User:RGKMA/sandbox/Peabody and Stearns Buildings

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Robert Swain Peabody
John Goddard Stearns Jr.

Peabody & Stearns was an architectural firm based in Boston, Massachusetts in the late 19th and early 20th century. The firm consisted of partners Robert Swain Peabody (1845–1917) and John Goddard Stearns Jr. (1843–1917) who practiced from 1870 to 1917. Their works were primarily built in Massachusetts and New England, although numerous examples of their work can be found in the Mid-Atlantic and Midwestern regions. Over 1,000 works have been attributed to the firm over the course of their 47-year existence.[1][2] The following is a list of current known works by the firm, organized by state/region.

Works[edit]

      Demolished or destroyed (also noted in italics and "Notes")
Building listed on the National Register of Historic Places
Building listed as a contributing property to a National Park Service historic district

Massachusetts[edit]

Building Image Location Year Built Notes Ref
Joseph Story Fay House Falmouth 1870 21 Challenger Dr.

Colonial Revival house designed for Joseph Story Fay at Woods Hole. Now the Meteor House at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.

[3]
Bussey Institute Jamaica Plain 1870–1871 305 South St.

Biological institute at Harvard University from 1871–1936. Located at Arnold Arboretum. Named for Benjamin Bussey. Burned down in 1970 and demolished in 1971.

[1][2]
[4][5]
[6][7]
H. B. Williams House Back Bay, Boston 1870–1871 252 Beacon St.

House designed for real estate developer Henry Bigelow Williams. First owned by Benjamin Chew Tilghman. Later sold to Mary Pratt Nash (daughter of Josiah Parsons Cooke). Demolished in 1925.

[8]
H. B. Williams House Back Bay, Boston 1870–1871 254 Beacon St.

House designed for real estate developer Henry Bigelow Williams. Benjamin Loring Young was a notable resident. Combined with 256 Beacon in 1922 and significantly remodeled by Harold F. Kellogg. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[5][9]
[10]
H. B. Williams House Back Bay, Boston 1870–1871 256 Beacon St.

House designed for real estate developer Henry Bigelow Williams. Combined with 254 Beacon in 1922 and significantly remodeled by Harold F. Kellogg. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

H. B. Williams House Back Bay, Boston 1870–1871 258 Beacon St.

House designed for real estate developer Henry Bigelow Williams. Combined with 260 Beacon in the early 1940s and significantly changed. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[5]
[11]
H. B. Williams House Back Bay, Boston 1870–1871 260 Beacon St.

House designed for real estate developer Henry Bigelow Williams. Notable residents include George H. Mifflin, Evelyn Ames (daughter of Oliver Ames), and Oakes Ames. Combined with 258 Beacon in the early 1940s and significantly changed. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

Edward Bangs House Back Bay, Boston 1871 240 Beacon St.

House designed for Edward Bangs, father of Outram Bangs. Outram's childhood home. Was the Massachusetts School of Physiotherapy from 1944–1958. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[5][6]
[12]
[13]
Ernest Longfellow House Cambridge 1871 108 Brattle St.

House designed for Ernest Wadsworth Longfellow.

[14]
Forbes Cottage Naushon Island 1871 Cottage designed for William Hathaway Forbes and his with Edith Emerson (daughter of Ralph Waldo Emerson). The cottage was dismantled and replaced in 1886 by William Ralph Emerson. [2]
H. B. Williams House Back Bay, Boston 1871 62 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for real estate developer Henry Bigelow Williams. George Duncan was a notable resident. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[1][5]
[15]
[16]
[17]
H. B. Williams House Back Bay, Boston 1871 64 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for real estate developer Henry Bigelow Williams. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

H. B. Williams House Back Bay, Boston 1871 66 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for real estate developer Henry Bigelow Williams. William E. Ladd converted 66 Commonwealth into an office. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

Henry Clay Weston House Back Bay, Boston 1871 177 Beacon St.

House designed for Henry Clay Weston and his wife Evelyn Owen. Henry Weston Farnsworth and Edwin Allen Locke were notable residents. Later acquired by Chamberlayne Junior College. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[18]
[19]
J. Wells House Brookline 1871 98 Colchester St.

House designed for John Wells. Demolished in the 1920s.

[6]
[20]
J. Wells Stable Brookline 1871 98 Colchester St.

Stable designed for John Wells. Demolished in the 1920s.

Matthews Hall Cambridge 1871 (42°22′26.2″N 71°07′05.3″W / 42.373944°N 71.118139°W / 42.373944; -71.118139 (Harvard University Matthews Hall))

Victorian Gothic student dormitory designed for Harvard University. Notable past residents include Philip W. Anderson, Matt Damon, Maura Healey, and Chuck Schumer.

[5]
[21]
[22]
[23]
Yarmouth Port Library Yarmouth 1871 297 MA-6A

Library designed for Nathan Matthews at Yarmouth Port. Matthews also commissioned the firm for his Newport and Boston homes. Tower and dormer removed in 1945 and wings added in 1951 and 1958.

[1][5]
[24]
[25]
Ames-Webster Mansion Back Bay, Boston 1871–1872 306 Dartmouth St.

House designed for Stephen Van Rensselaer Thayer who died in 1871 and was bought by James Henry Blake. Later owned by Frederick Lothrop Ames and Edwin S. Webster. Remodeled and expanded by John Hubbard Sturgis. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[6]
[26]
[27]
[28]
[29]
[30]
[31]
Augustus Flagg House Back Bay, Boston 1871–1872 274 Clarendon St.

House designed for Augustus Flagg, publisher with Little, Brown & Company. Later owned by William Endicott, president of the Boston & Albany Railroad. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[6]
[32]
James Henry Blake House Back Bay, Boston 1871–1872 191 Beacon St.

House designed for James Henry Blake. Notable residents and owners include Nathaniel Thayer Jr., Alice Robeson (daughter of Andrew Robeson Jr.), and Julia Du Gay (widow of Henry Coffin Nevins). Was a dormitory for Emerson College from 1967–1975. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[18]
[33]
James Henry Blake House Back Bay, Boston 1871–1872 193 Beacon St.

House designed for James Henry Blake. Thomas Niles Jr., a partner at Roberts Brothers, was a notable owner. Later the childhood home of Sidney Dillon Ripley. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[18]
[34]
Nathaniel W. Curtis House Back Bay, Boston 1871–1872 195 Beacon St.

House designed for Nathaniel W. Curtis and his wife Sarah James Scull. Their nieces Madeleine and Helen Mixter lived with them after surviving the Ville du Havre shipwreck. Mary Haughton Richardson, daughter of Henry Hobson Richardson, was a notable owner. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[18]
[35]
John Francis Anderson House Back Bay, Boston 1871–1872 185 Beacon St.

House designed for American Civil War officer John Francis Anderson and his wife Ellen Sears Amory. Bentley Wirt Warren, president of the Sentinels of the Republic was a later owner. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[36]
Nathaniel Hooper House Back Bay, Boston 1871–1872 262 Beacon St.

House designed for Nathaniel Hooper. Notable residents include Mary Morton Kehew and Theodore Ayrault Dodge. Significantly altered/remodeled in 1937 by Homer Kiessling. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[37]
Nathaniel Hooper House Back Bay, Boston 1871–1872 264 Beacon St.

House designed for Nathaniel Hooper. George Cabot Lee of Lee, Higginson & Co. was a notable owner. Was the childhood home of Alice Hathaway Lee and George Cabot Lee Jr. Demolished in 1927.

[38]
Boston and Providence Depot Boston 1872 50 Park Plz.

Station for the Boston and Providence Railroad. Closed in 1899 and demolished in 1908. Now the site of the Boston Park Plaza.

[1][5]
[6]
[39]
[40]
[41]
George Wheatland House Back Bay, Boston 1872 7 Exeter St.

House designed for building contractor George Wheatland Jr. First owned by William Barton Rogers. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[42]
[43]
[44]
George Wheatland House Back Bay, Boston 1872 9 Exeter St.

House designed for building contractor George Wheatland Jr. Notable residents and owners include Ellen Frothingham, Stopford Brooke, Wallace Bryant, and Nanna Matthews Bryant. Additions to the building were designed by Arthur Bowditch and Bigelow & Wadsworth. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[42]
[45]
[46]
George Wheatland House Back Bay, Boston 1872 11 Exeter St.

House designed for building contractor George Wheatland Jr. First owned by Marshall Woods and Anne Brown Francis (daughter of John Brown Francis). Samuel Appleton Brown Abbott (son of Josiah Gardner Abbott) and Quincy Adams Shaw Jr. (son of Quincy Adams Shaw) were notable owners and residents. Remodeled in the 1920s by Richardson, Barott, and Richardson. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[42]
[47]
[48]
Hon. J. Thomas Stevenson House Swampscott 1872 245 Puritan Rd.

House designed for Joshua Thomas Stevenson and his wife Hannah Hooper, parents of Thomas G. Stevenson. Julia Arnold, widow of Lewis Golding Arnold, was a later owner. Also known as The Points.

[5]
[49]
J. Rooney House Brookline 1872 7 Kent St.

House designed for James Rooney. Also remodeled the house in 1884.

[6]
[20]
Smith Academy Hatfield 1872 Main St. & School St.

First building for Smith Academy. Demolished in 1982.

[1]
[5]
J. E. Thayer & Bro. Store Boston 1872–1873 Store building designed for J. E. Thayer & Bro. (John E. and Nathaniel Thayer), predecessor of Kidder, Peabody & Company. Location and status unknown. [40]
Christine Nilsson Building Boston 1873 110–114 Arch St. & 31–33 Otis St.

Building designed for Christine Nilsson to replace original building destroyed in the Great Boston Fire of 1872. First occupied by the American Rubber Company and D. M. Hodgden & Co. Later bought by Harvard College c. 1910. Demolished.

[50]
David Hinckley Building Boston 1873 54–58 Kilby St. & 92 Water St.

Building designed for the heirs of David Hinckley. Located at Liberty Square in the Custom House District.

[1]
[40]
[51]
[52]
Harvard Building Boston 1873 93–101 Arch St.

Built as an investment property for Harvard University after the Great Boston Fire of 1872. Originally owned by the President and Fellows of Harvard College. Later owned by the New England News Company.

[50]
[53]
[54]
Jonathan Bowditch House Jamaica Plain 1873 Pond St.

House deigned for Jonathan Ingersoll Bowditch. Demolished.

[1]
Lawrence Building Boston 1873 41–49 Federal St.

Building designed for James Lawrence (trustee of Abbott Lawrence). Later owned by Abbott Lawrence Rotch, A. Lawrence Lowell, and the John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co. Became part of the John Hancock Building. Demolished.

[40]
[55]
Matthews and Pratt Building Boston 1873 111–121 Federal St.

Store block designed for Nathan Matthews and Isaac Pratt. Later owned by Arioch Wentworth and Frederick Ayer. Demolished. Now the site of the Winthrop Center.

[5][6]
[55]
Miles Washburn House Back Bay, Boston 1873 18 Newbury St.

House designed for Miles Washburn. Significantly altered in the 1920s. Later held the Boston office of Manpower Inc. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[56]
Revere National Bank Building Boston 1873 100 Franklin St.

Building designed for the Revere National Bank. Demolished.

[57]
First Congregational Church Georgetown 1873–1874 7 Andover St.

Stick Style Victorian Gothic church, cornerstone laid October 7, 1873. Church dedicated on December 18, 1874. Charles Beecher was the first pastor of the church. Bell tower houses an 1815 Revere bell.

[5]
[58]
[59]
[60]
James Mason Crafts House Back Bay, Boston 1873–1874 59 Marlborough St.

House designed for James Crafts. Other notable residents include John Malcolm Forbes, Roger Wolcott, Franklin Henry Hooper, and Russell S. Codman Jr. The firm also designed a one-story brick addition in 1897. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[6]
[61]
Lawrence School Brookline 1873–1874 27 Francis St.

Stick Style schoolhouse designed for the town of Brookline. Named for Amos A. Lawrence. Also designed enlargements in 1885 and 1891. Demolished in 1929 and replaced in 1930 by R. Clipston Sturgis.

[20]
[62]
[63]
[64]
Augustus Lowell Building Boston 1874 10–12 Pearl St.

Building designed for Augustus Lowell at Post Office Square. Demolished c. 1900 and replaced with the Delta Building owned by the trustees of Richard Henry Dana Jr.

[65]
Boston Post Building Boston 1874 17 Milk St.

Victorian Gothic building designed for Beals, Greene & Co. Home of The Boston Post until 1905 and the Boston Evening Transcript until 1939. Built at the birth site of Benjamin Franklin. Altered in the 1920s by Edward L. Rawson and in the 1950s by Herman Feer & William E. Nast. Located in the Newspaper Row historic district.

[1][5]
[30]
[31]
[40]
[66]
[67]
[68]
Brookline Pumping Station & Engine House West Roxbury 1874 Pumping station and engine house designed for the town of Brookline to increase water supply in the town. Located on Cow Island along the Charles River just over the town border in West Roxbury. Demolished. [69]
Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1874 205 Beacon St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. Charles Francis Choate, president of the Old Colony Railroad, was a notable owner. Later the home and office of Walter J. Dodd. Remodeled in 1950 by Archie Riskin. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[5]
[70]
[71]
[72]
[73]
Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1874 209 Beacon St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. Later owned by Benjamin W. Crowninshield, William Henry Howard (son of William D. M. Howard), and Charles Locke Scudder. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1874 75 Newbury St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. Was former parish house of the Central Congregational Church. Later held the office of Allen & Collens and was headquarters of the Pan American Society. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[74]
Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1874 77 Newbury St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. Significantly altered. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[30]
[75]
Chickering & Sons Piano Warehouse Boston 1874 156 Tremont St.

Piano warehouse designed for Chickering & Sons. Later owned by William Ingersoll Bowditch and Charles Pickering Bowditch. Was the location of E. T. Slattery Co. from 1901 to 1957. Demolished.

[6]
[76]
[77]
College Hall Northampton 1874 10 Elm St.

High Victorian Gothic building designed for Smith College. Located in the Northampton Downtown Historic District.

[1][5]
[39]
[78]
[79]
[80]
[81]
Gardner Brewer & Co. Store Boston 1874 Devonshire St. & Franklin St.

Store building designed for Gardner Brewer. Later known as the John Hancock Building owned by John Hancock Insurance which in 1909 commissioned Shepley, Rutan and Coolidge to design significant additions and alterations. Later owned by Stone & Webster. Demolished in 1965.

[1]
[40]
[55]
[82]
[83]
Gateway House Northampton 1874 House designed for Laurenus Clark Seelye, the first president of Smith College. Was the residence of Smith College presidents until demolition in 1970. Presidents during this period include Marion LeRoy Burton, William Allan Neilson, Elizabeth Cutter Morrow, Herbert Davis, and Thomas C. Mendenhall. [79]
[84]
Hotel Brunswick Boston 1874 Boylston St. & Clarendon St.

Enlarged in 1876. Notable residents include Alexander H. Rice and Thomas Talbot. Notable guests include Rutherford B. Hayes, Ulysses S. Grant, Dion Boucicault, Richard B. Angus, and Edmund Rice. Demolished in 1957. Now the site of 500 Boylston Street.

[1][5]
[6]
[28]
[39]
[85]
[86]
[87]
John G. Stearns Jr. House Brookline 1874 24 Pleasant St.

House designed for John Goddard Stearns Jr. Demolished.

[20]
Lambert Bros. Building Boston 1874 53–55 Brattle St.
Building designed for the Lambert Bros. Built by C. L. Haley. Was located across from Quincy House. Later owned by Godfrey Morse and Leopold Morse. Demolished. Now the site of Boston City Hall Plaza.
[40]
[88]
Longwood School Brookline 1874 Monmouth St. & St. Mary's St.

Schoolhouse designed for the town of Brookline. Demolished.

[1]
Newtonville School Newton 1874 Schoolhouse designed for the town of Newton in Newtonville. Location and status unknown. [1]
Wollaston School House Quincy 1874 Schoolhouse designed for the town of Quincy in the Wollaston neighborhood. Demolished. [6]
[89]
Frances M. McKay House Cambridge 1875 10 Follen St.

Second Empire Stick Style house designed for Frances M. MacKay. Located in the Follen Street Historic District. Added to the NRHP in 1982.

[1][5]
[6]
[90]
[91]
Holbrook Hall Newton 1875 Summer house designed at Oak Hill in Newton Centre for William Sumner Appleton, the son of Nathan Appleton and father of William Sumner Appleton Jr. Demolished and replaced with the residence of Robert Gould Shaw II which is now owned by Mount Ida College. [1][2]
[5]
Hotel Alexandra South End, Boston 1875 1759–1763 Washington St.

High Victorian Gothic residential hotel designed for Caleb Clark Walworth. Abandoned in 1975. Located in the South End District.

[92]
[93]
Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York Building Boston 1875 Milk St. & Pearl St.

Building designed for the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York at Post Office Square. Demolished.

[1][5]
[6]
[28]
[39]
[40]
[57]
[94]
Roger Wolcott House Milton 1875 Canton Ave. (now 60 Wolcott Woods Ln.)

House designed for Roger Wolcott. Demolished.

[1][6]
[95]
Roger Wolcott Stable Milton 1875 Canton Ave.

Stable designed for Roger Wolcott at his house. Demolished.

T. E. Curtis House Brookline 1875 144 Longwood Ave.

House designed for Thomas Edward Curtis. Demolished.

[5][6]
[20]
Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1876 79 Newbury St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[96]
[97]
Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1876 81 Newbury St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1876 83 Newbury St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. Significantly altered. Later held the headquarters of the Boston Loyal Order of Moose and American Red Cross Metropolitan Chapter. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[98]
Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1876 271 Beacon St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. Lemuel Cushing Kimball and his wife Addie Hall were the first owners. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[18]
[99]
[100]
[101]
[102]
Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1876 273 Beacon St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. George Franklin Putnam and his wife Sarah Becket Hood were the first owners. Was owned by the Katharine Gibbs School from 1930–1931. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1876 275 Beacon St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. Charles Edward Powers (president of the Middlesex Railroad) and his wife Harriet Fessenden were the first owners. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[18]
[103]
[104]
Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1876 277 Beacon St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. Carpet dealer John Goldthwait was the first owner. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[18]
[105]
[106]
Williston Hall South Hadley 1876 Residence hall and art and science building at Mount Holyoke College. Was the first building for the Mount Holyoke College Art Museum. Also designed additions in 1888. Destroyed by a fire in 1917. [107]
[108]
[109]
[110]
[111]
M. W. Quinlan House Brookline 1876 High St. & Irving St.

House designed for Michael W. Quinlan. Demolished.

[20]
[112]
N. Samuel Store Boston 1876 10 Post Office Sq.

Store designed for Nathan Samuel. Demolished.

[40]
Boston Turnverein Club House South End, Boston 1876–1877 29 Middlesex St. & Emerald St.

Clubhouse designed for the Boston Turnverein Club. Also known as Turn Hall. Sold in 1913. Demolished.

[1][6]
[113]
Fuller Building Lynn 1877 8–18 Central Sq.

Building designed for Arthur Fuller at Central Square. Demolished.

[6]
[114]
Charles H. Stearns House Brookline 1877 265 Harvard St.

House designed for Charles H. Stearns. Demolished in 1931.

[20]
Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1877 128 Newbury St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. Held the headquarters of the Russian War Relief Society. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[18]
[30]
[115]
Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1877 130 Newbury St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. Remodeled by Edward B. Stratton in 1927. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[18]
[30]
[116]
Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1877 132 Newbury St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. Significantly altered. Housed the Boston advertising offices of House Beautiful and Boston publication office of The American Architect. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[18]
[30]
[117]
Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1877 134 Newbury St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[18]
[30]
[118]
Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1877 136 Newbury St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. Later home to the Boston School of Fashion Design. Significantly altered by H. B. Allen. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[18]
[119]
[120]
Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1877 121 Marlborough St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. First owned by Maria Curtis, widow of Benjamin Robbins Curtis. Susan Weld, widow of Stephen Minot Weld Jr., was a later owner. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[18]
[121]
[122]
Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1877 123 Marlborough St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. Was the childhood home of Charlotte Howe Johnson (future wife of Curtis Guild Jr.). Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[18]
[123]
[124]
Charles Henry Wheelwright Foster House Brookline 1877 78 Upland Rd.

Queen Anne style house designed for Charles Henry Wheelright Foster at Pill Hill. Also designed a music pavilion for Foster in 1893. Later owned by Isadore Braggiotti, was the childhood home of Mario, Gloria, and Francesca Braggiotti (future wife of John Davis Lodge). Located in the Pill Hill Historic District.

[1]
[20]
[125]
[126]
[127]
[128]
Dudley H. Bradlee House Medford 1877 21 Ashcroft Rd.

Queen Anne Stick Style house designed for Dudley Hall Bradlee and his wife Elizabeth Hall.

[1]
[129]
[130]
First Church Northampton 1877 129 Main St.

High Victorian Gothic Congregational church. Clock by E. Howard & Co. and stained glass by Louis Comfort Tiffany. Located in the Northampton Downtown Historic District.

[1][5]
[6]
[131]
[132]
G. W. Wiggins House Brookline 1877 House designed for George W. Wiggins. Location and status unknown. [6]
[20]
G. W. Wiggins Stable Brookline 1877 Stable designed for George W. Wiggins. Location and status unknown.
H. D. Hall House Medford 1877 105 Governors Ave.

