40 Franklin St, Rochester, New York (1927)[203]
- Schenectady City Hall, 105 Jay St, Schenectady, New York (1931-33)[204]
- Schaffer Library, Union College, Schenectady, New York (1959)[205]
-
House for Erzelia F. (Stetson) Metcalfe, Buffalo, New York, 1882.
-
Interior view of the house for Erzelia F. (Stetson) Metcalfe, Buffalo, New York, 1882.
-
House for Phillips Phoenix and Lloyd Phoenix, New York City, 1882.
-
House for Charles Lewis Tiffany, New York City, 1882.
-
YMCA Building, Newburgh, New York, 1882.
-
Interior view of the Church of the Ascension, Episcopal, New York City, 1885-89.
-
House for Charles J. Osborn, Mamaroneck, New York, 1883-85.
-
Goelet Estate Office Building, New York City, 1885.
-
Freundschaft Society, New York City, 1886-87.
-
Goelet Building, New York City, 1886-87.
-
Judge Building, New York City, 1888.
-
Ophir Hall, Purchase, New York, 1888-92 and 1912.
-
Century Association, New York City, 1889-91.
-
Church of the Ascension, Episcopal parish house, New York City, 1889.
-
Plaza Hotel, New York City, 1889.
-
Adams Power Plant, Niagara Falls, New York, 1890-93.
-
Warren Building, New York City, 1890.
-
King Model Houses, New York City, 1891.
-
Cable Building, New York City, 1892-94.
-
Hall of Fame for Great Americans, New York University (former campus), University Heights, Bronx, 1892-94.
-
Hall of Languages, New York University (former campus), University Heights, Bronx, 1892-94.
-
Bowery Savings Bank Building, New York City, 1893-95.
-
First Presbyterian Church south addition, New York City, 1893-94.
-
Harvard Club of New York, New York City, 1893-94.
-
Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, New York, 1895-1927.
-
House for Charles H. Williams, 690 Delaware Ave, Buffalo, New York, 1895-96.
-
Staatsburgh, Staatsburg, New York, 1895-96.
-
House for George L. Williams, Buffalo, New York, 1896-99.
-
Hyde Park, Hyde Park, New York, 1896-99.
-
Mathematics Hall, Columbia University, New York City, 1896-97.
-
The Orchard, Southampton, New York, 1898.
-
Harbor Hill, Roslyn, New York, 1899-1902.
-
House for Benjamin W. Arnold, Albany, New York, 1902-04.
-
House for William Kissam Vanderbilt II, New York City, 1905.
-
Office building for the Eastman Kodak Company, New York City, 1906.
-
Kent Hall, Columbia University, New York City, 1909-10.
-
Avery Hall, Columbia University, New York City, 1911-12.
-
Pulitzer Hall, Columbia University, New York City, 1912-13.
-
Administration Building, Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Brooklyn, 1918.
-
Eastman Theatre, Rochester, New York, 1920-22.
-
Foster Hall, State University of New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York, 1920.
-
Dodge Hall, Columbia University, New York City, 1923-24.
-
Fountain Court in the Memorial Art Gallery addition, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York, 1925-26.
-
Memorial Chapel, Union College, Schenectady, New York, 1925.
-
Elks Building, Brooklyn, New York, 1926.
-
Schenectady City Hall, Schenectady, New York, 1931-33.
-
New York City Department of Sanitation Bronx Grit Chamber, Mott Haven, Bronx, 1936-37.
-
Schaffer Library, Union College, Schenectady, New York, 1959.
