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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 It was suceeded by the office of Steinman, Corrigill, Cain & White, itself soon superceded by Steinman, Cain & White.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.
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Russwin Hotel, New Britain, Connecticut, 1886.
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Salem School, Naugatuck, Connecticut, 1893.
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Service buildings at Tranquility Farm, Middlebury, Connecticut, 1895.
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Howard Whittemore Memorial Library, Naugatuck, Connecticut, 1894.
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Hartford Medical Society, Hartford, Connecticut, 1897-98.
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Hill-Stead, Farmington, Connecticut, 1898.
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Congregational Church of Naugatuck, Naugatuck, Connecticut, 1903.
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Waterbury Union Station, Waterbury, Connecticut, 1906-09.
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Home Bank and Trust Company Building, Meriden, Connecticut, 1922.
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Harriman Hall, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut, 1926-27.
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Olin Memorial Library, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut, 1926-27.
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Shanklin Laboratory, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut, 1926-27.
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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.
- ^ Karen Van Lengen and Lisa Reilly, Vassar College: An Architectural Tour (New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2004)
- ^ American Machinist 22 July 1920: 146h. New York.
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