House designed for Horace Dudley Hall. Burned down in 1907.

[1]
[130]
Moorfield Storey House Brookline 1877 44 Edgehill Rd.

Queen Anne style house designed for Moorfield Storey, Peabody's friend and college roommate at Pill Hill. Later owned by Walter E. Andrews, father of Louise Andrews Kent. Located in the Pill Hill Historic District.

[1][6]
[20]
[126]
[127]
[133]
[134]
Robert Swain Peabody House Brookline 1877 50 Edgehill Rd.

Queen Anne style house designed for Peabody and his family at Pill Hill. Located in the Pill Hill Historic District.

[1][5]
[20]
[28]
[39]
[127]
[134]
[135]
[136]
R. H. White Co. Department Store Boston 1877 518–536 Washington St.

Department store designed for the R. H. White Company. Addition designed in 1889. Bought by Filene's in 1928. Demolished in 1974.

[1][5]
[28]
[40]
[57]
[137]
[138]
T. Albert Taylor House Back Bay, Boston 1877 261 Boylston St. (now 601 Boylston St.)

House designed for T. Albert Taylor. Built by Woodbury & Leighton. Demolished.

[6]
[139]
John W. Denny House Milton 1877–1878 704 Brush Hill Rd.

House designed for John W. Denny. Bought by Philip Saltonstall of Tucker, Anthony & Co. in 1894. Demolished in 1910.

[1][5]
[28]
[39]
[80]
[140]
[141]
Dickinson High School and Deerfield Academy Building Deerfield 1877–1879 7 Boyden Ln.

School building designed for Dickinson High School and Deerfield Academy. Demolished in 1930 and replaced with the new Deerfield Academy main school building, designed by Charles A. Platt.

[1][5]
[80]
[142]
[143]
Wyman's Exchange Building Lowell 1877–1879 Merrimack St. & Central St. (42°38′43.4″N 71°18′31.1″W / 42.645389°N 71.308639°W / 42.645389; -71.308639 (Wyman's Exchange Building))

Commercial building designed for S. G. Wyman. The Lowell Bank was the original tenant. Peabody & Stearns also remodeled and expanded the building in 1909.

[5][6]
[144]
Battle Lawn Concord 1878 Liberty St.

House designed for Col. Edwin Shepard Barrett, great-great-grandson of Col. James Barrett. Sold in 1898 and significantly remodeled by Frank Chouteau Brown. Demolished in 1953.

[1][2]
[140]
[145]
Bromfield School Harvard 1878 4 Pond Rd.

Romanesque Revival school building designed for the Bromfield School. Harvard Public Library now uses the building. Located in the Harvard Center Historic District.

[1]
[146]
[147]
Charles Clarke House Northampton 1878 50 Elm St.

Queen Anne style summer house designed for Charles H. Clarke. Bought by Smith College in 1889.

[1]
[81]
[148]
Dr. Richard M. Hodges House Back Bay, Boston 1878 67 Marlborough St.

House designed for Richard Manning Hodges. Later owned by Augustus Lowell, William Lowell Putnam, George Howard Monks, Massachusetts General Hospital, and McLean Hospital. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[5][6]
[149]
[150]
[151]
Edward Everett Monument Watertown 1878 Magnolia Ave. Lot #17 (42°22′08.6″N 71°08′37.1″W / 42.369056°N 71.143639°W / 42.369056; -71.143639 (Edward Everett Monument))

Monument designed for Edward Everett at Mount Auburn Cemetery.

[152]
Elizabeth Grinnell House Back Bay, Boston 1878 18 Fairfield St.

House designed for Elizabeth and Charles Edward Grinnell. Later owned by J. Harleston Parker, Harold Walker (son of Charles Howard Walker who also remodeled the house), and Reuben H. Markham. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[5][6]
[18]
[31]
[153]
[154]
Tanglewood Falmouth 1878 Highfield Dr.

House and stable designed for James Arthur Beebe. Also designed alterations to the house in 1894 and 1905. Given to Harvard University after Beebe's death. Demolished in 1977.

[1][2]
[6]
[155]
[156]
Tanglewood Carriage House Falmouth 1878 Highfield Dr.

Carriage house designed for James Arthur Beebe at Tanglewood.

Tanglewood Gatehouse Falmouth 1878 Highfield Dr.

Gatehouse designed for James Arthur Beebe at Tanglewood.

Howard National Bank Boston 1878–1879 19 Congress St.

Bank building designed for Howard National Bank. Masonry work by Standish & Woodbury. Demolished c. 1900.

[1][5]
[40]
[157]
[158]
[159]
[160]
B. W. Munroe House Back Bay, Boston 1879 212 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for Benjamin Warren Munroe and his wife Ellen Hedge Lunt. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[6]
[161]
[162]
Edgewood Falmouth 1879 549 Woods Hole Rd. (41°31′26.8″N 70°39′51.8″W / 41.524111°N 70.664389°W / 41.524111; -70.664389 (Edgewood))

Queen Anne style house designed for Joseph Story Fay Jr. at Woods Hole. Landscape designed by the Olmsted Brothers.

[2][6]
[155]
[163]
Hatfield House Northampton 1879 3 Neilson Dr.

Gothic Revival dormitory designed for Smith College. Now Hatfield Hall

[1]
[81]
[109]
[164]
Hemenway Gymnasium Cambridge 1879 Cambridge St. & Holmes Pl.

Gymnasium building designed for Harvard University. Built by the Norcross Brothers. Demolished and replaced with the Fine Arts Library.

[1][5]
[6]
[23]
[39]
[80]
[94]
[165]
[166]
Hubbard House Northampton 1879 3 Green St.

Queen Anne style dormitory designed for Smith College. Julia Child was notable resident.

[1]
[81]
[109]
[167]
J. Murray Forbes House Back Bay, Boston 1879 107 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for John Murray Forbes, partner in Russell & Company. Henry Melville Whitney was a resident for a brief period. Demolished in 1939.

[168]
[169]
John C. Phillips House Back Bay, Boston 1879 299 Berkeley St.

House designed for John Charles Phillips Jr. Was the childhood home of John Charles Phillips III and William Phillips. Demolished in February 1941. Now the site of First Lutheran Church of Boston.

[1][2]
[5]
[39]
[170]
[171]
Joseph Story Fay House Back Bay, Boston 1879 169 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for Joseph Story Fay Sr. In 1907, Harry Houdini performed a private escape for Fay and members of the Somerset Club at this house. Significantly remodeled by Parker, Thomas & Rice in 1928. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[66]
[172]
[173]
The Larches Falmouth 1879 80 Church St.

Tudor Revival Shingle Style house designed for John M. Glidden at Woods Hole. Bought by Eugene Nims, president of Southwestern Bell Telephone Company, in 1923. Hired the Olmsted Brothers to do extensive landscaping work in 1929.

[2][6]
[155]
[174]
[175]
R. Baker House Back Bay, Boston 1879 150 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for Richard Baker Jr. Later owned by Thomas Sherwin. In 1926, Pauline Revere Thayer purchased the house for the Chilton Club. The building was remodeled and combined with 152 Commonwealth and remains part of the Club today. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[176]
[177]
[178]
Roger Wolcott House Back Bay, Boston 1879 173 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for Roger Wolcott. Other notable residents and owners include John Thayer and J. Harleston Parker (who significantly changed the design in 1917). Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[66]
[179]
[180]
Sewall School Brookline 1879 275 Cypress St.
Two room wooden schoolhouse designed for the town of Brookline. Moved next door in 1891 to become the old blacksmith shop at the Town Stable. Demolished.
[20]
[64]
[181]
[182]
[183]
Smith College Gymnasium Northampton 1879 Gymnasium designed for Smith College. Demolished and replaced with the Smith Alumnae Gymnasium in 1890 by William C. Brocklesby. [1]
[84]
Washburn House Northampton 1879 4 Seelye Dr.

Gothic Revival dormitory designed for Smith College. Named for William B. Washburn.

[1]
[81]
[109]
[184]
Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1879–1880 125 Marlborough St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. George Lewis was the first owner. In 1937–1938, Herman L. Feer remodeled the building and replaced front façade. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[18]
[185]
[186]
Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1879–1880 127 Marlborough St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. Irvin McDowell Garfield (son of president James A. Garfield) lived here with his wife Susan from 1910 to 1939. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[18]
[187]
Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1879–1880 129 Marlborough St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. First owned by Nathaniel Walker and his wife Susan White Seaver Grant. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[18]
[188]
[189]
Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1880 131 Marlborough St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. First owned by Henry Endicott and his wife Mary Hubbard Howe. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[18]
[190]
[191]
Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1880 133 Marlborough St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. First owned by Arthur Amory and his wife Elizabeth Wilcocks Ingersoll. 5th story added c. 1912. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[18]
[192]
[193]
A. Lyman Williston House Northampton 1880 35 Round Hill Rd.

Queen Anne style house designed for A. Lyman Williston. Sold in the 1940s to the Mary A. Burnham School and in 1968 to the Clarke School to be used as a dormitory. Demolished in the 1970s.

[1][6]
[194]
[195]
Dupee Estate Newton 1880 400 Beacon St. (42°19′54.5″N 71°10′30.2″W / 42.331806°N 71.175056°W / 42.331806; -71.175056 (Dupee Estate))

Tudor Revival High Victorian Gothic estate designed for William R. Dupee in Chestnut Hill. Later the home of Mary Baker Eddy who hired Solon Spencer Beman to remodel. Located in the Chestnut Hill Historic District. Added to the NRHP in 1986.

[2]
[196]
[197]
[198]
[199]
Francis H. Appleton House Back Bay, Boston 1880 265 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for Francis H. Appleton. Abbott Lawrence Rotch was later a resident. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[6]
[200]
[201]
[202]
Olney Estate Falmouth 1880 Surf Dr. & Mill Rd.

Summer cottage designed for Richard Olney. Destroyed in the 1938 New England hurricane.

[155]
Shepherd Brooks Estate MedfordMA ShepherdBrooksEstate MainHouse Medford 1880 275 Grove St.

Queen Anne style house designed for Shepherd Brooks. Built by the Norcross Brothers. Added to the NRHP in 1975.

[2][6]
[203]
[204]
[205]
[206]
Shepherd Brooks Estate Carriage House Medford 1880 275 Grove St. (42°26′7.1″N 71°8′11.7″W / 42.435306°N 71.136583°W / 42.435306; -71.136583 (Shepherd Brooks Estate Carriage House))

Queen Anne style carriage house designed for Shepherd Brooks at his estate. Built by the Norcross Brothers. Added to the NRHP in 1975.

Moraine Farm / Phillips Estate Beverly 1880–1882 719 Cabot St. (42°35′11.0″N 70°53′39.5″W / 42.586389°N 70.894306°W / 42.586389; -70.894306 (Moraine Farm / Phillips Estate))

Shingle Style estate designed for John Charles Phillips Jr., father of John and William Phillips and grandson of John Phillips. Phillips Jr.'s daughter, Martha, married Andrew James Peters at Moraine Farm. Landscape designed by Frederick Law Olmsted overlooking Wenham Lake. 66 acres recently acquired by The Trustees of Reservations.

[2][6]
[207]
[208]
[209]
[210]
[211]
[212]
Moraine Farm Ladies Room & Pavilion Beverly 1880–1882 719 Cabot St. (42°35′08.0″N 70°53′38.6″W / 42.585556°N 70.894056°W / 42.585556; -70.894056 (Moraine Farm Ladies Room & Pavilion))

Queen Anne style ladies room and pavilion designed at Moraine Farm.

Moraine Farm Shed Beverly 1880–1882 719 Cabot St. (42°35′11.9″N 70°53′41.2″W / 42.586639°N 70.894778°W / 42.586639; -70.894778 (Moraine Farm Shed))

Shed designed at Moraine Farm. Moved in 1947 and in 1978 to current location.

Saint Mary of the Assumption Church Brookline 1880–1886 5 Linden Pl.

High Victorian Gothic church. Designed the church and rectory. Was first Catholic church established in Brookline and the first church in America to be named Saint Mary of the Assumption. Added to the NRHP in 1985.

[1][5]
[6]
[20]
[28]
[213]
[214]
[215]
[216]
C. W. Clifford House New Bedford 1881 78 Orchard St.

Queen Anne style house designed for lawyer Charles Warren Clifford, son of John H. Clifford. Located in the County Street Historic District.

[1][6]
Charles Elliott Perkins House Milton 1881 255 Adams St.

Colonial Revival house designed for Charles Elliott Perkins and wife Edith Forbes. Located in the Milton Hill Historic District.

[1][6]
[217]
[218]
Charles Merriman House Back Bay, Boston 1881 175 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for banker Charles Merriam and his wife Helen Jaques. Elizabeth Gardiner Bacon, sister-in-law of Robert Bacon, was a later resident. Bought by Rev. Eleanor Mel and converted it into the Boston Home of Truth (part of the New Thought movement) and church. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[6]
[66]
[219]
[220]
Charles T. White House Back Bay, Boston 1881 213 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for Charles Tallman White and his wife Sarah Brackett Richardson. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[5][6]
[85]
[221]
[222]
Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1881 279 Beacon St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. Robert Amory was the first owner. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[18]
[223]
[224]
Charles W. Freeland House Back Bay, Boston 1881 281 Beacon St.

House designed for real estate developer Charles W. Freeland. Mary and Caroline Bartlett, daughters of Enoch Bartlett, were the first owners. Henry S. Russell was a notable resident. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[18]
[225]
[226]
D. N. Spooner House Back Bay, Boston 1881 196 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for Elizabeth Elliot Torrey Spooner, the widow of merchant Daniel Nicolson Spooner. Thomas Wheelock was later a resident. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[85]
[227]
[228]
[229]
Easthampton Public Library Easthampton 1881 9 Park St.

Tudor Revival library designed for the town of Easthampton. Was known as the Emily Williston Memorial Library. Name changed back to the Easthampton Public Library in 2023. Located in the Main Street Historic District.

[1][5]
[39]
[230]
[231]
[232]
E. C. Johnson Cottage Nahant 1881 School St.

Cottage designed for Edward C. Johnson. Demolished.

[6]
J. H. White House Brookline 1881 541–545 Boylston St.

House designed for Joseph H. White. Located in the Fisher Hill Historic District.

[5][6]
[20]
[127]
[233]
[234]
J. H. White Outbuilding Brookline 1881 557–565 Boylston St.

Stable/carriage house designed for Joseph H. White. Located in the Fisher Hill Historic District. Now a private residence.

J. M. Hubbard House Back Bay, Boston 1881 382 Marlborough St.

House designed for James Mascarene Hubbard. Thomas Russell Sullivan was later a resident. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[5][6]
[235]
[236]
John Payson Williston Observatory South Hadley 1881 Jewett Ln. (42°15′21.7″N 72°34′39.3″W / 42.256028°N 72.577583°W / 42.256028; -72.577583 (John Payson Williston Observatory))

Observatory designed for Mount Holyoke College. The oldest academic building on campus. Elisabeth Bardwell was the first director, followed by Anne Sewell Young and Alice Hall Farnsworth.

[110]
[237]
E. G. Leonard House New Bedford 1881–1882 99 Madison St.

Queen Anne Shingle Style house designed for Elizabeth Gibbs Leonard. Sold in 1901 to Andrew Pierce, president of Pairpoint Glass Co. and son of New Bedford mayor Andrew G. Pierce. Located in the County Street Historic District.

[1][6]
[238]
Emma F. Keyes House Back Bay, Boston 1881–1882 88 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for Emma Frances Keyes, widow of Henry Keyes. Built by the Norcross Brothers. Demolished in 1923.

[239]
Guild Cottage Nahant 1881–1882 6 Swallow Cave Rd.

Cottage designed for Elizabeth Henderson Rice, widow of Samuel Eliot Guild. Landscape designed by Frederick Law Olmsted. Destroyed in the 1938 New England hurricane.

[1][2]
[5][6]
[240]
[241]
Spouting Horn Nahant 1881–1882 8 Spouting Horn Rd.

House designed for Thomas Motley Jr. Demolished in 2011.

[2][5]
[242]
Allen Winden Lenox and Stockbridge 1882 Old Stockbridge Rd.

Berkshire Cottage designed for Charles D. Lanier. Built by C. E. Clark. Landscape designed by Ernest Bowditch. The firm also designed alterations in 1895 and 1903. J. P. Morgan, James F. D. Lanier, and Lord Algernon Gordon-Lennox were notable guests. Demolished in 1928 following Lanier's death.

[2][6]
[243]
[244]
[245]
Coldbrooke Lenox 1882 Woods Ln. (42°20′34.6″N 73°16′03.7″W / 42.342944°N 73.267694°W / 42.342944; -73.267694 (Coldbrooke))

Berkshire Cottage designed for John Sanford Barnes and his wife Susan Bainbridge Hays, granddaughter of William Bainbridge. Now known as Beecher's Cottage and located at Wyndhurst Club.

[2][6]
[245]
[246]
[247]
Coldbrooke Barn Lenox 1882 Barn designed for John Sanford Barnes at Coldbrooke.
Coldbrooke Carriage House Lenox 1882 Carriage house designed for John Sanford Barnes at Coldbrooke.
Coldbrooke Stable Lenox 1882 Stable designed for John Sanford Barnes at Coldbrooke.
E. Pierson Beebe Apartment Building Boston 1882 Apartment building designed for E. Pierson Beebe. Location and status unknown. [2]
F. P. Sprague House Back Bay, Boston 1882 229 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for Dr. Francis Peleg Sprague. Building was sold to MIT in 1949 and became fraternity house for the MIT chapter of Phi Kappa Theta. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[6]
[248]
[249]
Henry Bradlee Jr. House FrontView Medford 1882 11 Turell Rd.

Queen Anne style house designed for Henry Bradlee Jr. and his wife Maude Abbot.

[130]
[250]
Hillyer Art Museum Northampton 1882 Art museum designed for Smith College. The first public exhibition of Charles Lang Freer's Asian collection was organized at the museum in 1897. Later additions designed by Charles A. Rich and Frederick L. Ackerman. Demolished in 1970. [1]
[81]
[251]
[252]
[253]
[254]
[255]
J. C. White Store Boston 1882 10 Bromfield St.
Store designed for John C. White. Demolished.
[40]
John E. Peabody House Back Bay, Boston 1882 183 Marlborough St.

House designed for John Endicott Peabody, son of Samuel Endicott Peabody and brother of Endicott Peabody. Other notable residents include John Thayer, Bayard Thayer, and Marrianne Lawrence (daughter of William Lawrence). Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[6]
[256]
[257]
Merrywood Lenox and Stockbridge 1882 320 Old Stockbridge Rd.

Berkshire Cottage deigned for Charles Bullard, nephew of Charles Eliot Norton. Later was the summer residence of Clark Voorhees.

[2][6]
[245]
[247]
[258]
Nathan Matthews House Back Bay, Boston 1882 25 Exeter St.

House designed for real estate investor Nathan Matthews (father of Nathan Matthews Jr.). Sold to William Bliss, president of the Boston and Albany Railroad, in 1884. Other notable residents include John Thayer and Ann Wigmore. Gerald Zaltman purchased and renovated the residence in 1992. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[6]
[30]
[229]
[259]
[260]
Patrick Grant Cottage Nahant 1882 Swallow Cave Rd.

Cottage designed for Patrick Grant, father of Robert Grant. Later owned by Francis Peleg Sprague, the son of Peleg Sprague. Demolished in 1941.

[2][6]
[241]
Pierce Hall Northampton 1882 21 West St.

High Victorian Gothic music hall designed for Smith College. Originally called Music Hall, renamed in 1924 after Arthur Henry Pierce.

[81]
[109]
[254]
[261]
S. Endicott Peabody House Back Bay, Boston 1882 205 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for Samuel Endicott Peabody. Other notable residents and owners include Bayard Thayer, Philip Sears, James MacNaughton, Robert Gould Shaw II, Margarett Sargent, Cameron Winslow, and Bayard Tuckerman Jr. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[262]
[263]
Saint Mary of the Assumption Rectory Brookline 1882 3 Linden Pl.

High Victorian Gothic rectory designed for Saint Mary of the Assumption Church. Added to the NRHP in 1985.

[1][5]
[213]
[264]
Walker Hall Amherst 1882 Designed for Amherst College to replace original Walker Hall which was destroyed in 1882 by a fire. Austin Dickinson helped the firm secure this commission. Demolished in 1963. [1]
[265]
R. H. White & Co. Warehouse Store Boston 1882–1883 Bedford St. & Harrison Ave.

Warehouse store designed for R. H. White. Built by the Norcross Brothers. Demolished.

[1][5]
[40]
[39]
[266]
[267]
U.S. Post Office Salem 1882–1883 118 Washington St.

Classical Revival United States Post Office building deigned for the City of Salem. Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company was a later tenent. Located in the Downtown Salem District.

[268]
[269]
Arthur Mills House Brookline 1883 22 Irving St.

Shingle Style house designed at Pill Hill for Arthur Mills, an executive of the Boston and Albany Railroad. Later owned by William Bosworth Castle. Located in the Pill Hill Historic District.

[20]
[127]
[134]
[270]
[271]
First Congregational Church Parsonage Great Barrington 1883 241 Main St.