- Plaza Hotel, 1 W 58th St, New York City (1889, demolished 1905)
- Houses for Henry Villard, 451 Madison Ave, New York City (1882-86, NRHP 1975)[37]
- Apartments for David H. King Jr., 167-173 W 83rd St, New York City (1885)[37]
- Church of the Ascension, Episcopal remodeling, Fifth Ave and W 10th St, New York City (1885-89)[37]
- Houses, West End Ave, New York City (1885, demolished)[37]
- Goelet Building, 900 Broadway, New York City (1886-87)[37]
- Judge Building, 110 Fifth Ave, New York City (1888)[37]
- Judson Memorial Church, 55 Washington Sq S, New York City (1888-93 and 1895-96)[37]
- The Players remodeling, 16 Gramercy Park, New York City (1888-89)[37]
- Century Association, 7 W 43rd St, New York City (1889-91)[37]
- Church of the Ascension, Episcopal parish house, 12 W 11th St, New York City (1889)[37]
- Washington Arch, Washington Square Park, New York City (1889-95)[37]
- 55 Hudson Street building, New York City (1890)[37]
- Warren Building, 903 Broadway, New York City (1890)[37]
- King Model Houses, 203-265 W 139th St, New York City (1891)[37]
- Metropolitan Club, 1 E 60th St, New York City (1891-94)[37]
- Cable Building, 611 Broadway, New York City (1892-94)[37]
- Park & Tilford Building, 100 W 72nd St, New York City (1892-93)[37]
- Bowery Savings Bank Building, 130 Bowery, New York City (1893-95)[37]
- First Presbyterian Church south addition, 48 Fifth Ave, New York City (1893-94)[37]
- New York Life Insurance Company Building, 346 Broadway, New York City (1894-99)[37]
- House for James J. Goodwin, 11 W 54th St, New York City (1896-98)[37]
- Remodeling of Castle Garden as the New York Aquarium, The Battery, New York City (1896, removed)[37]
- University Club of New York, 1 W 54th St, New York City (1896-1900)[37]
- Stuyvesant Fish House for Stuyvesant Fish, 25 E 78th St, New York City (1897-1900)[37]
- House for William H. Moore, 4 E 54th St, New York City (1898-1900)[37]
- House for Harry B. Hollins, 12 W 56th St, New York City (1899-1901)[37]
- House for Philip A. Rollins, 28 E 78th St, New York City (1899-1902)[37]
- House for Joseph Pulitzer, 7 E 73rd St, New York City (1900-03)[37]
- House for Thomas B. Clarke, 22 E 35th St, New York City (1901)[37]
- Houses for Payne Whitney and Henry H. Cook, 972 and 973 Fifth Ave, New York City (1902-07)[37]
- Harmonie Club, 4 E 60th St, New York City (1904-06)[37]
- IRT Powerhouse, 840 Twelfth Ave, New York City (1904)[37]
- Metropolitan Museum of Art north and south wings, 1000 Fifth Ave, New York City (1904 et seq.)[37]
- New York Public Library Hamilton Grange Branch, 503 W 145th St, New York City (1905-06)[37]
- House for Percy R. Pyne, 680 Park Ave, New York City (1906-12)[37]
- Manhattan Municipal Building, 1 Centre St, New York City (1907-14)[37]
- National City Bank Building remodeling, 55 Wall St, New York City (1907-10)[37]
- New York Public Library 115th Street Branch, 203 W 115th St, New York City (1907-09)[37]
- Second National Bank Building, 250 Fifth Ave, New York City (1908)[37]
- 998 Fifth Avenue apartments, New York City (1910-12)[37]
- James A. Farley Post Office Building, 421 Eighth Ave, New York City (1913 and 1935)[37]
- Hotel Pennsylvania, 401 Seventh Ave, New York City (1918, demolished 2022)[37]
- Racquet and Tennis Club, 370 Park Ave, New York City (1918)[37]
- The Town Hall, 123 W 43rd St, New York City (1919-21)[37]
- American Academy of Arts and Letters, 633 W 155th St, New York City (1921-23)[37]
- House for Oliver D. Filley, 684 Park Ave, New York City (1925-26)[37]
- Our Lady of Esperanza Church remodeling, 624 W 156th St, New York City (1925)[37]
- Savoy-Plaza Hotel, 767 Fifth Ave, New York City (1927, demolished 1965)[37]
- Sherry's Restaurant, 691 Madison Ave, New York City (1928)[37]
- Building 400 (Liggett Hall), Fort Jay, Governors Island, New York City (1928-30)[206]
- Building 12, Fort Jay, Governors Island, New York City (1931)[206]
- Building 333 and Building 550, Fort Jay, Governors Island, New York City (1932)[206]
- Building 515 (Post Hospital), Fort Jay, Governors Island, New York City (1935)[206]
- Building 315 and Building 555, Fort Jay, Governors Island, New York City (1938-40)[206]
- Brooklyn–Battery Tunnel ventilation building, Governors Island, New York City (1948-50)[207]
1910 | 393 5th Ave | 393 5th Ave | New York | New York | ||
1910 | New York Post-Graduate Medical School and Hospital | 313 E 20th St | New York | New York | Demolished. | |
1911 | Brearley School | 58-60 E 61st St | New York | New York | Demolished. | |
1912 | 681 5th Ave | 681 5th Ave | New York | New York | ||
1912 | Geraldyn Redmond House | 701-705 Park Ave | New York | New York | Demolished. | |
1915 | Harvard Club of New York | 27 W 44th St | New York | New York | Addition. | |
1916 | Thomas Newbold House | 15 E 79th St | New York | New York | ||
1923 | 277 Park Ave | 277 Park Ave | New York | New York | Demolished. | |
1924 | 360 E 50th St | 360 E 50th St | New York | New York | ||
1925 | 430 E 57th St | 430 E 57th St | New York | New York | ||
1927 | National City Bank Building | 52 Wall St | New York | New York | Demolished. |
North Carolina
[edit]- Industrial development program, Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina (1890s)
- Buildings, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Ohio
[edit]- House for Leonard C. Hanna, 737 Euclid Ave, Cleveland, Ohio (1903-04, demolished)[208]
- House for Howard M. Hanna Jr., 12 W Hanna Ln, Bratenahl, Ohio (1910, NRHP 1974)[209]
- National McKinley Birthplace Memorial, 40 N Main St, Niles, Ohio (1915)
- Butler Institute of American Art, 524 Wick Ave, Youngstown, Ohio (1919)
Oregon
[edit]- Portland Hotel, 721 SW Sixth Ave, Portland, Oregon (1882-90, demolished 1951)[210]
-
Portland Hotel, Portland, Oregon, 1882-90.