Parsonage designed for the First Congregational Church of Great Barrington. Interior decorated by Herter Brothers. Added to the NRHP in 1992. Restored and repaired in Fall 2022.

[1]
[245]
[272]
[273]
[274]
[275]
First Congregational Church Parsonage Carriage House Great Barrington 1883 241 Main St. (42°11′43.9″N 73°21′37.8″W / 42.195528°N 73.360500°W / 42.195528; -73.360500 (First Congregational Church Parsonage Carriage House))

Carriage house designed for the parsonage at the First Congregational Church of Great Barrington.

Thomas Parsons School Brookline 1883 Walter Ave.

School designed for the town of Brookline. Further enlarged in 1886. Demolished in 1944.

[20]
[64]
William G. Saltonstall House Back Bay, Boston 1883 30 Fairfield St. / 242 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for William Gurdon Saltonstall. Was part of The Newman School from 1958–1974. Currently part of the Kingsley Montessori School. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[85]
[276]
[277]
[278]
National Bank of Commerce New Bedford 1883–1884 37 N Water St.

Classical Revival building designed for the National Bank of Commerce. Owned by the New Bedford Whaling Museum since 1906.

[1][5]
[6]
[39]
Park Entrance Lands Trust House Back Bay, Boston 1883–1884 378 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for the Park Entrance Lands Trust (Henry Melville Whitney was a trustee). First owned by Albert Augustus Pope and purchased by the Harvard Club of Boston in 1927. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[279]
[280]
[281]
Park Entrance Lands Trust House Back Bay, Boston 1883–1884 380 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for the Park Entrance Lands Trust (Henry Melville Whitney was a trustee). Purchased by the Harvard Club of Boston in 1923. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

Kragsyde Manchester 1883–1885 27 Smith's Point Rd.

Shingle Style summer cottage designed for George Nixon Black Jr. Frederick Law Olmsted designed the landscape. Built by Roberts & Hoare. Considered a monument of shingle style architecture. Demolished in 1929.

[1][2]
[5][6]
[28]
[39]
[165]
[210]
[282]
[283]
Kragsyde Carriage House Manchester 1883–1885 29 Smith's Point Rd.

Carriage house designed for George Nixon Black Jr. at Kragsyde. Now a private residence.

Bayley House Newton 1884 16 Fairmont Ave.

Queen Anne style house designed for James C. Bayley in Newtonville. Bayley died within months after ground was broken. Edgar P. Van Etten, president of the Boston and Albany Railroad, was a resident in 1903. Added to the NRHP in 1986.

[1][5]
[284]
[285]
Bayley Carriage House Newton 1884 Lombard St.

Carriage house designed for James C. Bayley at his house in Newtonville. Demolished in the 1930s.

Edward Grew Building Boston 1884 49–51 Franklin St.

Building designed for Edward Sturgis Grew. Demolished in the early 1930s.

[1][6]
[40]
Edward Grew House Back Bay, Boston 1884 185 Marlborough St.

House designed for Edward Sturgis Grew, the father of Joseph Grew. Joseph's childhood home. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[1][6]
[286]
[287]
Groton School Brooks House Groton 1884 282 Farmers Row (42°35′36.9″N 71°35′00.2″W / 42.593583°N 71.583389°W / 42.593583; -71.583389 (Groton School Brooks House))

Craftsman Tudor Revival building designed for the Groton School. Was the initial residential and academic building. Also designed an addition in 1915.

[6]
[39]
[288]
[289]
[290]
J. C. White House Back Bay, Boston 1884 259 Marlborough St.

House designed for James Clarke White. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[6]
[85]
[291]
[292]
Joseph Davis House Worcester 1884 41 Elm St.

Shingle Style house designed for Joseph Estabrook Davis, son of Isaac Davis. Later the home of William Rice, president of the Washburn and Moen Company. Now the Worcester Natural History Society building. Added to the NRHP in 1980.

[1]
[293]
[294]
Moraine Farm Barn Beverly 1884 707 Cabot St.

Barn built at Moraine Farm. Burned down and replaced in 1907.

[208]
[210]
[295]
[296]
[297]
Moraine Farm Gatehouse Beverly 1884 707 Cabot St. (42°34′55.7″N 70°53′57.0″W / 42.582139°N 70.899167°W / 42.582139; -70.899167 (Moraine Farm Gatehouse))

Queen Anne style gatehouse built at Moraine Farm.

W. L. Richardson House Back Bay, Boston 1884 225 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for Dr. William Lambert Richardson, dean of the Harvard Medical School. Acquired by Harvard College after Richardson's death in 1932. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[85]
[298]
[299]
[300]
Nelson Slater Bartlett House Back Bay, Boston 1884 227 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for siblings Nelson Slater and Mary F. Bartlett. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[1][2]
[6]
[85]
[300]
[301]
[302]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1884 2-2A Symphony Rd.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[305]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1884 28 Saint Stephen St.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[306]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1884 30 Saint Stephen St.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[307]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1884 32 Saint Stephen St.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[308]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1884 34 Saint Stephen St.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[309]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1884 36 Saint Stephen St.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[310]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1884 37 Saint Stephen St.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[311]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1884 39 Saint Stephen St.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[312]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1884 41 Saint Stephen St.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[313]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1884 43 Saint Stephen St.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[314]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1884 45 Saint Stephen St.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[315]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1884 47 Saint Stephen St.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[316]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1884 49 Saint Stephen St.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[317]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1884 51 Saint Stephen St.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[318]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1884 53 Saint Stephen St.

Row houses designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[319]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1884 55 Saint Stephen St.

Row houses designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[320]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1884 57 Saint Stephen St.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[321]
William H. Lincoln School Brookline 1884 194 Boylston St.

School designed for the town of Brookline. Demolished and replaced in 1932.

[1][5]
[20]
[64]
[322]
Woodward Emery House Cambridge 1884 160 Brattle St.

Queen Anne style house designed for Woodward Emery, a Boston lawyer and Cambridge public official, and his wife Anne. Located in the Old Cambridge Historic District.

[6]
[323]
[324]
American Unitarian Association Building Boston 1884–1886 Beacon St. & Bowdoin St.

Building designed for the American Unitarian Association. Built by Woodbury & Leighton. Bought and demolished in 1925 by Hotel Bellevue for an expansion.

[1][5]
[6]
[85]
[266]
[325]
[326]
[327]
[328]
Mrs. Nathaniel Thayer House Back Bay, Boston 1884–1886 305 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for Cornelia Patterson Thayer, widow of Nathaniel Thayer Jr., and their son Bayard Thayer. Later owned by the AHEPA Charitable and Educational Corporation of Massachusetts. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[1][6]
[85]
[329]
[330]
[331]
Elm Court Lenox and Stockbridge 1885 310 Old Stockbridge Rd.

Berkshire Cottage designed for William Douglas Sloane and Emily Thorn Vanderbilt. Frederick Law Olmsted and John Charles Olmsted designed the landscape and gardens. Interior designed by Ogden Codman Jr. Significantly enlarged by the firm in 1901. Elm Court is the largest shingle style house in the United States. Added to the NRHP in 1985. Sold in 2023 for $8,000,000.

[1][2]
[6]
[244]
[283]
[332]
[333]
[334]
[335]
[336]
Elm Court Barn Lenox and Stockbridge 1885 310 Old Stockbridge Rd. (42°20′11.0″N 73°17′18.8″W / 42.336389°N 73.288556°W / 42.336389; -73.288556 (Elm Court Barn))

Barn designed at Elm Court for William Douglas Sloane and Emily Thorn Vanderbilt. Added to the NRHP in 1985.

Elm Court Butler's House Lenox and Stockbridge 1885 310 Old Stockbridge Rd.

Butler's house designed at Elm Court for William Douglas Sloane and Emily Thorn Vanderbilt. Added to the NRHP in 1985.

Elm Court Garage Lenox and Stockbridge 1885 310 Old Stockbridge Rd.

Garage designed at Elm Court for William Douglas Sloane and Emily Thorn Vanderbilt. Added to the NRHP in 1985.

Elm Court Gardener's House Lenox and Stockbridge 1885 310 Old Stockbridge Rd.

Gardener's house designed at Elm Court for William Douglas Sloane and Emily Thorn Vanderbilt. Added to the NRHP in 1985.

Elm Court Greenhouses Lenox and Stockbridge 1885 310 Old Stockbridge Rd.

Greenhouses designed at Elm Court for William Douglas Sloane and Emily Thorn Vanderbilt. Added to the NRHP in 1985. One has been demolished.

Elm Court Pump Houses Lenox and Stockbridge 1885 310 Old Stockbridge Rd.

Two pump houses designed at Elm Court for William Douglas Sloane and Emily Thorn Vanderbilt. Added to the NRHP in 1985.

Grant House Brookline 1885 135 Saint Paul St.

House designed for Stephen and Charles Grant. Later the home of John Dittemore and Timothy Walsh of Maginnis & Walsh.

[6]
[20]
[127]
[337]
Henry Fay Houses Falmouth 1885 Two additional houses designed for Henry Fay at "The Moors" in Woods Hole. Demolished in 1947. [2][6]
Moses Williams House Brookline 1885 30 Warren St.

Tudor Revival house designed for Moses B. Williams, member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1874, 1875, and 1876. Located in the Brookline Town Green Historic District.

[5][6]
[20]
[127]
[338]
[339]
[340]
Moses Williams Carriage House Brookline 1885 58–60 Hedge Rd.

Queen Anne style carriage house designed for Moses B. Williams. Located in the Brookline Town Green Historic District. Now a private residence.

Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1885 38 Saint Stephen St.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[341]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1885 40 Saint Stephen St.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[342]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1885 42 Saint Stephen St.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[343]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1885 44 Saint Stephen St.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[344]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1885 46 Saint Stephen St.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[345]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1885 48 Saint Stephen St.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[346]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1885 54 Saint Stephen St.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[347]
Whitney Row House Fenway, Boston 1885 56 Saint Stephen St.

Row house designed for Henry Melville Whitney.

[303]
[304]
[348]
Brookline Firehouse #3 Brookline 1886 86 Monmouth St.

Shingle Style building designed as a chemical engine house. Now the Brookline Arts Center. Located in the Longwood Historic District.

[20]
[322]
[349]
Crocker-Weld House & Stable Back Bay, Boston 1886 338 Newbury St.

House and stable designed for Uriel Crocker and George Walker Weld. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[6]
[350]
Robert G. Winthrop Elementary School Brookline 1886 599 Brookline Ave.

School designed for the town of Brookline. Building given to the Red Cross in 1917. Renovated by Kilham & Hopkins in 1927. Converted to a recreation center in 1976 by Sellow, Doherty & Shesky. Renamed the James J. Lynch recreation center. Now home of the Brookline Early Education Program.

[1][6]
[20]
[64]
[351]
Saint Paul's Rectory Brookline 1886 130 Aspinwall Ave.

Jacobethan Tudor Revival rectory designed for Saint Paul's Episcopal Church. Added to the NRHP in 1985.

[20]
[127]
[352]
[353]
[354]
[355]
Francis H. Appleton House Back Bay, Boston 1886–1887 251 Marlborough St.

House designed for Massachusetts Senator Francis Henry Appleton. Owned by Boston University from 1947 to 1966 and by The Newman School from 1966 to 1988. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[6]
[18]
[356]
[357]
Brookline Gas Company Stable and Shed Brookline 1887 Brookline Ave. & Washington St.

Large stable and shed deigned for the Brookline Gas Company. Built by W. H. Bowker. Demolished.

[20]
[358]
Charles H. Stearns Building Brookline 1887 101–105 Longwood Ave.

Queen Anne style building designed for Charles H. Stearns (Stearns' first cousin), consisting of three connected house which he rented out. Renton Whidden, member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives from 1919 to 1930, was a notable tenant.

[20]
[127]
[359]
Crowninshield-Cabot House Back Bay, Boston 1887 398 Marlborough St.

House designed for developers Benjamin W. Crowninshield and Walter Channing Cabot. Built by Woodbury & Leighton. Was the fraternity house of the MIT Lambda Chi Alpha Chapter from 1919 to 1922 and the Phi Mu Delta Chapter from 1923 to 1924. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[360]
[361]
[362]
Crowninshield-Cabot House Back Bay, Boston 1887 400 Marlborough St.

House designed for developers Benjamin W. Crowninshield and Walter Channing Cabot. First owned by Emeline Cheney, widow of Arthur Cheney the owner of the Globe Theatre. Built by Woodbury & Leighton. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[360]
[363]
[364]
Crowninshield-Cabot House Back Bay, Boston 1887 402 Marlborough St.

House designed for developers Benjamin W. Crowninshield and Walter Channing Cabot. Built by Woodbury & Leighton. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[360]
[365]
[366]
Farlow Herbarium Cambridge 1887 20 Divinity Ave.

Originally the Divinity Library at Harvard University. Now a herbarium and library. Named for William Gilson Farlow.

[1]
[23]
[367]
G. W. West House Back Bay, Boston 1887 246 Beacon St.

House and office designed for Dr. George Webb West and Mary E. West. Built by George P. Eldredge. A garage in the rear was added in 1927 and designed by Henry Bailey Alden. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[6]
[18]
[368]
[369]
[370]
Henry H. Fay Stable Back Bay, Boston 1887 330 Beacon St.

Stable designed for Henry H. Fay. Demolished in 1957.

[2]
[371]
Peabody Family Cottage Marblehead 1887 2 Davis Rd.

Shingle Style summer cottage designed for Peabody and his family. Later owned by Thomas Shepard of the Shepard Steamship Co. Located at Peaches Point.

[2]
[372]
[373]
Robert Bennet Forbes Barn Milton 1887–1889 215 Adams St. (42°15′50.6″N 71°3′56.4″W / 42.264056°N 71.065667°W / 42.264056; -71.065667 (Robert Bennet Forbes Barn))

Greek Revival Shingle Style Barn designed for John Murray Forbes and Robert Bennet Forbes at the Captain Robert Bennet Forbes House. Located in the Milton Hill Historic District. Added to the NRHP in 1966.

[374]
[375]
Cabot School Brookline 1888 32 Marion St.

School designed for the town of Brookline. Named for James Elliot Cabot. Demolished in 1957.

[1][6]
[20]
[64]
[322]
[376]
Charles F. Adams House Back Bay, Boston 1888 20 Gloucester St.

House designed for Charles Francis Adams Jr. Later owned by Washington Butcher Thomas, president of the American Sugar Refining Company. Robert Dawson Evans, president of the United States Rubber Company, was a notable resident. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[1][6]
[18]
[31]
[85]
[377]
[378]
Edward Russell House Brookline 1888 64 Sewall Ave.

House designed for Edward Russell. Demolished.

[379]
First Parish Church Weston 1888 349 Boston Post Rd.

Tudor Revival church. Fourth and current Unitarian church built at this site for the First Parish of Weston. Landscape designed by Charles Eliot. Stained glass designed by Louis Comfort Tiffany and Charles Jay Connick. Contains a Revere bell. Located in the Boston Post Road Historic District.

[1][5]
[6]
[39]
[165]
[380]
[381]
[382]
[383]
Fiske Building Boston 1888 87–95 State St.

Building designed for J. N. Fiske. Built by the Norcross Brothers. Demolished in 1984.

[1][6]
[28]
[39]
[40]
[94]
[57]
[165]
[384]
Greystone Brookline 1888 62 Buckminster Rd.

Jacobethan Tudor Revival house designed for Jonathan H. White. Used by Beaver Country Day School in the 1920s and the Sisters of the Holy Cross School in the 1950s and 1960s. Located in the Fisher Hill Historic District.

[1][6]
[20]
[165]
[385]
[386]
Greystone Stable Brookline 1888 62 Buckminster Rd.

Stable designed for Jonathan H. White at Greystone. Demolished.

H. M. Whitney House Nantasket 1888 Jerusalem Rd.

House designed for Henry Melville Whitney. Demolished.

[1][6]
H. M. Whitney Barn Nantasket 1888 Jerusalem Rd.

Barn designed for Henry Melville Whitney. Demolished.

Hasty Pudding Club House Cambridge 1888 12 Holyoke St.

Building designed for the Hasty Pudding Club of Harvard University. Now Harvard's Farkas Hall and used by Hasty Pudding Theatricals. Located in the Harvard Square Historic District. Added to the NRHP in 1978.

[1][6]
[387]
[388]
[389]
[390]
James Murray Kay House Brookline 1888 Gardner Rd. & Sullivan Rd. (now Rawson Rd.)

House designed for James Murray Kay. Demolished.

[1][6]
[20]
[391]
James Murray Kay Stable Brookline 1888 Gardner Rd. & Sullivan Rd. (now Rawson Rd.)

Stable/carriage house designed for James Murray Kay. Demolished.

L. Shannon Davis House Brookline 1888 36 Sumner Rd. / 39 Buckminster Rd.

Queen Anne style house designed for Langdon Shannon Davis. Located in the Fisher Hill Historic District.

[20]
[127]
[392]
[393]
T. M. Stetson House New Bedford 1888 Ash St. & Moreland Ter.

House designed for Thomas Meriam Stetson, director of the First National Bank of New Bedford. Landscape designed by Charles Eliot. Demolished in the 1920s.

[1][6]
[394]
T. M. Stetson Stable New Bedford 1888 Ash St. & Moreland Ter.

Stable designed for Thomas Meriam Stetson at his estate. Demolished in the 1920s.

Thomas H. Clay House Brookline 1888 94 Upland Rd.

Colonial Revival house designed for Thomas Hart Clay at Pill Hill. Located in the Pill Hill Historic District.

[134]
William B. Lambert House Cambridge 1888 23 Highland St.

House designed for William B. Lambert and his wife Annie.

[6]
[395]
William B. Lambert Stable Cambridge 1888 23 Highland St.

Stable/carriage house designed for William B. Lambert.

William Lawrence Stable Cambridge 1888 101 Brattle St.

Stable designed for William Lawrence at his house. Demolished in the late 1920s.

[6]
Women's E. & I. Union Building Boston 1888 260–264 Boylston St.

Building designed for the Women's Educational and Industrial Union. Built by Woodbury & Leighton. Demolished.

[6]
[325]
Allen Winden Cow Barn Lenox 1888–1889 Cow barn designed for Charles D. Lanier at his Allen Winden farm complex. Also designed alterations in 1914. Demolished in 1928. [2][6]
[244]
Carney Building Boston 1889 510–512 Washington St.

Store and mercantile building designed for A. Carney. Demolished.

[396]
[397]
Charles R. Cross House Brookline 1889 100 Upland Rd.

Colonial Revival house designed at Pill Hill for Charles R. Cross. Located in the Pill Hill Historic District.

[1][6]
[20]
[126]
[127]
[134]
[398]
D. L. Weeks House Waltham 1889 451 Main St.

House designed for Delmont L. Weeks. Significant additions and alterations designed in 1958 and 1970.

[399]
Henry W. Lamb House Brookline 1889 High St.

House designed for Henry W. Lamb. Demolished.

[6]
[20]
Ludlow Manufacturing Co. Building Boston 1889 135 Essex St.

Building designed for the Ludlow Manufacturing Company. Built by Woodbury & Leighton. Demolished.

[1][6]
[40]
[325]
[400]
[401]
North Street Warehouse Boston 1889 24 North St.

Warehouse designed for William Minot in Dock Square. Later owned by the Hark Beef Company and the Bostonian Hotel. Located in the Blackstone Block Historic District.

[6]
[30]
[31]
[40]
[325]
[402]
[403]
Old Ship Parish House Hingham 1889 83 Main St.

Colonial Revival parish house designed for the Old Ship Church. Converted into offices in 1959. Demolished in 1977.

[2]
[404]
[405]
W. G. Corthell House Quincy 1889 Elmwood Ave. & Farrington St.

House designed for Wendell G. Corthell at Wollaston Heights. Demolished.

[406]
St. Stephen's Episcopal Church Pittsfield 1889–1890 67 East St.

Gothic Revival Episcopal Church designed under the rectorship of William Wilberforce Newton. Consecrated by Phillips Brooks November 19, 1892. Stained glass windows designed by Louis Comfort Tiffany and Mary Elizabeth Tillinghast. Major additions in 1920 and 1957. Renovated in 1984. Located in the Park Square Historic District.

[1][2]
[6]
[407]
[408]
[409]
[410]
Exchange Building Boston 1889–1891 53 State St.

The firm's largest commission: $1,938,308.53. The firm's office was located in this building, room 919. Located in the Financial District. Designated a Boston Landmark by the Boston Landmarks Commission in 1980. Façade remains part of current Exchange Place building.

[1][5]
[6]
[28]
[31]
[39]
[40]
[85]
[94]
[57]
[165]
[411]
Groton School Fives Court Groton 1890 282 Farmers Row (42°35′31.5″N 71°35′02.5″W / 42.592083°N 71.584028°W / 42.592083; -71.584028 (Groton School Fives Court))

Classical Revival fives court building designed for the Groton School.

[6]
[39]
[288]
[412]
Henry W. Lamb Stable Brookline 1890 Cumberland Ave. & Hill St.

Stable designed for Henry W. Lamb. Built by W. H. Bowker. Demolished.

[20]
[413]
Highwood Stable Stockbridge 1890 3 Hawthorne Rd. (42°20′52.4″N 73°18′23.9″W / 42.347889°N 73.306639°W / 42.347889; -73.306639 (Highwood Stable))

Stable/carriage house designed for William Story Bullard at Highwood. Now the Leon Fleisher Carriage House at Tanglewood.

[244]
William Minot Trustee Warehouse Boston 1890 High St. & Broad St.

Six-story brick warehouse building designed for William Minot.

[40]
[414]
Zabdiel A. Willard Building Boston 1890 39–41 Kingston St.

Mercantile and office building designed for Zabdiel Adams Willard, son-in-law of John Ware.

[6]
[40]
[415]
[416]
[417]
Brinley Cottage Gloucester 1891 158 Hesperus Ave.

Cottage designed for Charles A. Brinley in Magnolia, worker at Midvale Steel.

[1][2]
[6]
Brinley Cottage Stable Gloucester 1891 156 Hesperus Ave.

Stable designed for Charles A. Brinley at his cottage in Magnolia.

Brookline Gas Light Company Office Building Allston 1891 Cambridge St.

Office building designed for the Brookline Gas Light Company. Demolished.

[6]
[418]
Colonnade Building Boston 1891 172 Tremont St.

Building designed for J. C. Inches and J. G. Bryant. Demolished.

[6]
[40]
[419]
[420]
Concord Home School Boathouse Concord 1891 496 Main St.

Queen Anne Shingle Style boathouse designed for James S. Garland at the Concord Home School on the Sudbury River. Now the South Bridge Boat House.

[421]
[422]
Concord Home School House Concord 1891 27 Nashoba Rd.

Colonial Revival house designed for James S. Garland at the Concord Home School.

Concord Home School House Concord 1891 42 Nashoba Rd.

Colonial Revival house designed for James S. Garland at the Concord Home School.

Concord Home School Gymnasium Concord 1891 51 Nashoba Rd.

Shingle Style gymnasium designed for James S. Garland at the Concord Home School. Now a private residence.

Cotting Building Boston 1891 184–194 South St. / 753–757 Atlantic Ave.

Building designed for Charles E. Cotting and William Minot Jr. Located in the Leather District.

[6]
[40]
[423]
Groton School Hundred House Groton 1891 282 Farmers Row (42°35′31.0″N 71°35′07.0″W / 42.591944°N 71.585278°W / 42.591944; -71.585278 (Groton School Hundred House))

Classical Revival building and headmaster's house designed for Endicott Peabody, headmaster of the Groton School.

[6]
[39]
[288]
[424]
H. F. Tapley House Lynn 1891 280 Ocean St.

House designed for Henry Fuller Tapley and his wife Ida. Demolished in the 1930s.

[1][6]
James P. Stearns House Brookline 1891 House designed for James P. Stearns. Demolished. [20]
Pope Manufacturing Co. Building Boston 1891 219–223 Columbus Ave.

Building designed for Albert Augustus Pope and the Pope Manufacturing Company. Burned down in 1895. Replaced by Peabody & Stearns with current building at the same site in 1897.

[1][6]
[40]
[165]
[325]
Prentiss Cummings House Brookline 1891 187 Gardner Rd.

House designed for Prentiss Cummings, Massachusetts Senator in 1905 and 1906. Demolished.

[20]
Robert Swain Peabody Carriage Barn Brookline 1891 50 Edgehill Rd. (42°19′34.4″N 71°7′4.1″W / 42.326222°N 71.117806°W / 42.326222; -71.117806 (Robert Swain Peabody Carriage Barn))

Tudor Revival carriage barn designed at Peabody's residence at Pill Hill. Expanded from a smaller shed designed in 1885. Located in the Pill Hill Historic District.

[20]
[425]
William Minot Jr. House Back Bay, Boston 1891 24 Charlesgate E

House designed for William Minot Jr. Built by Woodbury & Leighton. Later owned by Garland Junior College from 1960–1976 and by Simmons College from 1976–2005. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[6]
[325]
[426]
[427]
[428]
Dupee Estate Gatehouse and Carriage House Newton 1892 400 Beacon St. (42°19′55.3″N 71°10′33.5″W / 42.332028°N 71.175972°W / 42.332028; -71.175972 (Dupee Estate Gatehouse and Carriage House))

Tudor Revival gatehouse and carriage house designed for William R. Dupee at his Dupee Estate in Chestnut Hill. Later owned by Mary Baker Eddy. Located in the Chestnut Hill Historic District. Added to the NRHP in 1986.

[198]
[429]
Edwards House Brookline 1892 32 Longwood Ave.

House designed for Phoebe Palmer Edwards. Demolished.

[20]
Emily E. Sears House Back Bay, Boston 1892 420 Beacon St.

House designed for Emily E. Sears. Simeon Burt Wolbach was a notable resident. Part of the Massachusetts College of Optometry since 1971. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[6]
[18]
[85]
[165]
[430]
[431]
I. Tucker Burr House Milton 1892 175 Milton St. (42°13′53.2″N 71°6′54.0″W / 42.231444°N 71.115000°W / 42.231444; -71.115000 (I. Tucker Burr House))

Shingle Style summer estate designed for Isaac Tucker Burr, member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives from 1875 to 1876. Was a friary from 1945 to 1979. Now a condominium complex.

[6]
[432]
[433]
I. Tucker Burr Cottage Milton 1892 175 Milton St.

Cottage designed for Isaac Tucker Burr at his estate.

I. Tucker Burr Stable Milton 1892 175 Milton St.

Stable designed for Isaac Tucker Burr at his estate.

Charlesgate Stables Boston 1892–1893 Massachusetts Ave. & Newbury St. (42°20′54.3″N 71°5′16.4″W / 42.348417°N 71.087889°W / 42.348417; -71.087889 (Charlesgate Stables))

Livery stable designed for Charles Kenny and Eugene L. Clark. Purchased by Benjamin Briscoe in 1909 for the Maxwell-Briscoe Company for use as a car sales room and service garage.

[6]
[40]
[165]
[434]
Dexter House Brookline 1893 5 Maple St.

Colonial Revival house designed for George and Grace Dexter. Later the residence of Arthur Dehon Little. Located in the Pill Hill Historic District.

[6]
[20]
[127]
[134]
[435]
[436]
[437]
Dr. Foster House Cambridge 1893 8 Elmwood Ave. / 8 Traill St.

Shingle Style house designed for Dr. Charles C. Foster. Located in the Old Cambridge Historic District.

[6]
[323]
[438]
[439]
Dr. Foster Carriage House Cambridge 1893 10 Traill St.

Carriage house designed for Dr. Charles C. Foster. Owned by Harvard University from 1964 to 1977. Located in the Old Cambridge Historic District. Now a private residence.

Elizabeth G. Rice House Jamaica Plain 1893 233 Pond St.

House designed for Elizabeth G. Rice. Demolished.

[1][6]
Harvard University Locker Building Allston 1893 45 N Harvard St.

Locker building designed for Harvard University, located at Soldier's Field. Built by J. W. Bishop & Co. Destroyed by a fire and demolished in 1930.

[6]
[440]
[441]
[442]
[443]
[444]
Mary Hutcheson Page House Brookline 1893 17 Hawthorn Rd.

Colonial Revival house designed for Mary Hutcheson Page at Pill Hill. Located in the Pill Hill Historic District.

[20]
[445]
[446]
[447]
Mary Hutcheson Page House Brookline 1893 21 Hawthorn Rd.

Colonial Revival house designed with Julius A. Schweinfurth for Mary Hutcheson Page at Pill Hill. Located in the Pill Hill Historic District.

Masonic Building New Bedford 1893 558–566 Pleasant St. / 211 Union St.

Building designed for the Masonic Order of New Bedford. Located in the Central New Bedford Historic District.

[1][6]
[448]
National City Bank Lynn 1893 122–134 Market St. & Oxford St.

Bank building designed for the National City Bank of Lynn. Demolished.

[1]
Wheatleigh Stockbridge 1893 11 Hawthorne Rd.

Renaissance Revival Berkshire Cottage designed for Henry H. Cook. Assisted by Julius Schweinfurth. Landscape designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and interior designed by Ogden Codman Jr. Owned by the Boston Symphony Orchestra from 1949–1957. Added to the NRHP in 1982. Now a luxury hotel.

[1][2]
[6]
[165]
[244]
[449]
[450]
[451]
[452]
Wheatleigh Gatehouse Stockbridge 1893 13 Hawthorne Rd.

Renaissance Revival gatehouse designed for Henry H. Cook at Wheatleigh. Added to the NRHP in 1982. Now a private residence.

Wheatleigh Lodge Stockbridge 1893 Wheatleigh Dr. & Hawthorne St.

Lodge designed for Henry H. Cook at Wheatleigh. Demolished.

Wheatleigh Pump House Stockbridge 1893 Pump house designed for Henry H. Cook at Wheatleigh.
Wheatleigh Stable Stockbridge 1893 Hawthorne Rd.

Stable designed for Henry H. Cook at Wheatleigh. Added to the NRHP in 1982.

Grinnell House Roxbury, Boston 1894 14 Dorr St.

House designed at Fort Hill for Elizabeth and Charles Edward Grinnell. Located in the Roxbury Highlands Historic District.

[6]
[453]
Ludlow Manufacturing Co. Building Boston 1894 133 Essex St.

Building designed for the Ludlow Manufacturing Company. Built by Woodbury & Leighton. Demolished.

[1][6]
[40]
[325]
[454]
Market and Music Hall Building Springfield 1894 Hillman St. & Dwight St. & Bridge St.

Market and music hall building. Demolished.

[6]
[455]
New Bedford Standard Times Building New Bedford 1894 555 Pleasant St.

Renaissance Revival building designed for Francis Bunker Greene of the Pleasant Street Trust Co. Occupied by the New Bedford Standard Times. Fifth floor added in 1912. Building narrowed in 1923–1925 due to widening of Pleasant Street. Located in the Central New Bedford Historic District.

[1][6]
[456]
[457]
S. C. Heald House Jamaica Plain 1894 44 Rockwood St.

House and stable designed for Simpson Clark Heald. Landscaping by the Olmsted Brothers. Demolished.

[1][6]
Wyndhurst Lenox 1894 55 Lee Rd. (42°20′22.9″N 73°15′56.8″W / 42.339694°N 73.265778°W / 42.339694; -73.265778 (Wyndhurst))

Tudor Revival Berkshire Cottage designed for John W. Sloane (brother of William D. Sloane). Built by Woodbury & Leighton. Landscape designed by Frederick Law Olmsted. Notable guests include William McKinley and Ida Saxton McKinley.

[1][2]
[6]
[39]
[244]
[245]
[325]
[458]
[459]
Wyndhurst Carriage House Lenox 1894 Lee Rd.

Carriage house designed for John W. Sloane at Wyndhurst. Destroyed by a fire in 2010.

Wyndhurst Cow Barn Lenox 1894 Lee Rd.

Cow barn designed for John W. Sloane at Wyndhurst.

Wyndhurst Greenhouses Lenox 1894 Lee Rd.

Greenhouses designed for John W. Sloane at Wyndhurst.

Wyndhurst Poultry Shelter Lenox 1894 Lee Rd.

Poultry shelter designed for John W. Sloane at Wyndhurst.

Wyndhurst Stables Lenox 1894 Lee Rd.

Stables designed for John W. Sloane at Wyndhurst.

State Mutual Building Worcester 1894–1897 340 Main St.

Renaissance Revival building designed for the State Mutual Life Assurance Company. Built by the Norcross Brothers. Was regarded as the first modern office building and skyscraper in the city. Located in the Mechanics' Hall District.

[1][6]
[165]
[460]
[461]
[462]
Elizabeth Stearns House Brookline 1895 John St.

House designed for Elizabeth Stearns. Demolished.

[20]
Metropolitan Storage Warehouse Cambridge 1895 134 Massachusetts Ave.

Built by George A. Fuller Co. Also designed additions in 1898, 1903, and 1911–1912.

[6]
[463]
[464]
[465]
[466]
Winthrop Stable Lenox 1895 45 West St. (42°21′12.8″N 73°17′36.8″W / 42.353556°N 73.293556°W / 42.353556; -73.293556 (Winthrop Stable))

Shingle Style stable designed for Grenville Lindall Winthrop. Now Copley Hall dormitory at Tanglewood Music Institute.

[467]
First Congregational Church Parish House New Bedford 1896 85 8th St.

Parish house designed for the First Congregational Society. Connected to the rear of the main church. Peabody's father, Ephraim Peabody, was pastor of the church from 1837 to 1845.

[1][6]
[238]
The Knoll Marblehead 1896 1 Davenport Rd.

Shingle Style cottage designed for George Howe Davenport and his wife Camilla on Peaches Point. Their daughter married William Truman Aldrich.

[2][6]
[468]
The Stone House Cataumet 1896–1898 Scraggy Neck Rd.

House designed for William Ellery Channing Eustis, grandson of Abraham Eustis and William Ellery Channing, at Scraggy Neck. Burned down in the 1940s.

[1][2]
[6]
Cotting Warehouse Building Boston 1897 136–140 Beach St.

Warehouse building designed for Charles E. Cotting. The United States Leather Company was the first tenant of the building. Located in the Leather District.

[469]
Frank W. Eastman House Framingham 1897 121 State St.

Craftsman Style house designed for Frank W. Eastman.

[6]
[470]
McNeil Bros. Stable Boston 1897 Troy St.

Stable designed for and built by the McNeil Bros.

[471]
Pope Manufacturing Co. Building Boston 1897 219–223 Columbus Ave.

Renaissance Revival building designed for Albert Augustus Pope and the Pope Manufacturing Company. Built by J. W. Bishop & Co.

[14]
[40]
[472]
[473]
[474]
Russia Wharf Building Boston 1897 518–540 Atlantic Ave.

Classical Revival building designed for the Boston Real Estate Trust. Vose-Swain Engraving Co. was the first occupant. Added to the NRHP in 1980.

[1][6]
[39]
[40]
[475]
Concord Building Framingham 1897–1898 92–108 Concord St.

Classical Revival building designed for Clifford Folger, John Merriam, and Thomas Barber of the Concord Building Company. Built by A. Fales & Sons. Was home of the Framingham District Court until the 1950s.

[1][6]
[476]
[477]
[478]
Mystic Side Opera House Malden 1897–1898 Pleasant St. & Washington St.

Opera house designed for the Malden Opera Company. Demolished.

[479]
[480]
[481]
Paul Revere School North End, Boston 1897–1898 61 Prince St.

Renaissance Revival school designed for the City of Boston, named for Paul Revere. The first fireproof schoolhouse built in Boston and first fireproof elementary school in New England. Now Saint Anthony's Parochial School.

[1][6]
[66]
[482]
[483]
[484]
The Cove Beverly 1897–1898 Queen Anne style cottage designed for Dr. Henry Francis Sears at Beverly Cove. In 1942, it became the home of his daughter, Emily Sears, and her husband Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. Demolished in the 1940s. [1][2]
[6]
[485]
[486]
The Cove Carriage House and Stable Beverly 1897–1898 239 / 271R Hale St.

Queen Anne style carriage house and stable designed for Dr. Henry Francis Sears at Beverly Cove. Stable was demolished and carriage house is now a private residence.

Homewood Hamilton 1897–1899 9 Boardman Ln.

Summer cottage designed for Rodolphe L. Agassiz. Significantly remodeled/altered.

[1][6]
Homewood Stable Hamilton 1897–1899 9 Boardman Ln.

Stable designed for Rodolphe L. Agassiz at Homewood.

Christ Episcopal Church Waltham 1897–1902 750 Main St.

Tudor Revival church. Stained glass windows designed by Clayton and Bell, Charles Jay Connick, Louis Comfort Tiffany, and Donald MacDonald. Church construction financed by Robert Treat Paine. Added to the NRHP in 1989.

[1][6]
[28]
[487]
[488]
[489]
[490]
Fales Memorial Parish House Waltham 1897–1902 750 Main St. (42°22′33.7″N 71°14′25.1″W / 42.376028°N 71.240306°W / 42.376028; -71.240306 (Fales Memorial Parish House))

Tudor Revival parish house designed for Christ Episcopal Church. Named for the Church's first rector, Thomas F. Fales. Added to the NRHP in 1989.

Bartlett Cottage / Stoneleigh Manchester 1898 2 Masconomo St.

Cottage designed for siblings Nelson Slater, Mary F., and Fanny Bartlett. Built by Roberts & Hoare. Later renamed Stoneleigh.

[2][6]
[491]
[492]
Dover Street Bathhouse Boston 1898 249 Dover St. (now E Berkeley St.)

Public Bath House designed for the City of Boston. Demolished.

[1][6]
[493]
[494]
James and John Stearns House Brookline 1898 10 Pleasant St.

House designed for James and John Stearns. Demolished.

[20]
James and John Stearns House Brookline 1898 14 Pleasant St.

House designed for James and John Stearns. Demolished.

Lawrence Brooks House Groton 1898 House designed for Lawrence Brooks at his estate overlooking Martins Pond. Built by J. W. Bishop & Co. [6]
[495]
Lawrence Brooks Stable Groton 1898 Stable designed for Lawrence Brooks at his estate.
National Dock & Warehouse Co. Warehouse East Boston 1898 Lewis St.

Warehouse designed for the National Dock & Warehouse Co. Built by C. Everett Clark & Co. Demolished.

[6]
[40]
Sellors House Concord 1898 145 Lexington Rd.

Classical Revival house designed for Edith Heywood and her husband Frederick Sellors. Located in the Concord Monument Square–Lexington Road Historic District.

[6]
[496]
The Plainfield Barn Bourne 1898 55 Rocky Point Rd.

Barn designed for John Parkinson at his Plainfield Estate at Rocky Point.

[2]
[497]
[498]
[499]
[500]
The Plainfield Carriage House Bourne 1898 85 Monument Neck Rd.

Carriage house designed for John Parkinson at his Plainfield Estate at Rocky Point.

The Plainfield Water Tower Bourne 1898 85 Monument Neck Rd.

Water tower designed for John Parkinson at his Plainfield Estate at Rocky Point. Destroyed in the 1938 New England hurricane. foundation still extant: 41°43′42.6″N 70°37′0.0″W / 41.728500°N 70.616667°W / 41.728500; -70.616667.

William B. Stearns House Brookline 1898 43 Pleasant St.

House designed for William B. Stearns. Demolished.

[20]
William Minot House Back Bay, Boston 1898 409 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for William Minot III. William A. Paine was a later owner. Later owned by the Garland School and Simmons College. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[6]
[18]
[501]
[502]
[503]
[504]
Worcester City Hall Worcester 1898 455 Main St.

Renaissance Revival city hall designed for the City of Worcester. Built by the Norcross Brothers. Clock by E. Howard & Co. Added to the NRHP in 1978.

[1][6]
[39]
[505]
[506]
American Bell Telephone Co. Building Boston 1899 115–119 Milk St.

Building designed for the American Bell Telephone Company. Built by Woodbury & Leighton. Later owned by the New England Telephone & Telegraph Co. Demolished.

[6]
[325]
[507]
[508]
Beebe Factory Building Boston 1899 240–246 E Berkeley St.

Factory building designed for James A. Beebe. Built by Woodbury & Leighton.

[325]
[509]
Draper House Back Bay, Boston 1899 297 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for George A. Draper and his wife Jessie. Was the childhood home of Wickliffe Draper. Built by Woodbury & Leighton. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[6]
[18]
[325]
[510]
[511]
[512]
Gross & Strauss Store Boston 1899 Washington St. & Bedford St.

Store designed for Isaac Gross and Philip Strauss. Built by the Norcross Brothers. Owned by the Trustees of the Massachusetts General Hospital. Demolished.

[40]
[513]
[514]
[515]
Groton School House Groton 1899 282 Farmers Row (42°35′37.5″N 71°35′04.0″W / 42.593750°N 71.584444°W / 42.593750; -71.584444 (Groton School House))

Classical Revival building designed for the Groton School.

[1][6]
[39]
[288]
[516]
[517]
Hotel Bellevue Beacon Hill, Boston 1899 19–21 Beacon St.

Classical Revival hotel. Notable guests and residents include Louisa May Alcott, John F. Kennedy, Charles Lindbergh, Albert Francis Hegenberger, Lester J. Maitland, and Alexander Graham Bell. Addition designed on Bowdoin St. by Putnam & Cox in 1925.

[1]
[518]
[519]
[520]
Rebecca A. Green Building Boston 1899 7–11 Fulton St.

Business building designed for Rebecca A. Green. First occupied by the Boston Auction Co. Demolished during the Big Dig and now site of the Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway.

[521]
Albany Building Boston 1899–1902 179 Lincoln St.

Classical Revival building. Built by the Norcross Brothers. Originally occupied by the United Shoe Machinery Corporation. Interior remodeled in 2014 by Atelier Cho Thompson. Located in the Leather District.

[1][6]
[40]
[522]
[523]
Arlington Street Schoolhouse Framingham 1900 Gordon St. & Arlington St.

Schoolhouse designed for the Town of Framingham. Demolished.

[6]
[524]
[525]
Boston Real Estate Trust Co. Building Boston 1900 156–164 Washington St. & 9 Devonshire St.

Store and storage building designed for the Boston Real Estate Trust Company at Dock Square and Adams Square. Demolished. Now the site of Boston City Hall Plaza.