Pennsylvania
[edit]- "Millwood" for Robert Percy Allen, 1012 Alden Way, Cornwall, Pennsylvania (1881-83, NRHP 2011)
- Trinity Hall addition, 231 Park Ave, Washington, Pennsylvania (1881, NRHP 1976, demolished)[211]
- "Cramond" for Daniel S. Newhall, 95 Crestline Rd, Strafford, Pennsylvania (1886, NRHP 1986)[212]
- House for John Eyerman,[z] 200 High St, Easton, Pennsylvania (1888)
- Germantown Cricket Club, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1890, NRHP 1987)
- Protection of the Flag Monument,[aa] Academy Park, Athens, Pennsylvania (1900)
- House remodeling for Thomas B. Wanamaker,[ab] 1900 Rittenhouse Sq, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1902, demolished 1924)[213]
- Girard Trust Company Building,[ac] 10 S Broad St, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1905-07)
- Franklin National Bank Building,[ac] 1416-1418 Chestnut St, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1915, demolished)
- Girard Trust Company Tower,[ac] 10 S Broad St, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1930-31)
- Dietrich Hall,[ad] University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1949-50)[214]
- Bethlehem Steel Corporation offices, 119 Walnut St, Johnstown, Pennsylvania (1954)[215]
-
Millwood, Cornwall, Pennsylvania, 1881-83.
-
Cramond, Strafford, Pennsylvania, 1886.
-
House for John Eyerman, Easton, Pennsylvania, 1888.
-
Protection of the Flag Monument, Academy Park, Athens, Pennsylvania, 1900.
-
Girard Trust Company Building, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1905-07.
-
Girard Trust Company Tower, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1930.
Rhode Island
[edit]Newport
[edit]- Newport Casino, 194 Bellevue Ave, Newport, Rhode Island (1879-81, NRHP 1970, NHP 1987)[4]
- "Fairlawn" additions and alterations for Levi P. Morton, Bellevue Ave, Newport, Rhode Island (1880)[4]
- House for Samuel P. Tilton, 12 Sunnyside Pl, Newport, Rhode Island (1880-82)[4]
- "Kingscote" additions and alterations for David King, 253 Bellevue Ave, Newport, Rhode Island (1880-81)[4]
- House for Isaac Bell Jr., 70 Perry St, Newport, Rhode Island (1881-83)[4]
- House for William Starr Miller II, 431 Bellevue Ave, Newport, Rhode Island (1881-83)[4]
- House alterations for William Watts Sherman, 35 Shepard Ave, Newport, Rhode Island (1881)[4]
- House for Charles M. Bull, 42 W Main Rd, Middletown, Rhode Island (1882-83)[4]
- House for Samuel Colman, 7 Red Cross Ave, Newport, Rhode Island (1882-83)[4]
- "Ochre Point" for Robert Goelet, 195 Narragansett Ave, Newport, Rhode Island (1882-84)[4]
- "Villino" for Frances L. Skinner, 6 Red Cross Ave, Newport, Rhode Island (1882)[4]
- "Berkeley Villa" for LeRoy King, 1 Berkeley Ave, Newport, Rhode Island (1884-86)[4]
- House for Henry A. C. Taylor, Annandale Rd, Newport, Rhode Island (1884-86, demolished 1952)[4]
- "Sunnyside" for William Edgar, 25 Sunnyside Pl, Newport, Rhode Island (1884-86)[4]
- "Berry Hill" for Robert H. Glover, 21 Hammersmith Rd, Newport, Rhode Island (1886-87)[4]
- "Edgehill" for George Gordon King, 138 Harrison Ave, Newport, Rhode Island (1887-88)[4]
- "Beacon Rock" for Edwin D. Morgan III, 147 Harrison Ave, Newport, Rhode Island (1888-91)[4]
- "Rosecliff" for Hermann Oelrichs, 548 Bellevue Ave, Newport, Rhode Island (1899-1902, NRHP 1973)[4]