[6]
[40]
[526]
Central Wharf & Wet Dock Co. Building Boston 1900 Central St., Atlantic Ave. & State St.
Warehouse building designed for the Central Wharf & Wet Dock Company. Built by the Norcross Brothers at Central Wharf. Demolished during the Big Dig and now site of the Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway.
[6]
[526]
[527]
Coburnville Schoolhouse Framingham 1900 Apple St. (now Bethany Rd.) & Coburn St.

Wooden schoolhouse designed for the Town of Framingham. Demolished.

[528]
George Albree House Concord 1900 299 Lexington Rd.

Shingle style house designed for George Albree.

[6]
[529]
Newell Boathouse Allston 1900 801–805 Soldiers Field Rd.

Shingle Style boathouse designed for Harvard University along the Charles River. Named for Marshall Newell. Renovated in 2022–2023.

[1][6]
[39]
[530]
[531]
[532]
[533]
Moorfield Storey Town House Fenway, Boston 1900 24 Fenway

Townhouse designed for Moorfield Storey. Now part of the Boston Conservatory at Berklee and is a residence hall at Berklee College of Music. Located in the Fenway-Boylston Street District.

[1][6]
[534]
[535]
[536]
[537]
Robert Swain Peabody Town House Fenway, Boston 1900 22 Fenway

Townhouse designed for Robert Swain Peabody. Purchased by Andrew Preston after Peabody's death in 1917 and by the Massachusetts Medical Society in the 1950s. Now part of the Boston Conservatory at Berklee and is a residence hall at Berklee College of Music. Located in the Fenway-Boylston Street District.

[1][5]
[6]
[31]
[39]
[534]
[537]
[538]
[539]
Henry Fay House and Water Tower Falmouth 1900–1901 House and water tower designed for Henry Fay at "The Moors" in Woods Hole. Demolished in 1947. [2][6]
A. T. Brown House Back Bay, Boston 1901 401 Commonwealth Ave.

House designed for Atherton Thayer Brown and his wife Hannah King Davenport. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[6]
[540]
[541]
Bussey Institute Headhouse and Greenhouse Jamaica Plain 1901 South St. near Arborway

Headhouse and greenhouse designed for Harvard University at Bussey Institute.

[6]
[542]
[543]
Central Building Boston 1901 70 State St.

Designed for the trustees of Reginald Foster, R. S. Codman, and William Gaston. Built by the Norcross Brothers. Demolished.

[1][6]
[40]
[544]
[545]
Chickering Hall Back Bay, Boston 1901 239 Huntington Ave.

Designed for William Hill of Chickering & Sons. Opening concert included Antoinette Szumowska, Pol Plançon, and the Kneisel Quartet. Also expanded the building in 1912 into the St. James Theatre. Later owned by Emerson College of Oratory. Demolished in 1963.

[6]
[40]
[546]
[547]
[548]
Dudley Station Roxbury, Boston 1901 Washington St. & Dudley St. (42°19′45.1″N 71°5′3.0″W / 42.329194°N 71.084167°W / 42.329194; -71.084167 (Dudley Station))

Collaborative design with Alexander Wadsworth Longfellow Jr. for the Washington Street Elevated Railroad. Peabody designed the ramps, southbound platform, and signal houses. Located at Dudley Square in the Dudley Station Historic District.

[549]
[550]
Elizabeth G. Rice Stable Jamaica Plain 1901 37 Pond Cir.

Classical Revival stable designed for Elizabeth G. Rice. Now a private residence.

[1][6]
[551]
[552]
Fiske Wharf and Warehouse Trust Building North End, Boston 1901 453–467 Commercial St.

7-story brick warehouse building designed for the Fiske Wharf and Warehouse Trust. Associated with the Merchant Ware House Company. Now owned by the U.S. Coast Guard.

[6]
[553]
George E. Turnure Cottage Lenox 1901 Cottage designed for George Evans Turnure, grandson of Charles D. Lanier. Burned down in 1961. [6]
[554]
[555]
Henry F. Sears Farm Cottage Topsfield 1901 129 Perkins Row

Cottage and outbuildings designed for Henry Francis Sears at his farm. Later purchased by Thomas E. Proctor. Now a private residence.

[1][2]
[6]
[556]
Henry F. Sears Farm Barn Topsfield 1901 127–129 Perkins Row
Barn/stable designed for Henry Francis Sears at his farm. Later purchased by Thomas E. Proctor. Demolished.
Henry F. Sears Farm Outbuilding Topsfield 1901 127 Perkins Row

Outbuilding designed for Henry Francis Sears at his farm. Later purchased by Thomas E. Proctor. Now a private residence.

J. P. Stearns House Brookline 1901 31 Pleasant St.

House designed for James P. Stearns. Demolished.

[20]
Middlesex School Concord 1901 1400 Lowell Rd.

Peabody & Stearns designed most of the campus buildings, Olmsted Brothers designed campus layout and landscape.

[1]
[557]
Bryant-Paine Hall Concord 1901 1400 Lowell Rd. (42°29′48.9″N 71°22′01.0″W / 42.496917°N 71.366944°W / 42.496917; -71.366944 (Middlesex School Bryant-Paine Hall))

Colonial Revival building. First building on the Middlesex School campus. Named for Julia Bryant and Charles Jackson Paine.

[557]
[558]
[559]
Headmaster's House Concord 1901 House designed for the headmaster of the Middlesex School. Location and status unknown. [559]
Soldiers' Memorial Library Mansfield 1901 Park Row & Union St.

Victorian Gothic library designed for the town of Mansfield, gifted by Elizabeth F. Noble. Added to the NRHP in 1995. Now houses the Mansfield School Superintendent Office.

[1]
[560]
[561]
Cochrane Cottage Manchester 1901–1902 4 Cobb Ave.

Cottage designed for Col. Hugh Cochrane and his wife. Their daughter, Eleanor, was the wife of Richard Sears.

[1][2]
[6]
[562]
Merchants Real Estate Trust Building North End, Boston 1901–1902 77 N Washington St.

Mercantile building designed for Arthur Lyman and J. H. Storer of the Merchants Real Estate Trust. Later known as the Trade Building and the Scotch ‘n Sirloin Building. Also designed a three-story addition in 1911, both built by Whidden & Co. Notable tenants include American Express Co. and Barber–Colman Co.

[1][6]
[40]
[563]
Parental School Dormitories West Roxbury 1901–1902 Spring St.

Three dormitory buildings designed for the Parental School. Demolished.

[564]
[565]
Institute for Savings Roxbury, Boston 1901–1903 2343–2345 Washington St.

Renaissance Revival bank building designed for the Roxbury Institute for Savings. Now the Boston Five Cents Savings Bank. Located in the Dudley Station Historic District.

[1][6]
[40]
[566]
Cunard Building Boston 1901–1906 122–130 State St.

Classical Revival building designed for the trust of Moses Williams. Was the former U.S. headquarter building of the Cunard Line. Other notable tenants include the American Bureau of Shipping, Plymouth Cordage Co., Ocean Spray Preserving Co., Henry Bailey Alden, and the UNCF. Located in the Custom House District.

[1]
[30]
[39]
[40]
[567]
[568]
[569]
Dorchester Heights Monument Dorchester Heights 1902 Thomas Park (42°19′58.3″N 71°2′44.8″W / 42.332861°N 71.045778°W / 42.332861; -71.045778 (Dorchester Heights Monument))

Monument dedicated to the American victory in the siege of Boston. Built by the Norcross Brothers. Restored, reinforced, and weatherproofed by Charles Wilson Killam in 1934–1935. Located in the Dorchester Heights Historic District.

[1]
[94]
[570]
[571]
[572]
[573]
Fannie Foster Town House Fenway, Boston 1902 26 Fenway

Townhouse designed for Fannie Foster. Now part of the Boston Conservatory at Berklee and is a residence hall at Berklee College of Music. Located in the Fenway-Boylston Street District.

[2][6]
[534]
[574]
[575]
Greene Acres Dartmouth 1902 824 Tucker Rd.

Colonial Revival house designed for Francis Bunker Greene. Later served as a monastery. Now a private residence.

[2][6]
[576]
Greene Acres Stable Dartmouth 1902 800 Tucker Rd.

Stable designed for Francis Bunker Greene at Greene Acres.

Greene Acres Greenhouse Dartmouth 1902 Greenhouse designed for Francis Bunker Greene at Greene Acres.
Groton School Gymnasium Groton 1902 282 Farmers Row (42°35′31.8″N 71°35′00.6″W / 42.592167°N 71.583500°W / 42.592167; -71.583500 (Groton School Gymnasium))

Classical Revival gymnasium designed for the Groton School. Converted into a dining hall in 1963–1964 to plans by Shepley, Bulfinch, Richardson and Abbott.

[6]
[39]
[288]
[577]
[578]
[579]
Henry S. Howe House Brookline 1902 165 Ivy St.

House designed for Henry Saltonstall Howe. Demolished in the 1930s.

[1][2]
[6]
[20]
[580]
[581]
Higginson House Concord 1902 1400 Lowell Rd. (42°29′47.9″N 71°22′06.4″W / 42.496639°N 71.368444°W / 42.496639; -71.368444 (Middlesex School Higginson House))

Building designed for the Middlesex School. Named for Henry Lee Higginson.

[557]
J. Parkinson House Back Bay, Boston 1902 160 Beacon St.

House designed for John Parkinson and his wife Gertrude Weld. Was the location of Fisher College from 1950–1952 and Burdett College from 1954–1972. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[6]
[582]
[583]
Phillips Academy Gymnasium Andover 1902 Highland Rd. (42°38′43.6″N 71°07′53.0″W / 42.645444°N 71.131389°W / 42.645444; -71.131389 (Phillips Academy Gymnasium))

Gymnasium building designed for Phillips Academy. Renamed Borden Gymnasium for M. C. D. Borden. Extensive addition designed by Eggers & Higgins in 1951.

[1][6]
[584]
[585]
[586]
Rogers–Young House Brookline 1902 35 Gardner Rd.

Colonial Revival house designed for Robert King Rogers and Agnes Hill Young.

[6]
[20]
[127]
[587]
India Building Boston 1902–1903 74–84 State St.

Building designed for the Trustees of the State Street Association. First tenants include Stone & Webster, Boston & Northern Street Railway Co., Postal Telegraph Company, and Goodwin, Dresel & Parker. Later tenants were primarily steamship lines and law firms, notably Tucker Anthony. An addition was added in 1921 by the firm's successor, Appleton & Stearns. Located in the Custom House District.

[1][6]
[39]
[40]
[57]
[588]
[589]
Runkle School Building A Brookline 1902–1903 50 Druce St.

Building designed for the Runkle School. Named for John Daniel Runkle. Demolished in 1962.

[6]
[20]
[64]
[590]
[591]
Runkle School Building B Brookline 1902–1903 50 Druce St.

Building designed for the Runkle School. Named for John Daniel Runkle. Demolished in 1962.

Ware Hall Concord 1902–1903 1400 Lowell Rd. (42°29′55.2″N 71°22′05.5″W / 42.498667°N 71.368194°W / 42.498667; -71.368194 (Middlesex School Ware Hall))

Building designed for the Middlesex School.

[557]
Edward Boit House Brookline 1903 29 Colchester St.

Colonial Revival house designed for Edward Darley Boit. His daughters were the subject of John Singer Sargent's The Daughters of Edward Darley Boit. Located in the Longwood Historic District.

[1][6]
[20]
[127]
[592]
[593]
[594]
F. C. Stevens Cottage Manchester 1903 Summer cottage designed for Frederick C. Stevens on Gales Point. Demolished in 1972. [595]
Industrial School for Crippled and Deformed Children Fenway, Boston 1903 241 Saint Botolph St.

Classical Revival building designed for the Cotting School. Was the original building for the school. Now owned by the New England Conservatory of Music.

[1][6]
[596]
[597]
[598]
J. B. Richmond House Back Bay, Boston 1903 310 Beacon St.

House designed for Joshua Bailey Richmond, sugar manufacturer. Bought by Tom Brady in 2006 who renovated the building and converted it from nine condos to four. Andrónico Luksic Craig bought three and Brady kept one for himself. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[6]
[18]
[599]
[600]
[601]
Peabody House Concord 1903 1400 Lowell Rd. (42°29′54.5″N 71°22′02.3″W / 42.498472°N 71.367306°W / 42.498472; -71.367306 (Middlesex School Peabody House))

Building designed for the Middlesex School.

[557]
Simmons College Main Building Boston 1903 300 Fenway

Classical Revival building designed for Simmons College. The main building on the campus. Built by George A. Fuller Co.

[1]
[39]
[463]
[602]
The Mountain Manchester 1903 73 Bridge St.

Summer cottage designed for Reginald Heber Fitz and his wife Elizabeth Loring Clarke on Norton Mountain. Built by Roberts & Hoare.

[1][2]
[6]
[603]
The Mountain Stable Manchester 1903 71 Bridge St. (42°34′23.5″N 70°46′48.3″W / 42.573194°N 70.780083°W / 42.573194; -70.780083 (The Mountain Stable))

Stable and carriage house designed for Reginald Herber Fitz at his cottage. Now a private residence.

Heath School Brookline 1903–1904 100 Eliot St.

School designed for the town of Brookline. Demolished and replaced by Hugh Stebbins in 1958.

[1]
[20]
[64]
[604]
Monks Building Boston 1903–1904 Congress St. & Quaker Ln. (42°21′28.8″N 71°3′24.1″W / 42.358000°N 71.056694°W / 42.358000; -71.056694 (Monks Building))

Classical Revival building designed for Richard J. Monks. Built by George A. Fuller Co. Later known as the National Shawmut Bank Building and the Fidelity Building. Fidelity Investments was a notable tenant.

[5][6]
[39]
[40]
[463]
[605]
[606]
Cliff Beach Bathhouse Nantucket 1904 Bathhouse commissioned by Clifford Folger at the Cliff Bathing Beach. [1][2]
[6]
[607]
Indian Neck East House Wareham 1904 31 Warren Point Rd.

Shingle Style house designed for Stephen Minot Weld Jr. at Indian Neck. Landscape designed by Martha Brookes Hutcheson. Also designed a porte-cochère addition in 1905. Later owned by Howard Baldwin.

[2][6]
[608]
[609]
Marlborough Public Library Marlborough 1904 35 West Main St.

A Classical Revival Carnegie library designed for the city of Marlborough. Located in the West Main Street Historic District.

[1]
[610]
[611]
[612]
[613]
National Dock and Storage Warehouse Boston 1904 Building designed for the National Dock and Storage Warehouse Co. Built by W. H. Keyes. Location and status unknown. [40]
Registry of Deeds Retaining Wall Dedham 1904 River Pl. (now Old River Pl.)

Retaining wall designed and built for the Norfolk County Registry of Deeds along River Place.

[614]
The Massachusetts Building Boston 1904 60 State St.
Collaborative design with Cabot, Everett & Mead. Notable tenants include Brown Bros. & Co., Hale & Dorr, Harvey H. Bundy, and Lockwood, Greene & Co. Demolished in the early 1970s and replaced with 60 State Street.
[1][6]
[14]
[40]
[615]
Boston Normal School and Girls' Latin School Common Building Fenway, Boston 1905 115 Palace Rd. (42°20′12.7″N 71°5′58.1″W / 42.336861°N 71.099472°W / 42.336861; -71.099472 (Boston Normal School and Girls' Latin School Common Building))

Common building designed with Maginnis, Walsh & Sullivan and Coolidge & Carlson for the Boston Normal and Girls' Latin School Group. Built by George A. Fuller Co. Now MassArt East at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design.

[463]
[616]
[617]
[618]
[619]
Indian Neck Farmer's Cottage Wareham 1905 Farmer's cottage designed for Stephen Minot Weld Jr. at Indian Neck. Location and status unknown. [2][6]
Norfolk County Registry of Deeds Dedham 1905 649 High St.

Registry of Deeds building designed for Norfolk County. Located in the Dedham Village Historic District.

[1][6]
[94]
[620]
[621]
[622]
R. H. White & Co. Warehouse South End, Boston 1905 33 Troy St. (now Traveler St.)

Warehouse designed for R. H. White & Co. Later used as the warehouse for Summerfields Furniture. Now the Summerfields Self Storage Building, original building completely hidden.

[40]
[623]
[624]
[625]
Broadmere / Raymond Cottage Marblehead 1905 4 Broadmere Way

Classical Revival cottage designed for Samuel B. Raymond and his wife Alla M. Beveridge, the daughter of John Lourie Beveridge. Later owned by Samuel Appleton. Renamed Broadmere in the 1920s. Located on Fluen Point.

[626]
[627]
Broadmere / Raymond Cottage Carriage House Marblehead 1905 2 Broadmere Way

Colonial Revival carriage house and servant quarters designed for Samuel B. Raymond and his wife Alla. Now a private residence.

Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance Co. Building Springfield 1905 195 State St.

Classical Revival building designed for the Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance Co. Now headquarters the City of Springfield School Department and offices of the State Street Corporation. Added to the NRHP in 1983.

[1][6]
[628]
[629]
[630]
[631]
Seawold Manchester 1905–1906 450 Summer St.

Summer cottage designed for Andrew Carnegie II, the son of Thomas M. Carnegie.

[1][6]
[632]
Young Cottage Duxbury 1905–1906 58 King Caesar Rd.

Colonial Revival Craftsman cottage designed for William Hill Young on Powder Point. Additions designed in 1919 and 1922 by Appleton & Stearns.

[2][6]
Young Stable Duxbury 1905–1906 Stable designed for William Hill Young at his cottage.
Whitinsville High School Northbridge 1905–1907 171 Linwood Ave.

Colonial Revival school building designed for the Town of Northbridge in Whitinsville. Now part of Northbridge Middle School. Addition designed in the 1950s by Leland & Larsen. Located in the Whitinsville Historic District.

[1][6]
[633]
Boston Normal School Fenway, Boston 1906 623 Huntington Ave. (42°20′11.7″N 71°5′59.9″W / 42.336583°N 71.099972°W / 42.336583; -71.099972 (Boston Normal School))

Building designed with Maginnis, Walsh & Sullivan and Coolidge & Carlson for the Boston Normal and Girls' Latin School Group. Built by George A. Fuller Co. Now MassArt South at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design.

[463]
[616]
[619]
[634]
Chandler & Co. Store Building
Boston 1906 151 Tremont St.

Building designed for Chandler & Co. Demolished.

[40]
[635]
[636]
Girl's Latin School Fenway, Boston 1906 Tetlow St. (42°20′14.4″N 71°5′58.1″W / 42.337333°N 71.099472°W / 42.337333; -71.099472 (Girl's Latin School))

School building designed with Maginnis, Walsh & Sullivan and Coolidge & Carlson for the Boston Normal and Girls' Latin Group. Built by George A. Fuller Co. Now MassArt North at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design.

[463]
[616]
[619]
[637]
Patrick A. Collins School Fenway, Boston 1906 101 Palace Rd. (42°20′13.5″N 71°6′0.1″W / 42.337083°N 71.100028°W / 42.337083; -71.100028 (Patrick A. Collins School))

School building designed with Maginnis, Walsh & Sullivan and Coolidge & Carlson for the Boston Normal and Girls' Latin School Group. Built by George A. Fuller Co. Now MassArt Collins at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design.

[463]
[616]
[619]
[638]
Smith Patterson Co. Store Boston 1906 Arch St. & Summer St.

Store building designed for Smith Patterson Jewelry Company. Demolished.

[6]
[40]
The Pines Milton 1906 Hinckley Rd. & Allerton Rd.

House designed for Henry Southworth Shaw. Demolished in the 1930s.

[218]
Weld Hall Salem 1906 161 Essex St.

Hall designed for the Peabody Museum of Salem gifted by Charles Goddard Weld. Now part of the Peabody Essex Museum.

[6]
[269]
[639]
Hallowell House Concord 1906–1907 1400 Lowell Rd. (42°29′51.0″N 71°22′01.3″W / 42.497500°N 71.367028°W / 42.497500; -71.367028 (Middlesex School Hallowell House))

Building designed for the Middlesex School. Named for Norwood Penrose Hallowell.

[557]
E. W. Lamb Carriage House Brookline 1907 43 Cumberland Ave.

Carriage house designed for Elizabeth Whitney Lamb at Pill Hill. Demolished in the 1950s and replaced with a tennis court.

[126]
Henry S. Howe Farm Stable Holliston 1907 Stable designed for Henry Saltonstall Howe at his farm. Location and status unknown. [2][6]
Houston Store Building Boston 1907 25–27 Temple Pl.

Classical Revival store building designed for the heirs of John Perkins Cushing. Located in the Temple Place Historic District.

[6]
[40]
[640]
Moraine Farm Barn Beverly 1907 733 Cabot St. (42°35′01.0″N 70°53′56.7″W / 42.583611°N 70.899083°W / 42.583611; -70.899083 (Moraine Farm Barn))

Barn built at Moraine Farm to replace original barn built in 1884 which burned down.

[210]
[295]
Moraine Farm Hen House Beverly 1907 733 Cabot St. (42°35′01.0″N 70°53′58.7″W / 42.583611°N 70.899639°W / 42.583611; -70.899639 (Moraine Farm Hen House))

Hen house built at Moraine Farm. Converted into a residence in 1957.

[210]
[641]
Rogers–Young Carriage House-Barn Brookline 1907 35 Gardner Rd.

Carriage house-barn designed for Robert King Rogers and Agnes Hill Young. Destroyed by a fire in 1963.

[6]
[587]
Union Trust Co. Building Springfield 1907 1351 Main St.

Classical Revival building designed for the Union Trust Company. Located near Court Square. Added to the NRHP in 1978.

[1][6]
[629]
[642]
[643]
Weld Boathouse Cambridge 1907 971 Memorial Dr.

Boathouse designed for Harvard University along the Charles River. Named for George Walker Weld. Now Harvard's women's crew boathouse.

[1][2]
[39]
[94]
[644]
[645]
WPI Electrical Engineering Building Worcester 1907 Salisbury St. & West St. (42°16′30.9″N 71°48′25.3″W / 42.275250°N 71.807028°W / 42.275250; -71.807028 (WPI Electrical Engineering Building))

Craftsman style electrical engineering building designed for Worcester Polytechnic Institute. Now the Atwater Kent Laboratories, named for A. Atwater Kent.

[1][6]
[646]
[647]
[648]
[649]
Statue of George Frisbie Hoar Worcester 1907–1908 455 Main St. (42°15′46.6″N 71°48′07″W / 42.262944°N 71.80194°W / 42.262944; -71.80194 (Statue of George Frisbie Hoar))

Statue of George F. Hoar designed at Worcester City Hall. Daniel Chester French designed the statue, Peabody & Stearns designed the pedestal. Built by the Norcross Brothers.

[650]
[651]
Driscoll Building Back Bay, Boston 1908 715 Boylston St.

Renaissance Revival store building designed for Driscoll Incorporated Importers. Later occupied by the Massachusetts Nurseryman's Association. Restored in 2021–2022. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[6]
[652]
[653]
Patrick Andrew Collins Statue Back Bay, Boston 1908 Commonwealth Ave. (42°21′08.1″N 71°04′36.8″W / 42.352250°N 71.076889°W / 42.352250; -71.076889 (Patrick Andrew Collins Statue))

Statue of Patrick Collins. Collaborative design with J. Randolph Coolidge and Clarence H. Blackall. Henry Hudson Kitson and his wife Theo Alice Ruggles Kitson were chosen sculptors. Originally located at Charlesgate West, moved in 1966. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[654]
[655]
Boston Stock Exchange Building Boston 1908–1911 30 Congress St.

Building designed for the Boston Stock Exchange. Demolished in the fall of 1980.

[6]
[40]
[57]
[656]
[657]
[658]
Clinton Town Hall Clinton 1909 242 Church St.

Colonial Revival Italianate Renaissance Revival town hall designed for the Town of Clinton. Built by George A. Fuller Co.

[1][5]
[6]
[94]
[39]
[463]
[659]
Egleston Substation Jamaica Plain 1909 3025 Washington St.

Classical Revival substation designed for the Boston Elevated Railway. Added to the NRHP in 2010.

[660]
[661]
J. E. Hodgkins Store Lynn 1909 26 Market St.

Shoe store building designed for J. E. Hodgkins by his son, C. C. Hodgkins, under Peabody & Stearns. Demolished.

[662]
Chelsea City Hall Chelsea 1910 500 Broadway

Colonial Revival city hall designed for the City of Chelsea. Clock designed by E. Howard Clock Co. Located in the Bellingham Square Historic District.

[1][6]
[28]
[94]
[663]
[664]
Draper Corporation Worker Housing Hopedale 1910 1–2 Lake St.

Tudor Revival housing designed for Draper Corporation workers. Other houses in the complex were designed by J. Williams Beal, Walker & Kimball, Edwin J. Lewis Jr., and Robert Allen Cook. Located in the Hopedale Village Historic District.

[6]
[665]
[666]
[667]
Lechmere Viaduct Boston and Cambridge 1910 Charles River Dam Rd. (42°22′5.3″N 71°4′14.0″W / 42.368139°N 71.070556°W / 42.368139; -71.070556 (Lechmere Viaduct))

Bridge designed for the Boston Elevated Railway over the Charles River. Now carries the MBTA's Green Line. Across the street from the Museum of Science.

[668]
[669]
[670]
[671]
Wentworth Boiler House and Power Plant Boston 1910 550 Huntington Ave. (42°20′11.8″N 71°5′44.9″W / 42.336611°N 71.095806°W / 42.336611; -71.095806)

Boiler house and power plant building designed for Wentworth Institute of Technology.

[672]
Williston Hall Boston 1910 550 Huntington Ave. (42°20′12.6″N 71°05′43.2″W / 42.336833°N 71.095333°W / 42.336833; -71.095333 (Wentworth Institute of Technology Williston Hall))

Building designed for Wentworth Institute of Technology. Contains labs, offices, and conference rooms.

[673]
[674]
Atoparock Marblehead 1910–1911 9 Goodwins Ct.

Cottage designed for Edward Walter Clark Jr. and his wife Lydia. Demolished.

[1][6]
New England Telephone and Telegraph Co. Building Boston 1910–1911 50 Oliver St.

Building designed for the New England Telephone and Telegraph Company (later merged with the American Bell Telephone Company). Demolished.

[1][6]
[40]
[675]
[676]
[677]
[678]
Arlington Substation Arlington 1911 5 Water St.

Classical Revival substation designed for the Boston Elevated Railway. Built by Stone & Webster. Located along the Minuteman Bikeway in the Arlington Center Historic District.

[679]
Coolidge Corner Substation Brookline 1911 19 Webster St.

Classical Revival substation designed at Coolidge Corner for the Boston Elevated Railway Coolidge Corner station. Built by Stone & Webster.

[20]
[680]
[681]
[682]
Eliot Hall Concord 1911 1400 Lowell Rd. (42°29′52.9″N 71°22′00.7″W / 42.498028°N 71.366861°W / 42.498028; -71.366861 (Middlesex School Eliot Hall))

Building designed for the Middlesex School.

[557]
Harvard Square Subway Station Cambridge 1911 Subway station designed for the Boston Elevated Railway at Harvard Square. Demolished and replaced in 1927 with the Harvard Square Subway Kiosk, designed by Blackall, Clapp & Whittemore. [683]
[684]
[685]
Kendall Square Substation Cambridge 1911 Main St. near Broadway

Substation designed for the Boston Elevated Railway. Located at Kendall Square. Demolished.

[686]
[687]
Roslindale Substation Roslindale 1911 4228 Washington St.

Classical Revival substation designed for the Boston Elevated Railway. Built by Stone & Webster. Added to the NRHP in 2013.

[688]
South Boston Power Station South Boston 1911 696 E First St.

Classical Revival power station designed for the Boston Elevated Railway with Stone & Webster Engineering Co. Demolished.

[689]
[690]
W. D. Hunt Garage Brookline 1911 476 Boylston St.

Wooden garage designed for William D. Hunt. Built by W. E. Nason. Demolished.

[6]
[20]
[691]
[692]
U.S. Custom House Tower Boston 1911–1915 3 McKinley Square

Tower built on top of Ammi B. Young's 1837 Boston Custom House. Boston's tallest building until the Prudential Tower was built in 1964. Now tied as Boston's 23rd-tallest building. Located in the Custom House District. Added to the NRHP in 1973.

[1][6]
[28]
[31]
[39]
[40]
[57]
[94]
[693]
George Thorndike Angell Memorial Fountain and Plaza Boston 1912 Post Office Square (42°21′25.7″N 71°3′22.1″W / 42.357139°N 71.056139°W / 42.357139; -71.056139 (George Thorndike Angell Memorial Fountain and Plaza))

Designed the fountain along with the memorial plaza. Monument commemorating George Thorndike Angell.

[6]
[31]
[57]
[694]
[695]
[696]
[697]
Green Street Rapid Transit Station Jamaica Plain 1912 Washington St. & Green St.

Station for the Washington Street Elevated Railroad. Closed in 1987. Demolished.

[698]
Lloyd Store Boston 1912 308–310 Boylston St.

Store building designed for the Vaughan-Parkman Estate. Held the offices of Fay, Spofford & Thorndike. Demolished.

[6]
[40]
Annie Putnam Peabody Headstone Watertown 1912 Bellwort Path Lot #2813 (42°22′11.5″N 71°08′44.2″W / 42.369861°N 71.145611°W / 42.369861; -71.145611 (Annie Putnam Peabody Headstone))

Headstone designed for Annie Putnam Peabody, Peabody's wife, at Mount Auburn Cemetery after her death in 1911.

[699]
Robert Swain Peabody Headstone Watertown 1912 Bellwort Path Lot #2813 (42°22′11.5″N 71°08′44.2″W / 42.369861°N 71.145611°W / 42.369861; -71.145611 (Robert Swain Peabody Headstone))

Headstone designed for and by Peabody at Mount Auburn Cemetery following the death of his wife in 1911.

Sargent Trust Building Boston 1912 45–51 Bromfield St.

Classical Revival building designed in collaboration with Frank A. Kendall. Built by George A. Fuller Co.

[6]
[40]
[463]
[700]
Sea Cliff Inn Casino Nantucket 1912 Casino designed for the Sea Cliff Inn. Location and status unknown. [6]
[607]
St. James Theatre Back Bay, Boston 1912 239 Huntington Ave.

Addition to original Chickering Hall which Peabody & Stearns designed in 1901. Demolished in 1963.

[546]
Whitney Building Boston 1912–1913 46–54 Clinton St.

Building designed for F. B. Greene and Joseph P. Stearns. Demolished during the Big Dig and now site of the Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway.

[6]
[40]
[701]
Boston Insurance Co. Building Boston 1913 87 Kilby St. & 104 Milk St.

Classical Revival building designed for the Boston Insurance Company. Also known as the Mason Memorial Building. Significant additions and remodeling designed in 1929 by successor firm Appleton & Stearns, nearly doubled the size of the building.

[1]
[40]
[702]
[703]
[704]
Cambridge Memorial Flagstaff Cambridge 1913 Massachusetts Ave. & Kirkland St. (42°22′32.5″N 71°07′08.0″W / 42.375694°N 71.118889°W / 42.375694; -71.118889 (Cambridge Memorial Flagstaff))

Flagstaff erected in memory of Cambridge men who lost their lives in the American Revolutionary War. Proposed by the Daughters of the American Revolution.

[6]
[705]
[706]
[707]
Parental School Stable & Carriage House West Roxbury 1913 1275 VFW Parkway (42°16′27.0″N 71°10′26.6″W / 42.274167°N 71.174056°W / 42.274167; -71.174056 (Parental School Stable & Carriage House))

Queen Anne style stable and carriage house designed for the Parental School for Boys at Havey Beach. Now owned by the Metropolitan District Commission Police Station.

[6]
[708]
[709]
Allen Winden Stable Lenox 1914 (40°17′44.9″N 74°43′37.8″W / 40.295806°N 74.727167°W / 40.295806; -74.727167)

Stable designed for Charles D. Lanier at Allen Winden. Now owned by Shakespeare & Company of Lenox and located on their campus.

[6]
[244]
Hooper Cottage Hull 1914 95 Highland Ave.

Summer cottage designed for James Ripley Hooper, president of the National Bank of Boston.

[2][6]
Hooper Garage Hull 1914 Garage designed for James Ripley Hooper at his cottage.
Wentworth Hall Boston 1914 550 Huntington Ave. (42°20′11.8″N 71°05′41.9″W / 42.336611°N 71.094972°W / 42.336611; -71.094972 (Wentworth Institute of Technology Wentworth Hall))

Building designed for Wentworth Institute of Technology. Originally housed laboratories, drawing rooms, and a library.

[1]
[673]
[710]
Almon F. Cooper House Brookline 1915 67 Marion St. / 114 Park St.

House designed for Almon F. Cooper. Demolished.

[20]
Frank E. Peabody Garage Marblehead 1915 Foster St. & Valley Rd.

Two-story garage designed for Frank E. Peabody. Built by George A. Fuller Co. Demolished.

[6]
[463]
[711]
J. W. Maguire Co. Building Cambridge 1915 Charles River Pkwy & Pleasant St.

Three-story garage and auto repair shop designed for J. W. Maguire Co., distributors of Pierce-Arrow Motor Cars. Demolished.

[712]
[713]
[714]
Worcester Academy Gymnasium Worcester 1915 Dorchester St. (42°15′08.0″N 71°47′24.8″W / 42.252222°N 71.790222°W / 42.252222; -71.790222 (Worcester Academy Gymnasium))

Gothic Revival gymnasium designed for Worcester Academy. Located in the Grafton Hill neighborhood. Also known as Daniels Gymnasium.

[1][6]
[39]
[715]
[716]
[717]
Dobbs Hall Boston 1916 550 Huntington Ave. (42°20′11.9″N 71°05′40.1″W / 42.336639°N 71.094472°W / 42.336639; -71.094472 (Wentworth Institute of Technology Dobbs Hall))

Building designed for Wentworth Institute of Technology. Built by George A. Fuller Co. Contains mostly classrooms, offices, and storage rooms.

[463]
[673]
[718]
[719]
Arlington House Belmont 1916 115 Mill St. (42°23′46.0″N 71°11′33.8″W / 42.396111°N 71.192722°W / 42.396111; -71.192722 (McLean Hospital Arlington House))

Jacobethan Revival house designed for McLean Hospital. Built by George A. Fuller Co. Became the Arlington School in 1961. Located in the McLean Hospital National Register District.

[6]
[463]
[720]
[721]
[722]
Mary E. Wells School Southbridge 1916–1917 80 Marcy St.

Classical Revival school designed for the Town of Southbridge. Used as a school until 2012, has since been converted into residences. Added to the NRHP in 2023.

[1][6]
[723]
[724]
[725]
[726]
LeBaron Briggs House Concord 1917 1400 Lowell Rd. (42°29′50.1″N 71°22′07.5″W / 42.497250°N 71.368750°W / 42.497250; -71.368750 (Middlesex School LeBaron Briggs House))

Building designed for the Middlesex School. Named for LeBaron Russell Briggs.

[557]
M. W. Quinlan Jr. Co. Shop Brookline 1917 27–29 Boylston St.

Paint shop designed for M. W. Quinlan Jr. Demolished.

[20]
[727]
Indian Neck West House Wareham 1918 25 Warren Point Rd.

House deigned at Indian Neck for Stephen Minot Weld Jr.

[2]
[609]

Rhode Island[edit]

Building Image Location Year Built Notes Ref
D'Hauteville Villa Newport 1871 489 Bellevue Ave.

Stick Style cottage designed for Frederick Sears Grand D'Hauteville, grandson of David Sears. The firm also designed alterations in 1899. Burned in the 1950s.

[2][5]
[6]
[728]
[729]
Four Winds Newport 1871–1872 645 Bellevue Ave.

Stick Style cottage designed for George Wheatland. Later owned by Harriet Crowninshield and Nathaniel Thayer Jr.

[729]
[730]
Manshurd Hall Newport 1871–1872 492 Bellevue Ave.

Cottage designed for Nathan Matthews. Later owned by James R. Keene. Burned in 1881.

[1][2]
[5]
[729]
John W. Field Villa Newport 1872 80 Ocean Ave.

Villa designed for John W. Field. Later sold to John N. A. Griswold. Demolished.

[5]
Weetamoe / Edgemere Newport 1872 2 Rovensky Ave.

Stick Style cottage originally designed for Hannah Swift. Later bought by Nathaniel Thayer III and his wife Pauline Revere.

[729]
[731]
[732]
Laurelawn Newport 1873 589 Bellevue Ave.

Cottage designed for Frances Murdock.

[5]
[733]
Rosevale Estate Newport 1875–1876 30 Red Cross Ave.

House designed for William Cabell Rives Jr. (son of William Cabell Rives) and his wife Grace Winthrop Sears (daughter of David Sears). Enlarged by George Champlin Mason Sr. in 1881. Bought by William E. Carter in 1935.

[1][2]
[5]
[729]
[734]
The Breakers Newport 1878 44 Ochre Point Ave.

Queen Anne style cottage designed for Pierre Lorillard IV. Later owned by Cornelius Vanderbilt II. The firm also remodeled and expanded the mansion for Vanderbilt in 1886. Burned in 1892. Replaced with The Breakers.

[1][2]
[5][6]
[39]
[80]
[140]
[283]
[729]
Lion's Head Narragansett 1880 59 Newton Ave.

Cottage designed at Narragansett Pier for William Wilberforce Newton, Reverend at St. Stephen's Church in Pittsfield (also designed by Peabody & Stearns). Enlarged in 1888 by William H. Dabney Jr. Located in the Ocean Road Historic District.

[2][5]
[735]
Hillside Newport 1882 300 Gibbs Ave.

Shingle style cottage designed for Arthur Brewster Emmons, brother of Samuel Franklin Emmons.

[2][5]
[6]
[729]
[736]
[737]
Hillside Carriage House Newport 1882 161 Eustis Ave. / 108 Catherine St.

Carriage house designed for Arthur Brewster Emmons. Now a private residence, recently restored.

Vinland Estate Newport 1882–1883 32 Ochre Point Ave. (41°28′20.1″N 71°17′56.0″W / 41.472250°N 71.298889°W / 41.472250; -71.298889 (Vinland Estate))

Mansion designed for Catharine Lorillard Wolfe. Interior commissions by William Morris, Edward Burne-Jones, and Walter Crane. Inherited by Louis Lasher Lorillard after Wolfe's death in 1887. Sold in 1896 to Hamilton Twombly and Florence Vanderbilt. Renovated by Peabody & Stearns in 1907. Now Salve Regina University's McAuley Hall, named for Catherine McAuley. Located in the Bellevue Avenue and Ochre Point–Cliffs Historic District.

[1][2]
[39]
[165]
[283]
[729]
[738]
[739]
[740]
[741]
[742]
[743]
[744]
[745]
Vinland Carriage House Newport 1882–1883 26 Ochre Point Ave. (41°28′22.4″N 71°17′56.3″W / 41.472889°N 71.298972°W / 41.472889; -71.298972 (Vinland Carriage House))

Carriage house and housing for the butlers and footmen designed for Catharine Lorillard Wolfe at her Vinland Estate. Now Angelus Hall at Salve Regina University. Located in the Bellevue Avenue and Ochre Point–Cliffs Historic District.

Vinland Gatehouse Newport 1882–1883 28 Ochre Point Ave. (41°28′20.1″N 71°17′59.5″W / 41.472250°N 71.299861°W / 41.472250; -71.299861 (Vinland Gatehouse))

Gatehouse designed for Catharine Lorillard Wolfe at her Vinland Estate. Now Misto Gatehouse at Salve Regina University. Located in the Bellevue Avenue and Ochre Point–Cliffs Historic District.

Vinland Potting Shed Newport 1882–1883 Potting shed designed for Catharine Lorillard Wolfe at her Vinland Estate. Now the boathouse at Salve Regina University.
Vinland Gardener's Cottage Newport 1884 167 Webster St. (41°28′26.9″N 71°18′5.3″W / 41.474139°N 71.301472°W / 41.474139; -71.301472 (Vinland Gardener's Cottage))

Gardener's cottage designed for Catharine Lorillard Wolfe at her Vinland Estate. Now Tobin Hall at Salve Regina University.

Vinland Hennery Newport 1885 Ochre Point Ave. (41°28′25.0″N 71°18′3.2″W / 41.473611°N 71.300889°W / 41.473611; -71.300889 (Vinland Hennery))

Hennery designed for Catharine Lorillard Wolfe at her Vinland Estate. Now Drexel Hall at Salve Regina University.

Vinland Hen Keeper's Cottage Newport 1885 Ochre Point Ave. (41°28′26.1″N 71°18′3.4″W / 41.473917°N 71.300944°W / 41.473917; -71.300944 (Vinland Hen Keeper's Cottage))

Cottage built for the hen keeper. Designed for Catharine Lorillard Wolfe at her Vinland Estate. Now Stonor Hall at Salve Regina University.

Honeysuckle Lodge Newport 1886 225 Ruggles Ave.

Shingle style cottage designed for flour merchant Josiah Mason Fiske. Landscape designed by Frederick Law Olmsted. Later owned by T. Suffern Tailer (son of Edward Neufville Tailer) and C. Ledyard Blair. Located along the Newport Cliff Walk in the Bellevue Avenue and Ochre Point–Cliffs Historic District. Sold for $9.3 million in 2021.

[2][6]
[729]
[740]
[741]
[746]
[747]
Honeysuckle Lodge Stable Newport 1886 Stable designed for Josiah Mason Fiske at Honeysuckle Lodge.
Midcliff Newport 1886 229 Ruggles Ave.

Shingle style cottage designed for sisters Caroline and Frances Ogden Jones and their half-brother Louis Butler McCagg. Landscape designed by Frederick Law Olmsted. Later owned by Perle Mesta. Located along the Newport Cliff Walk in the Ochre Point–Cliffs Historic District.

[2]
[729]
[740]
[741]
[748]
Midcliff Carriage House Newport 1886 229 Ruggles Ave. (41°28′6.0″N 71°18′1.2″W / 41.468333°N 71.300333°W / 41.468333; -71.300333 (Midcliff Carriage House))

Carriage house designed for sisters Caroline and Frances Ogden Jones and their half-brother Louis Butler McCagg at Midcliff.