- "Oakwood" for George Gordon King, 1 Oakwood Ter, Newport, Rhode Island (1902)[4]
- Old School alterations, St George's School, Middletown, Rhode Island (1920)[216]
- Memorial Schoolhouse, St George's School, Middletown, Rhode Island (1924)[4]
- War Memorial Tower, Miantonomi Memorial Park, Newport, Rhode Island (1929)[4]
Narragansett Pier
[edit]- First Narragansett Pier Casino, 35 Ocean Rd, Narragansett Pier, Rhode Island (1883-86, mostly burned 1900)[217]
- "Stone Lea" for George V. Cresson, 40 Newton Ave, Narragansett Pier, Rhode Island (1883-84)[217]
- "Gillian Lodge" for Allan McLane, 415 Ocean Rd, Narragansett Pier, Rhode Island (1885-86)[217]
- Narragansett Pier Life Saving Station, 40 Ocean Rd, Narragansett Pier, Rhode Island (1888)[217]
- Louis Sherry Cottages and Casino, Gibson Ave, Narragansett Pier, Rhode Island (1888-89, partially burned 1912)[217]
Other Narragansett Bay resorts
[edit]- "Emdalar" for Jeremiah P. Robinson Jr., 234c Post Rd, South Kingstown, Rhode Island (1885)[218]
- House for William G. Low, 3 Low Ln, Bristol, Rhode Island (1886, demolished 1962)[219]
- "Holly House" for Rowland G. Hazard, Kingstown Rd, South Kingstown, Rhode Island (1892, demolished)[220]
- "Kymbolde" for Charles D. Kimball, 45 Kymbolde Way, South Kingstown, Rhode Island (1901)[221]
Providence
[edit]- House for William C. Chapin, 1251 Westminster St, Providence, Rhode Island (1881, demolished)[2]
- Rhode Island State House, 82 Smith St, Providence, Rhode Island (1895-1901, NRHP 1970)
- Faunce House, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island (1902)
-
Newport Casino, Newport, Rhode Island, 1879-81.
-
House for Samuel P. Tilton, Newport, Rhode Island, 1880.
-
Kingscote additions and alterations, Newport, Rhode Island, 1881.
-
Ochre Point, Newport, Rhode Island, 1882.
-
First Narragansett Pier Casino, 35 Ocean Rd, Narragansett Pier, Rhode Island, 1883.
-
Surviving portion of the first Narragansett Pier Casino, Narragansett Pier, Rhode Island, 1883.
-
House for Henry A. C. Taylor, Newport, Rhode Island, 1884.
-
Sunnyside, Newport, Rhode Island, 1884.
-
Emdalar, Wakefield, Rhode Island, 1885.
-
Rhode Island State House, Providence, Rhode Island, 1895-1901.
-
Rotunda of the Rhode Island State House, Providence, Rhode Island, 1895-1901.
-
Rosecliff, Newport, Rhode Island, 1899-1902.
-
Faunce House, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, 1902.
-
Second Narragansett Pier Casino, 35 Ocean Rd, Narragansett Pier, Rhode Island, 1905.
-
War Memorial Tower, Miantonomi Memorial Park, Newport, Rhode Island, 1929.
South Carolina
[edit]- United States Monument, Kings Mountain National Military Park, Blacksburg, South Carolina (1908-09)[222]
-
United States Monument, Kings Mountain National Military Park, Blacksburg, South Carolina, 1908-09.
Tennessee
[edit]- First Presbyterian Church, 554 McCallie Ave, Chattanooga, Tennessee (1910, NRHP 2009)
- War Memorial Auditorium,[ae] 301 Sixth Ave N, Nashville, Tennessee (1922-25, NRHP 2017)[223]
- Union and Planters Bank Building, 67 Madison Ave, Memphis, Tennessee (1923-24)[224]
- University School of Nashville, 2000 Edgehill Ave, Nashville, Tennessee (1925)
- Cohen Memorial Hall, Peabody College, Nashville, Tennessee (1928)[225]
Texas
[edit]- "The Open Gates" for George Sealy, 2419 Sealy Ave, Galveston, Texas (1889, NRHP 1969)
-
The Open Gates, Galveston, Texas, 1889.
Vermont
[edit]- Wells Fountain,[af] Main St and Poultney Rd, Brattleboro, Vermont (1890)[226]
- Canal Street School, 64 Canal St, Brattleboro, Vermont (1892, NRHP 1977)[227][228]
- Crafts Inn,[ag] 10 W Main St, Wilmington, Vermont (1898)[229]
- Memorial Hall,[ag] 14 W Main St, Wilmington, Vermont (1902)[229]
- Ira Allen Chapel, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont (1925)
- Burlington City Hall, 149 Church St, Burlington, Vermont (1927)
- Slade Hall, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont (1928)
- Fleming Museum of Art, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont (1931)
- Mabel Louise Southwick Memorial Building, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont (1934)
- Waterman Building, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont (1940)[230]
- Buckham, Chittenden and Willis Halls, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont (1947)
- Coolidge Hall, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont (1947)
- Mary Fletcher Hospital, 111 Colchester Ave, Burlington, Vermont (1950)[231]
- Wright Memorial Theatre, Middlebury College, Middlebury, Vermont (1958)[232]
-
Wells Fountain, Brattleboro, Vermont, 1890.
-
Crafts Inn, Wilmington, Vermont, 1898.
-
Burlington City Hall, Burlington, Vermont, 1927.
-
Waterman Building, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont, 1940.
Virginia
[edit]- Rotunda restoration, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia (1896-98)[202]
- Cabell, Cocke and Rouss Halls, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia (1897-98)[202]
- Carr's Hill, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia (1907-09)[202]
- Garrett Hall, Charlottesville, Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia (1907-09)[202]
-
Cabell Hall, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, 1897-98.
-
Cocke Hall, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, 1897-98.
-
Rouss Hall, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, 1897-98.
-
Garrett Hall, Charlottesville, Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, 1907-09.
Washington
[edit]- Tacoma Hotel, 913 A St, Tacoma, Washington (1884, burned 1935)[233]
-
Tacoma Hotel, Tacoma, Washington, 1884.
Works abroad
[edit]Canada
[edit]To manage work in Winnipeg, John Nelson Semmens of the New York office was sent to open an office in 1910, which he ran until 1913.[234]
- House for Susanna (Shaw) Minturn, 240 Boul de Comporté, La Malbaie (Murray Bay), Quebec, Canada (1894)[235]
- Camp Harmony Club, Camp Harmony, New Brunswick, Canada (1896)[236]
- "Kedgwick Lodge" for William K. Vanderbilt, Kedgwick River, New Brunswick, Canada (1897)[236]
- "Toadbrook Lodge" for Robert Goelet, Matapédia, Quebec, Canada (1897, demolished)[236]
- "Bord de l'Eau" for Alfred C. Chapin, Boul de Comporté, La Malbaie (Murray Bay), Quebec, Canada (1901, demolished)[235]
- Bank of Montreal Head Office addition and remodeling,[ah] 129 Rue St-Jacques, Montreal, Quebec, Canada (1901-05)[237]
- Mount Royal Club,[ai] 1175 Sherbrooke St W, Montreal, Quebec, Canada (1904-06)[238]
- Bank of Montreal Winnipeg Branch, 335 Main St, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada (1909-13)[238]
- House for Edmund L. Taylor, 611 Wellington Crescent, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada (1910)[238]
- Royal Trust Company Building,[aj] 105 Rue St-Jacques, Montreal, Quebec, Canada (1912)[238]
- Bank of Montreal Brantford Branch,[aj] 57 Market St, Brantford, Ontario, Canada (1913)[238]
- House for James W. Woods, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada (1919, unlocated)[238][239]
-
Bank of Montreal Brantford Branch, Brantford, Ontario, Canada, 1913.
Cuba
[edit]- Hotel Nacional de Cuba,[ak] Calle 21, Havana, La Habana Province, Cuba (1929-30)
Italy
[edit]- American Academy in Rome, Via Angelo Masina, Rome, Lazio, Italy (1913-14)
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Ann H. Schiller, "Charles F. McKim and His Francis Blake House" in Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 47, no. 1 (March 1988): 5-13.
- ^ a b c d e f Broderick, Mosette. Triumvirate: McKim, Mead & White. New York: Knopf, 2010.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 17, no. 430 (June 10, 1876): 467.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v James L. Yarnall, Newport Through its Architecture (Lebanon: University Press of New England, 2005)
- ^ John J. Curran, Peekskill (Charleston: Arcadia Publishing, 2005)
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 20, no. 503 (November 3, 1877): 859.
- ^ "Mr. Dickerson's New Residence" in Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 22, no. 545 (August 24, 1878): 699-700.