The Breakers Children's Playhouse Newport 1886 44 Ochre Point Ave. (41°28′14″N 71°17′54.1″W / 41.47056°N 71.298361°W / 41.47056; -71.298361 (The Breakers Children's Playhouse))

Playhouse commissioned by Cornelius Vanderbilt II at The Breakers. It is the only surviving structure from the original mansion and is part of the current Breakers mansion. Located in the Bellevue Avenue and Ochre Point–Cliffs Historic District.

[1][2]
[5]
[729]
[740]
[741]
[749]
Easton's Beach Bathing Pavilion Newport 1887 Memorial Blvd.

Shingle style bathing pavilion designed at Easton's Beach. Destroyed in the 1938 New England hurricane.

[1][2]
[39]
[729]
Rough Point Newport 1887–1892 680 Bellevue Ave.

Tudor style cottage designed for Frederick William Vanderbilt and his wife Louise. Gardens designed by Frederick Law Olmsted. Other notable owners include William B. Leeds, James Buchanan Duke, and Doris Duke. Thomas H. Howard was a notable guest. Located along the Newport Cliff Walk in the Bellevue Avenue Historic District. Now owned and operated by the Newport Restoration Foundation.

[1][2]
[6]
[39]
[729]
[740]
[750]
Rough Point Sheds Newport 1887–1892 Sheds designed for designed for Frederick William Vanderbilt and his wife Louise at Rough Point.
Rough Point Stable Newport 1887–1892 Stable designed for designed for Frederick William Vanderbilt and his wife Louise at Rough Point.
Ocean Lawn Newport 1888–1889 51 Cliff Ave.

Tudor style cottage designed for William and Elizabeth Gammell. Later owned by Harvey S. Firestone Jr. Sold to Alexis DeJoria and her father John Paul DeJoria for $11.65 million in 2017. Located in the Bellevue Avenue and Ochre Point–Cliffs Historic District.

[1][6]
[729]
[740]
[741]
[751]
Ocean Lawn Stable Newport 1888–1889 190 Narragansett Ave.

Stable designed for William and Elizabeth Gammell at Ocean Lawn.

Bleecker's Box Jamestown 1889 155 Walcott Ave. / 10 Racquet Rd.

A 33' x 33' x 33' summer cottage designed for John Van Benthuysen Bleecker and his wife Elizabeth, Stearns' sister. Significant additions designed in 2021.

[2]
[752]
[753]
Althorpe Newport 1889–1890 218 Ruggles Ave.

Colonial Revival villa designed for John Thompson Spencer. Notable guests include Vittorio Emanuele and Ernest Dimnet. Now Founders Hall at Salve Regina University. Located in the Bellevue Avenue and Ochre Point–Cliffs Historic District.

[2]
[729]
[740]
[741]
[754]
Althorpe Carriage House and Stable Newport 1890 108 Lawrence Ave.

Carriage house and stable designed for John Thompson Spencer. Now "The Hedges" at Salve Regina University. Located in the Bellevue Avenue and Ochre Point–Cliffs Historic District.

Church of the Messiah Olneyville, Providence 1890 1860 Westminster St.
Episcopal Church. Elizabeth Amory Gammell donated funds to construct the church. Interior damaged by a fire in 1927. Original parish merged with Grace Church in 2006. Now known as The King's Cathedral.
[1][6]
[755]
[756]
[757]
Rockhurst Newport 1891 Bellevue Ave.

Queen Anne style cottage designed for H. Mortimer Brooks and his wife Josephine Higgins (sister of Eugene Higgins). Renamed "Aspen Hall" in 1920 by John Aspegrens. Demolished in 1955.

[1][2]
[6]
[165]
[728]
[729]
[740]
Rockhurst Carriage House Newport 1891 Carriage house designed for H. Mortimer Brooks at Rockhurst. Demolished.
Rockhurst Gardener's House Newport 1891 Gardener's house designed for H. Mortimer Brooks at Rockhurst. Demolished.
Rockhurst Gatehouse Newport 1891 700 Bellevue Ave.

Gatehouse designed for H. Mortimer Brooks at Rockhurst. Restored in 1997. Now a private residence known as "Ledge Point Cottage." Located in the Bellevue Avenue Historic District.

St. John's Episcopal Church Parish House Providence 1893 275 N Main St.

Parish house designed for St. John's Episcopal Church. Demolished and replaced in 1965 by Millman & Sturges.

[6]
[758]
Shamrock Cliff Newport 1894–1896 65 Ridge Rd.

Tudor Revival cottage designed for Gaun McRobert Hutton and his wife Celeste Marguerite Winans (granddaughter of Ross Winans). Landscape designed by Frederick Law Olmsted. Located in the Ocean Drive Historic District.

[1][2]
[6]
[39]
[165]
[729]
[759]
[760]
Shamrock Cliff Gatehouse Newport 1894–1896 65 Ridge Rd. (41°27′48.4″N 71°21′20.5″W / 41.463444°N 71.355694°W / 41.463444; -71.355694 (Shamrock Cliff Gatehouse))

Gatehouse and gateway designed for Gaun McRobert Hutton at Shamrock Cliff. Located in the Ocean Drive Historic District.

Shamrock Cliff Stable Newport 1894–1896 65 Ridge Rd.

Stable designed for Guan McRobert Hutton at Shamrock Cliff.

Beech Bound Newport 1895 127 Harrison Ave.

Tudor Revival cottage designed for William F. Burden and his wife Florence Twombly (daughter of Hamilton McKown Twombly and Florence Adele Vanderbilt). Landscape designed by Frederick Law Olmsted. Located in the Ocean Drive Historic District.

[2][6]
[165]
[729]
[759]
[761]
Beech Bound Stable Newport 1895 Stable designed for William F. Burden at Beech Bound.
Bleak House Newport 1895 Ocean Ave.

Shingle style cottage designed for Ross R. Winans, the grandson of Ross Winans. Landscape and gardens designed by Frederick Law Olmsted. Named for the Charles Dickens novel Bleak House. Damaged by the 1938 New England hurricane and demolished in 1948.

[1][2]
[6]
[39]
[728]
[729]
Ridgemere Newport 1898 11 Leroy Ave.

Summer cottage designed for Fannie Foster. Later owned by Foster's cousin, Mary Sheffield Moriarty (daughter of William Paine Sheffield Sr. and mother of George Andrews Moriarty Jr.). Located in the Bellevue Avenue and Ochre Point–Cliffs Historic District.

[2][6]
[729]
[740]
[741]
Ridgemere Stable / Carriage House Newport 1898 11 Leroy Ave. (41°28′19.3″N 71°18′17.5″W / 41.472028°N 71.304861°W / 41.472028; -71.304861 (Ridgemere Stable / Carriage House))

Stable/carriage house designed for Fannie Foster at Ridgemere. Located in the Bellevue Avenue and Ochre Point–Cliffs Historic District.

Ridgemere Greenhouses Newport 1898 11 Leroy Ave.

Greenhouses designed for Fannie Foster at Ridgemere.

Hopedene Newport 1898–1902 43 Cliff Ave.

Georgian Revival cottage designed for Elizabeth Hope Gammell Slater. Landscape and gardens designed by Beatrix Farrand and the interior designed by Ogden Codman Jr. Located along the Newport Cliff Walk in the Bellevue Avenue and Ochre Point–Cliffs Historic District.

[1][2]
[6]
[729]
[740]
[741]
[762]
Hopedene Carriage House / Garage Newport 1898–1902 43 Cliff Ave. (41°28′50.8″N 71°17′53.4″W / 41.480778°N 71.298167°W / 41.480778; -71.298167 (Hopedene Garage))

Carriage house and garage designed for Elizabeth Hope Gammell Slater at Hopedene. Located along the Newport Cliff Walk in the Bellevue Avenue and Ochre Point–Cliffs Historic District.

D'Hauteville Villa Stable Newport 1899 1 Gordon St.

Stable designed for Frederick Sears Grand D'Hauteville at his Villa.

[2]
Providence Journal Building Providence 1906 60 Eddy St.

Building designed for The Providence Journal.

[1][6]
[755]
[756]
Vinland Caretaker's Cottage Newport 1907 Ochre Point Ave. (41°28′22.7″N 71°17′57.3″W / 41.472972°N 71.299250°W / 41.472972; -71.299250 (Vinland Caretaker's Cottage))

Caretaker's cottage designed for Hamilton McKown Twombly and his wife Florence Adele Vanderbilt at their Vinland Estate. Now Marian Hall at Salve Regina University.

[2][6]
[729]
[739]
[763]

Other New England states[edit]

Building Image Location Year Built Notes Ref
Great Falls National Bank Somersworth, New Hampshire 1872 45 Market St.

Originally held a harness store, bank, and meeting place for the Knights of Pythias. Now the 45 Market Street Bakery and Cafe.

[1]
[764]
Third Academy Building Exeter, New Hampshire 1872 Third Academy Building at Phillips Exeter Academy. Destroyed in a 1914 fire. [1][5]
[765]
[766]
Academy at Great Falls Somersworth, New Hampshire 1873–1875 Also known as the Orange Street School and later, the Burleigh School named for George William Burleigh. Demolished in the 1960s. [1][5]
[767]
Front Street Baptist Church Exeter, New Hampshire 1875–1876 43 Front St.

Baptist Church. Now the First Baptist Church, Exeter. Located in the Front Street Historic District.

[1][5]
[6]
[768]
[769]
[770]
John Rogers House New Canaan, Connecticut 1876 111 Oenoke Ridge

House designed for John Rogers. Demolished in 1960.

[771]
John Rogers Studio New Canaan, Connecticut 1878 13 Oenoke Ridge (41°9′1.5″N 73°29′49.9″W / 41.150417°N 73.497194°W / 41.150417; -73.497194 (John Rogers Studio))

Studio designed for sculptor John Rogers. Designated a National Historic Landmark in 1965. Added to the NRHP in 1966.

[771]
Blueberry Ledge Northeast Harbor, Maine 1881 137 Peabody Dr.

Cottage designed for Peabody's brother-in-law, Charles William Eliot, overlooking Bear Island. Later owned by Susan Alexander Jay, the widow of Peter Augustus Jay, Jay's daughter Susan Mary Alsop, and Mitchell Rales who demolished it in 2007. Notable guests include Douglas Dillon, Lord Carrington, Sir Nicholas and Lady Henderson, and Marietta Tree.

[2][6]
[772]
[773]
W. L. Vennard House Portsmouth, New Hampshire 1884 House designed for W. L. Vennard. Location and status unknown. [1]
Daniel Webster Robinson House Burlington, Vermont 1885–1886 384 Main St.

House designed for Daniel Webster Robinson. Since 1931 it has housed the Alpha Iota chapter of the Alpha Chi Omega sorority affiliated with the University of Vermont. Added to the NRHP in 1982. Located in the Main Street–College Street Historic District.

[2][6]
[774]
[775]
Daniel Webster Robinson Carriage House Burlington, Vermont 1885–1886 388 Main St.

Carriage house designed for Daniel Webster Robinson at his house. Added to the NRHP in 1982. Located in the Main Street–College Street Historic District.

Presque Isle Unitarian Church Presque Isle, Maine 1886 Academy St.

Demolished in 1939.

[776]
Union Church of Northeast Harbor Northeast Harbor, Maine 1887 21 Summit Rd.

The firm was also responsible for alterations made in 1913 by Frederick L. Savage. Added to the NRHP in 1998.

[1][2]
[6]
[39]
[772]
[777]
Leighton-Brewster Cottage Dublin, New Hampshire 1888 387 W Lake Rd. (42°54′39.0″N 72°5′18.8″W / 42.910833°N 72.088556°W / 42.910833; -72.088556 (Leighton-Brewster Cottage))

Cottage designed for George E. Leighton. Later known as Monadnock Farms and Redtop. Gardens designed by Arthur Asahel Shurcliff in 1926–1930. Renovated in 1978 by Robert A. M. Stern. Located in the Dublin Village Historic District.

[2][6]
[778]
[779]
[780]
[781]
Leighton-Brewster Stable Dublin, New Hampshire 1888 397 W Lake Rd. (42°54′43.7″N 72°05′22.1″W / 42.912139°N 72.089472°W / 42.912139; -72.089472 (Leighton-Brewster Stable))

Stable designed for George E. Leighton. Located in the Dublin Village Historic District. Now a private residence.

Stonlea / Stonelea Dublin, New Hampshire 1889 Stonelea Ln. (42°54′45.6″N 72°05′05.9″W / 42.912667°N 72.084972°W / 42.912667; -72.084972 (Stonelea / Stonlea))

Summer cottage designed for Daniel Catlin overlooking Dublin Pond. Also designed later additions and alterations. Restored in the early 2010s by Hugh Hardy and made net-zero. Located in the Dublin Village Historic District.

[2][6]
[778]
[780]
[781]
[782]
Stonlea Barn Dublin, New Hampshire 1889 Stonelea Ln. (42°54′44.3″N 72°05′00.9″W / 42.912306°N 72.083583°W / 42.912306; -72.083583 (Stonelea Barn))

Barn designed for Daniel Catlin on his Stonlea estate. Located in the Dublin Village Historic District.

Stonlea Boathouse Dublin, New Hampshire 1889 Main St. (42°54′40.6″N 72°05′07.1″W / 42.911278°N 72.085306°W / 42.911278; -72.085306 (Stonelea Boathouse))

Boathouse designed for Daniel Catlin on Dublin Pond. Located in the Dublin Village Historic District.

Stonlea Cottage Dublin, New Hampshire 1889 Stonelea Ln. (42°54′43.9″N 72°05′01.6″W / 42.912194°N 72.083778°W / 42.912194; -72.083778 (Stonelea Cottage))

Small cottage designed for Daniel Catlin on his Stonlea estate. Located in the Dublin Village Historic District.

Stonlea Stable Dublin, New Hampshire 1889 Stonlea Ln. (42°54′47.1″N 72°05′01.5″W / 42.913083°N 72.083750°W / 42.913083; -72.083750 (Stonelea Stable))

Stable designed for Daniel Catlin on his Stonlea estate. Located in the Dublin Village Historic District.

Hilltop Greenwich, Connecticut 1890 Palmer Hill Rd.

House designed for Henry Osborne Havemeyer and his wife Louisine Havemeyer overlooking the Long Island Sound. Interior designed by Samuel Colman. Demolished in the 1940s. Land bought by Gene Tunney in 1946, converted into single family housing development called Havemeyer Park.

[1][2]
[6]
[783]
[784]
[785]
[786]
[787]
Hilltop Stable Greenwich, Connecticut 1890 First stable designed for Henry and Louisine Havemeyer at their Hilltop villa. Demolished in the 1940s.
Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Arch Concord, New Hampshire 1892 107 N Main St. (43°12′25.87″N 71°32′12.84″W / 43.2071861°N 71.5369000°W / 43.2071861; -71.5369000 (Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Arch))

Archway built in honor of Concord's Civil War veterans. Dedicated July 4, 1892. Notables who attended the dedication ceremony include Nathaniel S. Berry and Harriet Patience Dame. Joseph R. Hawley was the keynote speaker. Located on New Hampshire State House grounds in the Concord Civic District.

[6]
[788]
[789]
Copp's Cottage Greenwich, Connecticut 1893 49 Byram Dr.

Queen Anne shingle style cottage designed for Emily (Maltby) Copp, widow of William Amasa Copp. Also known as Althea Lodge. After Copp's death in 1918, Ivor Thord-Gray bought and completely remodeled the cottage in 1924 as a Colonial Revival, renaming it Graycourt. Bought by a developer who removed the top two floors in 1955. Eventually rebuilt. Current cottage looks similar to original cottage.

[786]
Hilltop Cottage Greenwich, Connecticut 1893 Cottage designed for the caretaker/estate manager of Henry and Louisine Havemeyer's Hilltop villa. Demolished in the 1940s. [2][6]
[785]
Hilltop Greenhouses Greenwich, Connecticut 1893 Greenhouses designed for Henry and Louisine Havemeyer at their Hilltop villa. Demolished in the 1940s.
Hilltop Hay Barn Greenwich, Connecticut 1893 Hay barn designed for Henry and Louisine Havemeyer at their Hilltop villa. Demolished in the 1940s.
Hilltop Livestock Barns Greenwich, Connecticut 1893 Henry and Louisine Havemeyer at their Hilltop villa. Demolished in the 1940s.
Hilltop Stable Greenwich, Connecticut 1893 Second stable designed for Henry and Louisine Havemeyer at their Hilltop villa. Demolished in the 1940s.
Society for Savings Building Hartford, Connecticut 1893 31 Pratt St.

Building designed for the Society for Savings. Top half significantly changed by Sherwood F. Jeter in 1957. Located in the Pratt Street Historic District.

[1][6]
[39]
[165]
W. W. Vaughan Cottage Northeast Harbor, Maine 1893 46 Smallidge Point Rd.

Cottage designed for William Warren Vaughan. Also designed alterations to the cottage in 1905. Demolished.

[772]
Perkins House Hartford, Connecticut 1895 55 Forest St.

House designed for Mary Evelyn Perkins, widow of Edward Henry Perkins. Demolished. Now the site of Hartford Public High School.

[1][6]
[790]
Joel Gates Mansion Burlington, Vermont 1895 381 Main St.

Mansion designed for Joel Gates. Was located in the Main Street–College Street Historic District before it burned down.

[774]
[791]
The Willows Bar Harbor, Maine 1896 119 Eden St.

House designed for James A. Garland. Bought by Charlotte Baker who demolished and replaced the house in 1913. Later bought by Harry Oakes. Now site of a hotel with the same name.

[792]
York Hall Bath, Maine 1896–1898 1 Edward St.

House designed for William Dunning Sewall, the son of Arthur Sewall and father of Sumner Sewall. Calvin Coolidge was a notable guest. Located in the Bath Historic District.

[1][6]
[772]
[793]
[794]
[795]
York Hall Carriage House Bath, Maine 1896–1898 9 Carriage House Ln. (43°55′30.6″N 69°48′53.5″W / 43.925167°N 69.814861°W / 43.925167; -69.814861 (York Hall Carriage House))

Carriage house designed for William Dunning Sewall at York Hall. Located in the Bath Historic District.

Dupee Cottage Dark Harbor, Maine 1897 573 Shipyard Point Rd.

Cottage designed for William R. Dupee at Shipyard Point. Later sold to Henry T. Sloane who hired the firm to remodel the cottage in 1902 and 1908.

[2][6]
[772]
Dupee Cottage Carriage House Dark Harbor, Maine 1897 573 Shipyard Point Rd.

Carriage house designed for William R. Dupee at his cottage on Shipyard Point.

Fairholt Burlington, Vermont 1897 584 S Prospect St.

Summer cottage designed for Henry Holt. Landscape designed by Frederick Law Olmsted. Later owned by Richard Tarrant.

[796]
[797]
Gilkey Farm Islesboro, Maine 1898 Main Rd.

Cottage designed for Henry Saltonstall Howe. Demolished.

[2][6]
[772]
Gilkey Farm Stable Islesboro, Maine 1898 Main Rd.

Stable designed for Henry Saltonstall Howe at Gilkey Farm. Demolished.

The Hornbeam Dark Harbor, Maine 1899–1900 253 W Shore Dr.

Cottage designed for James Lawrence (grandson of Abbott Lawrence) and his wife Caroline Estelle Mudge.

[2][6]
Willowgate Tamworth, New Hampshire 1899–1900 251 Chocorua Lake Rd.

Cottage designed for John Sumner Runnells at Chocorua Lake. First built in 1899, but burned down during construction. Rebuilt in 1900. Robert Todd Lincoln was a notable guest. Main cottage was demolished in the late 1930s, outbuildings remain.

[2][6]
[798]
[799]
Willowgate Barn Tamworth, New Hampshire 1899–1900 251 Chocorua Lake Rd.

Barn designed for John Sumner Runnells at Willowgate. Located in the Chocorua Lake Basin Historic District.

Willowgate Carriage House / Stable Tamworth, New Hampshire 1899–1900 251 Chocorua Lake Rd.

Carriage house/stable designed for John Sumner Runnells at Willowgate. Converted into a cottage in the 1940s. Located in the Chocorua Lake Basin Historic District.

Willowgate Well House Tamworth, New Hampshire 1899–1900 251 Chocorua Lake Rd.

Well house designed for John Sumner Runnells at Willowgate. Located in the Chocorua Lake Basin Historic District.

Ravenscleft Seal Harbor, Maine 1899–1903 75 Cooksey Dr.

House designed for James Ford Rhodes and his wife Ann Card. Crawford Howell Toy was a frequent guest. Mark Hanna and Theodore Roosevelt were other notable guests.

[1][2]
[6]
[772]
[800]
[801]
Ravenscleft Carriage House Seal Harbor, Maine 1899–1903 75 Cooksey Dr.

Carriage house designed for James Ford Rhodes and his wife Ann Card at Ravenscleft.

Ravenscleft Stable Seal Harbor, Maine 1899–1903 75 Cooksey Dr.

Stable designed for James Ford Rhodes and his wife Ann Card at Ravenscleft.

F. W. Ward House Burlington, Vermont 1901–1902 396 Main St.

House designed for Frederick Wood Ward. Located in the Main Street–College Street Historic District.

[2][6]
Cow Cove Northeast Harbor, Maine 1902 79 Peabody Dr.