- ^ Historic Building Detail: BLM.138, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 22, no. 551 (October 5, 1878): 825.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 22, no. 544 (August 17, 1878): 692.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 22, no. 546 (August 31, 1878): 728.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 24, no. 592 (July 19, 1879): 595.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 21, no. 537 (June 29, 1878): 570.
- ^ Historic Building Detail: LEN.117, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ Luther S. Harris, Around Washington Square: An Illustrated History of Greenwich Village (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003)
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 24, no. 595 (August 9, 1879): 650.
- ^ Fort Hill Estate NRHP Registration Form (1988)
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 25, no. 635 (May 15, 1880): 478.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 26, no. 649 (August 21, 1880): 751.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 27, no. 688 (May 21, 1881): 538.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 29, no. 732 (March 25, 1882): 287.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 30, no. 753 (August 19, 1882): 782-783.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 30, no. 768 (December 2, 1882): 1047.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 30, no. 768 (December 2, 1882): 1047.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 31, no. 794 (June 2, 1883): 401.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 32, no. 802 (July 28, 1883): 546.
- ^ a b c d e f Arnold Lewis, American Country Houses of the Gilded Age (New York: Dover Publications, 1982)
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 35, no. 894 (May 2, 1885): 513.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 36, no. 905 (July 18, 1885): 827.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 37, no. 938 (March 6, 1886): 307.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 38, no. 959 (July 31, 1886): 988.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 38, no. 960 (August 7, 1886): 1021.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 38, no. 976 (November 27, 1886): 1473.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 41, no. 1052 (May 12, 1888): 627.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 43, no. 1100 (April 13, 1889): 530.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 43, no. 1105 (May 18, 1889): 715.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp Norval White, Elliot Willensky and Fran Leadon, AIA Guide to New York City (New York: Oxford University Press, 2010)
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 44, no. 1126 (October 12, 1889): 1389.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 45, no. 1145 (February 22, 1890): 282.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 47, no. 1210 (May 23, 1891): 848.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 49, no. 1260 (May 7, 1892): 721.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 48, no. 1240 (December 19, 1891): 815.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 50, no. 1271 (July 23, 1892): 112.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 49, no. 1262 (May 21, 1892): 812-813.
- ^ Scarborough Historic District NRHP Registration Form (1984)
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 51, no. 1304 (March 11, 1893): 869.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 51, no. 1319 (June 24, 1893): 997.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 53, no. 1366 (May 19, 1894): 814.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 53, no. 1366 (May 19, 1894): 814.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 53, no. 1367 (May 26, 1894): 843.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 54, no. 1398 (December 29, 1894): 987.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 55, no. 1414 (April 20, 1895): 641.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 55, no. 1418 (May 18, 1895): 850.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 55, no. 1420 (June 1, 1895): 916.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 56, no. 1445 (November 23, 1895): 720.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 57, no. 1453 (January 18, 1896): 93.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 57, no. 1461 (March 14, 1896): 453.
- ^ Thomas Nelson Page House NRHP Registration Form (1975)
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 58, no. 1497 (November 21, 1896): 753.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 58, no. 1499 (December 5, 1896): 856.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 59, no. 1504 (January 9, 1897): 56.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 61, no. 1571 (April 23, 1898): 738.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 61, no. 1576 (May 28, 1898): 967.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 63, no. 1617 (March 11, 1899): 441.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 65, no. 1662 (January 20, 1900): 103.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 65, no. 1669 (March 10, 1900): 409.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 69, no. 1765 (January 11, 1902): 630.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 69, no. 1785 (June 1, 1902): 1006.
- ^ a b c d Naugatuck Center Historic District NRHP Registration Form (1999)
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 69, no. 1786 (June 7, 1902): 1047.
- ^ "Roosevelt's Official Quarters" in Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 70, no. 1803 (October 4, 1902): 476.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 69, no. 1786 (June 7, 1902): 1071.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 70, no. 1791 (July 12, 1902): 65.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 70, no. 1802 (September 27, 1902): 454.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 70, no. 1815 (December 27, 1902): 985.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 71, no. 1829 (April 4, 1903): 651.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 71, no. 1837 (May 30, 1903): 1080.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 71, no. 1839 (June 13, 1903): 1176.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 72, no. 1850 (August 29, 1903): 382.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 72, no. 1053 (September 12, 1903): 475.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 72, no. 1853 (September 19, 1903): 496.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 72, no. 1862 (November 21, 1903): 936.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 72, no. 1865 (December 12, 1903): 1087.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 73, no. 1868 (January 9, 1904): 55.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 73, no. 1868 (January 9, 1904): 56.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 73, no. 1878 (March 12, 1904): 557.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 73, no. 1878 (March 12, 1904): 557.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 74, no. 1894 (July 2, 1904): 11.
- ^ University Cottage Club NRHP Registration Form (1999)
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 74, no. 1902 (August 27, 1904): 443.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 74, no. 1905 (September 17, 1904): 578.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 74, no. 1916 (December 3, 1904): 1223.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 75, no. 1926 (February 11, 1905): 302.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 75, no. 1926 (February 11, 1905): 303.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 75, no. 1936 (April 22, 1905): 872.
- ^ Our Past, The Towers.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 75, no. 1941 (May 27, 1905): 1169.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 77, no. 1977 (February 3, 1906): 190.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 77, no. 1994 (June 2, 1906): 1043.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 79, no. 2043 (May 11, 1907): 955.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 80, no. 2066 (October 19, 1907): 611.
- ^ Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 70, no. 1800 (September 13, 1902): 380.
- ^ "Now and Then: The History of Our Building". http://isps.yale.edu/. 2012.
- ^ Daniel Sterner, "New Britain City Hall (1886)," Historic Buildings of Connecticut, November 26, 2011.
- ^ Daniel Sterner, "Naugatuck National Bank (1930)," Historic Buildings of Connecticut, August 27, 2010.
- ^ Daniel Sterner, "Bristol Bank and Trust Company (1922)," Historic Buildings of Connecticut, April 2, 2011.
- ^ Daniel Sterner, "Home Bank and Trust Company (1922)," Historic Buildings of Connecticut, November 20, 2012.
- ^ a b c d e Potts, David B. Wesleyan University, 1910–1970: Academic Ambition and Middle-Class America. Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 2015.
- ^ "Precast System Developed for Low-cost Dormitories" in Architectural Engineering: New Concepts, New Methods, New Materials, New Applications (New York: F. W. Dodge Corporation, 1955): 78-79.
- ^ Salem School NRHP Registration Form (1983)
- ^ a b William J. Pape, History of Waterbury and the Naugatuck River Valley, Connecticut, vol. 1 (Chicago: S. J. Clarke Publishing Company, 1918)
- ^ Tranquility Farm NRHP Registration Form (1982)
- ^ St. Paul's Episcopal Church NRHP Registration Form (1979)
- ^ W. Barksdale Maynard, Buildings of Delaware (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2008): 178-181.
- ^ Engineering News-Record 157, no. 16 (October 18, 1956): 96.
- ^ "Mission & History". http://americanhistory.si.edu/. National Musuem of American History. n.d.
- ^ Greenwood Plantation NRHP Registration Form (1976)
- ^ "Forty Structures in Georgia to Cost $5,220,000." Manufacturers' Record 26 Oct. 1922: 57. Baltimore.
- ^ a b c d AIA Guide to Chicago, ed. Alice Sinkevich (San Diego: Harcourt, 2004)
- ^ Bryan Lathrop House NRHP Registration Form (1972)
- ^ a b c Graceland Cemetery NRHP Registration Form (2001)
- ^ Colonial Sugars Historic District NRHP Registration Form (1994)
- ^ Shreveport Commercial Historic District NRHP Registration Form (1982)
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Patricia McGraw Anderson, The Architecture of Bowdoin College (Brunswick: Bowdoin College Musuem of Art, 1988)
- ^ "Ross Winans Mansion". http://baltimoreheritage.org/. Baltimore Heritage, 10 Jan. 2011.
- ^ a b c d Old Goucher College Buildings NRHP Registration Form (1978)
- ^ Architecture and Building Aug. 1911: 28. New York.
- ^ Historic Building Detail: BEV.739, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ 270 Beacon, Back Bay Houses.
- ^ Historic Building Detail: MRN.62, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ 32 Hereford, Back Bay Houses.
- ^ Historic Statue Detail: BOS.9027, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ 257 Commonwealth, Back Bay Houses.
- ^ Historic Building Detail: MAN.29, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ 217 Commonwealth, Back Bay Houses.
- ^ Historic Building Detail: BOS.2624, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ Historic Building Detail: BOS.14906, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ 199 Commonwealth, Back Bay Houses.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Bunting, Bainbridge. Harvard: An Architectural History. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 1985.
- ^ 413 Commonwealth, Back Bay Houses.
- ^ 415 Commonwealth, Back Bay Houses.
- ^ 303 Commonwealth, Back Bay Houses.
- ^ "Manufacturers' Department" in Brickbuilder 6, no. 8 (August 1897): 182.
- ^ Historic Monument Detail: BOS.9031, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ Historic Building Detail: BOS.7524, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ "New England" in [https://www.google.com/books/edition/Trust_Companies/xw00AQAAMAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=0 Trust Companies 1, no. 2 (April 1904): 179.
- ^ Historic Building Detail: ANV.173, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ Historic Gate Detail: ANV.906, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ Historic Building Detail: PLY.7, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ Historic Building Detail: BOS.12790, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ Bryant F. Tolles Jr., Architecture & Academe: College Buildings in New England Before 1860 (University Press of New England, 2011)
- ^ Historic Area Detail: STO.B, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ Historic Building Detail: STO.26, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ Historic Building Detail: WLL.140, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ Historic Building Detail: GBR.8, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ Historic Building Detail: LEN.38, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ Historic Building Detail: STO.4, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ Historic Building Detail: STO.28, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Stanley King, The Consecrated Eminence: The Story of the Campus and Buildings of Amherst College (Amherst: Amherst College, 1951)
- ^ a b c d e Blair Kamin, Amherst College: An Architectural Tour (New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2020)
- ^ Historic Area Detail: GRO.E, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ Historic Building Detail: HLY.249, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ Historic Building Detail: HLY.489, Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System.
- ^ a b c Kathryn Bishop Eckert, Buildings of Michigan (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2012)
- ^ Edwin H. Hewitt, "The Dedication of the Minneapolis Institute of Arts," Journal of the American Institute of Architects 3, no. 1 (February 1915): 85-86.
- ^ New York Life Building NRHP Registration Form (1970)
- ^ Omaha National Bank Building NRHP Registration Form (1972)
- ^ Mackay School of Mines Building NRHP Registration Form (1982)
- ^ National Park Service Cultural Landscapes Inventory: Blow-Me-Down Farm, Saint Gaudens National Historic Site (2013)
- ^ Bryant F. Tolles Jr. and Carolyn K. Tolles, New Hampshire Architecture: An Illustrated Guide (Hanover: University Press of New England, 1979)
- ^ Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site General Management Plan. 1914.
- ^ a b Llewellyn Park Historic District NRHP Registration Form (1986)
- ^ Buildings in Monmouth: Stories and Styles
- ^ a b Nadzeika, Bonnie-Lynn. Postcard History Series: Morristown. Charleston, SC: Arcadia, 2012.
- ^ Scotch Plains School NRHP Registration Form (1978)
- ^ Rae, John W. Images of America: Mansions of Morris County. Charleston, SC: Arcadia, 1999.
- ^ Orange Free Publoc Library NRHP Registration Form (1981)
- ^ American Architect and Building News 27 Oct. 1900: xi. Boston.
- ^ Suzanne Hinman, The Grandest Madison Square Garden (Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 2019)
- ^ a b c d Elizabeth Breyer, George Eastman: A Biography (Rochester: University of Rochester Press, 2006)
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Andrew S. Dolkart, Morningside Heights: A History of its Architecture and Development (New York: Columbia University Press, 1998)
- ^ a b c d e Francis Morrone, An Architectural Guidebook to Brooklyn (Layton: Gibbs Smith, 2001)
- ^ Douglaston Historic District NRHP Registration Form (2005)
- ^ a b Pratt Buildings". http://mysite.pratt.edu/. Pratt Institute. n.d.
- ^ Nutt, John J. Newburgh: Her Institutions, Industries and Leading Citizens. Newburgh: Ritchie & Hull, 1891.
- ^ Exploring An Empty Hundred-Year-Old McKim, Mead & White Mansion
- ^ Historic Chastellux Overlooking Tuxedo Lake lists in New York for $10.9M
- ^ $3.85M waterfront estate designed by McKim, Mead & White is just 30 minutes outside NYC
- ^ "Proposals" in New York Times, August 5, 1943, 27.
- ^ Coventry, Kim, Daniel Meyer, and Arthur H. Miller. Classic Country Estates of Lake Forest. New York: W. W. Norton, 2003.
- ^ Adams Power Plant Transformer House NRHP Registration Form (1975)
- ^ Echota, Buffalo as an Architectural Museum.
- ^ Robert Root House, Buffalo as an Architectural Museum.
- ^ Williams-Pratt House, Buffalo as an Architectural Museum.
- ^ Williams-Butler House, Buffalo as an Architectural Museum.
- ^ Cornelia Brooke Gilder, "McKim, Mead & White" in Architects in Albany, ed. Diana S. Waite (Albany: Mount Ida Press, 2009): 47.
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- ^ Biemiller, Lawrence. "A 16-Sided Landmark That Almost Didn’t Survive". Union College Buildings & Grounds Blog. 17 May 2013.
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