Cottage designed for Peabody's brother Francis Greenwood Peabody.

[2][6]
[772]
[802]
Cow Cove Carriage House Northeast Harbor, Maine 1902 79 Peabody Dr. (44°17′45.7″N 68°16′38.6″W / 44.296028°N 68.277389°W / 44.296028; -68.277389 (Cow Cove Carriage House))

Carriage house designed for Francis Greenwood Peabody at Cow Cove.

Cow Cove "Little House" Northeast Harbor, Maine 1902 79 Peabody Dr. (44°17′46.7″N 68°16′42.3″W / 44.296306°N 68.278417°W / 44.296306; -68.278417)

Guest house named the "Little House" designed for Francis Greenwood Peabody at Cow Cove.

Drexel Estate Islesboro, Maine 1903 299 Drexel Ln.

Estate designed for George W. C. Drexel, son of Anthony Joseph Drexel. Also known as "Coombs Bluff" and "Gripsholm Manor." Owned by John Travolta and Kelly Preston from the 1990s to 2021. Added to the NRHP in 1985.

[1][2]
[6]
[772]
[803]
[804]
Drexel Estate Stable Islesboro, Maine 1903 299 Drexel Ln. (44°20′38.1″N 68°52′50.0″W / 44.343917°N 68.880556°W / 44.343917; -68.880556 (Drexel Estate Stable))

Stable designed for George W. C. Drexel at his Drexel Estate.

Drexel Estate Icehouse Islesboro, Maine 1903 299 Drexel Ln. (44°20′38.2″N 68°52′51.2″W / 44.343944°N 68.880889°W / 44.343944; -68.880889 (Drexel Estate Icehouse))

Icehouse designed for George W. C. Drexel at his Drexel Estate.

Leighton-Brewster Boathouse Dublin, New Hampshire 1903 397 W Lake Rd. (42°54′39.4″N 72°5′11.6″W / 42.910944°N 72.086556°W / 42.910944; -72.086556 (Leighton-Brewster Boathouse))

Boathouse designed for George B. Leighton on Dublin Pond. Located in the Dublin Village Historic District.

[778]
L. Biddle Stable Islesboro, Maine 1903 Stable designed for Livingston Biddle at Ryder's Cove. [6]
[772]
Westward Way Northeast Harbor, Maine 1903 30 S Shore Rd.

House designed for Abby Blake Blodgett, the widow of William Tilden Blodgett, and their daughter Eleanor. Landscape designed by Beatrix Farrand. Eleanor hired the firm to design alterations in 1912 and 1916. Later owned by Roger Milliken and his wife.

[1][2]
[6]
[772]
[805]
[806]
Westward Way Carriage House Northeast Harbor, Maine 1903 30 S Shore Rd.

Carriage house designed for Abby Blake Blodgett at Westward Way.

Louis Stoddard House New Haven, Connecticut 1905 700 Prospect St.

House designed for Louis Ezekiel Stoddard. Now Rosary Hall at Albertus Mangus College. Located in the Prospect Hill Historic District.

[1][6]
[807]
Highwoods Northeast Harbor, Maine 1905–1906 Asticou Rd.

House designed for Richard Hickman Harte and his wife Maria H. Ames (daughter of Oakes Ames). Also designed alterations in 1912. Burned down in 1970. Base of the front chimney remains and is incorporated into current house on the site.

[2][6]
[772]
Stevens Cottage Newport, New Hampshire 1906–1907 94 Rowell Rd.

Cottage designed for Mary Haven Stevens.

[2][6]
Stevens Cottage Water Tower Newport, New Hampshire 1906–1907 94 Rowell Rd.

Water tower designed for Mary Haven Stevens at her cottage. Demolished.

Victor M. Tyler House New Haven, Connecticut 1906–1907 760 Prospect St.

House designed for Victor M. Tyler. Now McAuliffe Hall at Albertus Mangus College. Located in the Prospect Hill Historic District.

[1][6]
[807]
[808]
Victor M. Tyler Carriage House New Haven, Connecticut 1906–1907 849 Winchester Ave.

Carriage house designed for Victor M. Tyler. Now Walsh Hall at Albertus Mangus College.

H. Darlington House New Haven, Connecticut 1907 House designed for H. Darlington. Location and status unknown. [1]
G. G. Williams House Farmington, Connecticut 1907 49 Mountain Spring Rd.

House designed for George Goodwin Williams. Later owned by Rolf D. Bibow. Located on The Country Club of Farmington golf course.

[2][6]
[809]
[810]
G. G. Williams Cottage Farmington, Connecticut 1907 51 Mountain Spring Rd.

Cottage designed for George Goodwin Williams.

G. G. Williams Garage Farmington, Connecticut 1907 51 Mountain Spring Rd.

Garage designed for George Goodwin Williams.

Hayes Q. Trowbridge House New Haven, Connecticut 1907–1908 100 Edgehill Rd.

House designed for Hayes Quincy Trowbridge. Located in the Prospect Hill Historic District.

[1][6]
[807]
[811]
[812]
[813]
Hayes Q. Trowbridge Carriage House New Haven, Connecticut 1907–1908 1 Reservoir St.

Carriage house designed for Hayes Quincy Trowbridge. Located in the Prospect Hill Historic District.

Willowgate Playhouse Tamworth, New Hampshire 1910 251 Chocorua Lake Rd.

Playhouse designed for John Sumner Runnells at Willowgate. Located in the Chocorua Lake Basin Historic District.

[799]
Willowgate Pony Barn Tamworth, New Hampshire 1910 251 Chocorua Lake Rd.

Pony barn designed for John Sumner Runnells at Willowgate. Located in the Chocorua Lake Basin Historic District.

Adee Memorial Boathouse New Haven, Connecticut 1911 74 Forbes Ave.

Boathouse designed for Yale University. Situated along Quinnipiac River and New Haven Harbor. Demolished in 2007. The Canal Dock Boathouse has some remaining pieces of the Adee Boathouse on display.

[1][2]
[6]
[814]
[815]
[816]
Bangor High School Bangor, Maine 1912 185 Harlow St.

High school designed for the City of Bangor. Located in the Great Fire of 1911 Historic District.

[1][6]
[772]
[817]
[818]
[819]
[820]
Bangor Public Library Bangor, Maine 1912 145 Harlow St.

Library designed for the City of Bangor. Located in the Great Fire of 1911 Historic District. Added to the NRHP in 1984. In 1998, Robert A. M. Stern designed a significant addition to the original building.

[1][6]
[39]
[772]
[818]
[821]
[822]
Exchange Building Bangor, Maine 1912–1913 27 State St.

Building designed for Charles E. Woodward and his wife Marion E. Lyford of the Bangor Real Estate Co. Located in the Great Fire of 1911 Historic District.

[6]
[772]
[823]
[824]
[825]
[826]
Kragsyde Swan's Island, Maine 1982–1990s 260 Red Point Rd.

House of Jane L. Goodrich and Jim Beyor. Exact replica of Kragsyde built to the original blueprints and architectural plans by Peabody & Stearns.

[210]
[282]
[827]
[828]
[829]
[830]

Mid-Atlantic region[edit]

Building Image Location Year Built Notes Ref
Union League Clubhouse New York City, New York 1880 5th Ave. & 39th St.

Clubhouse designed for the Union League Club of New York City. Demolished in 1932 and replaced with the Fifth Avenue Tower.

[1][5]
[6]
[39]
[165]
[831]
[832]
St. Peter's Church in Galilee Monmouth Beach, New Jersey 1880–1881 Ocean Ave.

Moved across the street in 1933. Burned down in 1955.

[1][2]
[833]
United Bank Building New York City, New York 1881 Wall St. & Broadway

Building designed for the First National Bank and the Bank of the Republic. Also designed later alterations and additions. Demolished and replaced in 1932 with 2 Wall Street.

[1][5]
[39]
[40]
[834]
[835]
Thomas M. Carnegie House Point Breeze, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania c. 1882 Penn Ave. & Dunfermline St.

House and stable designed for Thomas M. Carnegie. Demolished.

[14]
Elberon Casino Elberon, New Jersey 1883 Lincoln Ave.

Was the site of the Elberon Casino Invitation which featured tennis players Robert Livingston Beeckman, Howard Taylor, and Oliver Campbell. Burned down in 1959.

[1][2]
[283]
Lawrenceville School Lawrenceville, New Jersey 1884–1895 Peabody & Stearns designed the original campus of the school, which included Memorial Hall, a gymnasium, the headmaster's house, five dorms, and future plans for the chapel. [1][5]
[6]
[39]
[836]
[837]
[838]
Cleve House Lawrenceville, New Jersey 1885 (40°17′44.9″N 74°43′40.8″W / 40.295806°N 74.728000°W / 40.295806; -74.728000 (Lawrenceville School Cleve House))

Designed for the Lawrenceville School. Named for John Cleve Green. Located in the Lawrence Township Historic District.

Dickinson House Lawrenceville, New Jersey 1885 (40°17′48.5″N 74°43′45.3″W / 40.296806°N 74.729250°W / 40.296806; -74.729250 (Lawrenceville School Dickinson House))

Designed for the Lawrenceville School. Named for Martha Dickinson, daughter of Jonathan Dickinson and great-grandmother of John Cleve Green. Located in the Lawrence Township Historic District.

Foundation House Lawrenceville, New Jersey 1885 (40°17′44.3″N 74°43′51.1″W / 40.295639°N 74.730861°W / 40.295639; -74.730861 (Lawrenceville School Foundation House))

The headmaster's house at the Lawrenceville School. Located in the Lawrence Township Historic District.

Griswold House Lawrenceville, New Jersey 1885 (40°17′46.8″N 74°43′40.8″W / 40.296333°N 74.728000°W / 40.296333; -74.728000 (Lawrenceville School Griswold House))

Designed for the Lawrenceville School. Named for Sarah Helen Griswold, wife of John Cleve Green. Located in the Lawrence Township Historic District.

Lawrenceville School Bath House Lawrenceville, New Jersey 1885 (40°17′44.9″N 74°43′37.8″W / 40.295806°N 74.727167°W / 40.295806; -74.727167)

Bath house designed for the Lawrenceville School. Served as a bath house until 1902.

Memorial Hall Lawrenceville, New Jersey 1885 (40°17′41.8″N 74°43′45.0″W / 40.294944°N 74.729167°W / 40.294944; -74.729167 (Lawrenceville School Memorial Hall))

Part of the Lawrenceville School campus. Renamed Woods Memorial Hall in 2010. Located in the Lawrence Township Historic District.

Woodhull House Lawrenceville, New Jersey 1885 (40°17′48.3″N 74°43′42.6″W / 40.296750°N 74.728500°W / 40.296750; -74.728500 (Lawrenceville School Woodhull House))

Designed for the Lawrenceville School. Named for Henry Woodhull Green, brother of John Cleve Green. Destroyed by fire in 1892, rebuilt the same year. Located in the Lawrence Township Historic District.

George F. Baker Stable Monmouth Beach, New Jersey 1886 Ocean Ave.
Stable designed for George Fisher Baker at "Seaverge" his summer cottage. Location and status unknown.
[2]
Cragston Dairy Building Highland Falls, New York 1888–1889 Dairy building designed for J. P. Morgan at his Cragston estate. Now a private residence. Location unknown. [2][6]
Cragston Second House Highland Falls, New York 1888–1889 Second house designed for J. P. Morgan at his Cragston estate. Location and status unknown. [2]
Kennedy House Lawrenceville, New Jersey 1889 (40°17′46.7″N 74°43′46.8″W / 40.296306°N 74.729667°W / 40.296306; -74.729667 (Lawrenceville School Kennedy House))

Designed for the Lawrenceville School. Located in the Lawrence Township Historic District.

[6]
[836]
[837]
Central Railroad of New Jersey Terminal Jersey City, New Jersey 1889 Liberty State Park (40°42′26.1″N 74°2′6.2″W / 40.707250°N 74.035056°W / 40.707250; -74.035056 (Central Railroad of New Jersey Terminal))
Terminal designed for the Central Railroad of New Jersey. Added to the NRHP in 1975.
[1][6]
[39]
[839]
[840]
Central Building New York City, New York 1890–1891 Liberty St. & West St.

Central building designed for the Central Railroad of New Jersey. Demolished and replaced with the World Trade Center. Now the site of the National September 11 Memorial & Museum.

[1][5]
[6]
[39]
[40]
[841]
Lakewood Depot Station Lakewood, New Jersey 1892 Depot station designed for the Central Railroad of New Jersey. Burned on the morning of May 30, 1939. [1][6]
[842]
Pinecrest Elkins, West Virginia 1892 4 Kerens Hill

Summer home designed for Richard C. Kerens. Added to the NRHP in 1979.

[1][2]
[6]
[843]
Pinecrest Gatehouse and Caretaker's Cottage Elkins, West Virginia 1892 Kerens Hill

Gatehouse and caretaker's cottage designed for Richard C. Kerens at Pinecrest. Moved in 1957. Now a private residence.

Pinecrest Stable Elkins, West Virginia 1892 Kerens Hill

Stable designed for Richard C. Kerens at Pinecrest.

Upper House Lawrenceville, New Jersey 1892 (40°17′42.7″N 74°43′48.9″W / 40.295194°N 74.730250°W / 40.295194; -74.730250 (Lawrenceville School Upper House))

Designed for the Lawrenceville School. Located in the Lawrence Township Historic District.

[5][6]
[836]
[837]
George W. Childs Drexel House Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1893 1726 Locust St.

House designed for George William Childs Drexel, son of Anthony Drexel. Sold to Edward Bok in 1924. Now the Curtis Institute of Music. Located in the Center City West Commercial Historic District.

[2][6]
[165]
[844]
[845]
[846]
Volta Bureau Georgetown, Washington, D.C. 1893 1537 35th St. NW

Building commissioned by Alexander Graham Bell as his first formal research laboratory. Now the headquarters of the Alexander Graham Bell Association for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing. Added to the NRHP in 1972. Located in the Georgetown Historic District.

[6]
[165]
[847]
[848]
[849]
Ashwood Villanova, Pennsylvania 1894 Ashwood Rd.

House designed for Jacob Mendes Da Costa. Destroyed by a fire in the 1960s.

[1][2]
[6]
[850]
Ashwood Barn Villanova, Pennsylvania 1894 249 Hilldale Rd.

Barn designed for Jacob Mendes Da Costa at Ashwood. Now a private residence known as "The Stable." Renovated in 1979.

Ashwood Farm House Villanova, Pennsylvania 1894 Farm house designed for Jacob Mendes Da Costa at Ashwood. Location and status unknown.
Ashwood Gatehouse Villanova, Pennsylvania 1894 801 Lancaster Ave. (40°2′10.4″N 75°20′56.4″W / 40.036222°N 75.349000°W / 40.036222; -75.349000 (Ashwood Gatehouse))

Gatehouse designed for Jacob Mendes Da Costa at Ashwood. Now a branch of Malvern Bank.

Ashwood Stable Villanova, Pennsylvania 1894 Stable designed for Jacob Mendes Da Costa at Ashwood. Location and status unknown.
Charles L. Colby House New York City, New York 1894 8 E 69th St.

House designed for Charles L. Colby and his wife Anna. Sold to William D. Sloane and his wife Emily Thorn Vanderbilt in 1897. Later transferred to their daughter Florence Adele Sloane and her husband James A. Burden. Was owned by the Consulate General of Sweden, now the Columbus Citizens Foundation. Located in the Upper East Side Historic District.

[1][6]
[165]
[851]
[852]
Edith Memorial Chapel Lawrenceville, New Jersey 1894 (40°17′42.9″N 74°43′42.5″W / 40.295250°N 74.728472°W / 40.295250; -74.728472 (Lawrenceville School Edith Memorial Chapel))

Chapel designed for the Lawrenceville School. Named for John Cleve Green's daughter, Edith, who died as a child. Located in the Lawrence Township Historic District.

[1][5]
[836]
John J. Emery House New York City, New York 1894 5 E 68th St.

House designed for John J. Emery, son of Gardner Colby and father of John J. Emery Jr. Interior alterations designed by Ogden Codman in 1911. Now houses the Consulate General of Indonesia, New York. Located in the Upper East Side Historic District.

[1][6]
[165]
[851]
[852]
[853]
[854]
[855]
[856]
Marianna Ogden House New York City, New York 1894 266 Madison Ave.

House designed for Marianna Ogden, widow of William B. Ogden. Inherited by Ogden's niece, Marion Arnot Haven, and her husband Forsyth Wickes. Was later the headquarters of the National Automobile Chamber of Commerce. Demolished in 1923.

[1][6]
[165]
[857]
Fahnestock Mausoleum The Bronx, New York 1895 Oak Hill Plot, Section 83 (40°53′19.4″N 73°52′24.3″W / 40.888722°N 73.873417°W / 40.888722; -73.873417 (Fahnestock Mausoleum))

Mausoleum designed for Harris C. Fahnestock and his family at Woodlawn Cemetery. Glass mosaics designed by Louis Comfort Tiffany.

[858]
[859]
Nathaniel Holmes House Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 1895 Morewood Ave. & 5th Ave.

House designed for Nathaniel Holmes and his wife Susan. Demolished.

[6]
[14]
[860]
[861]
Edward H. Binns House Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 1896 Fair Oaks St. & Murray Hill Ave. (1225 Murray Hill Ave.)

House designed for Edward H. Binns. Demolished.

[862]
Ferguson House Shadyside, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 1896 5001 5th Ave.

House designed for Edmund Morewood Ferguson. Demolished.

[1][6]
[860]
[863]
Harvey Childs House Shadyside, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 1896 718 Devonshire St.

House designed for Harvey Childs. Now the Chancellor's Residence at the University of Pittsburgh. Leon Falk Jr. was a notable resident. Designated a Pittsburgh Historic Landmark in 1973 by the PHLF.

[1][6]
[864]
Sarah Drexel Fell-Rensselaer House Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1896–1898 1801 Walnut St.

House designed for Sarah Drexel Fell-Rensselaer, daughter of Anthony Joseph Drexel and wife of Alexander Van Rensselaer. Built by Woodbury & Leighton. Located in the Center City West Commercial Historic District.

[1][6]
[325]
[844]
[846]
[865]
Durbin Horne House Point Breeze, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 1897 7418 Penn Ave.

House designed for Durbin Horne, son of Joseph Horne. Now houses the Reformed Presbyterian Theological Seminary.

[1][6]
[866]
[867]
[868]
[869]
Durbin Horne Stable Point Breeze, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 1897 Stable designed for Durbin Horne.
Joseph Horne Company Department Store Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 1898–1900 501 Penn Ave.

Building designed for the Joseph Horne Company. Designated a Pittsburgh Historic Landmark by the PHLF in 1982.

[6]
[870]
[871]
[872]
Anna L. Snowden House Haverford, Pennsylvania 1899 House designed for Anna L. Snowden. Location and status unknown. [873]
H. C. Frick House Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 1899 House designed for Henry Clay Frick. Location and status unknown. [874]
[875]
Rydal Station House Rydal, Pennsylvania 1899 Country house and stable designed near Rydal station. Location and status unknown. [876]
Curtis Publishing Co. Building Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1899–1900 6th St. & Arch St.

Building designed for the Curtis Publishing Company. Demolished.

[1][6]
[877]
[878]
[879]
Oakley Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1899–1900 500 W Moreland Ave.

House designed for Walter Lewis Ross (brother of Charley Ross) and his wife Julia Peabody Chandler on land bought from Henry H. Houston. House built by William J. Patterson. Located in the Chestnut Hill Historic District.

[1][2]
[6]
[880]
[881]
[882]
Oakley Carriage House Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1899–1900 511 W Mermaid Ln.

Carriage house designed for Walter Lewis Ross at Oakley. Now a private residence. Located in the Chestnut Hill Historic District.

East Liberty Market East Liberty, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 1900 5900 Baum Blvd.

Beaux-Arts city market financed by the Mellon family of Pittsburgh. Added to the NRHP in 1977. Designated a Pittsburgh Historic Landmark in 1988 by the PHLF. Now known as Motor Square Garden and is headquarters of the American Automobile Association Pittsburgh branch.

[1][6]
[883]
[884]
[885]
H. G. Brown House Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 1900 5050 Forbes St.

House designed for Henry Graham Brown. Demolished.

[1][6]
[869]
[886]
[887]
Krisheim Gatehouse Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1900 604 Gate House Ln.

Gatehouse designed for George Woodward at Krisheim, ten years before the main house was built. Located in the Chestnut Hill Historic District.

[2][6]
[882]
[888]
Graphic Arts Gallery Building Buffalo, New York 1901 Designed the Gallery of the Graphic Arts building for the 1901 Pan-American Exposition. Demolished after the exposition. [1]
[889]
[890]
[891]
Horticultural Building Buffalo, New York 1901 Designed the Horticultural Building for the 1901 Pan-American Exposition. Demolished after the exposition.
Mines Building Buffalo, New York 1901 Designed the Mines Building for the 1901 Pan-American Exposition. Demolished after the exposition.
Walter Baker & Co. Cocoa and Chocolate Exhibit Buffalo, New York 1901 Designed Walter Baker & Co.'s Cocoa and Chocolate Exhibit at the 1901 Pan-American Exposition. Demolished after the exposition.
Laurento Estate Villanova, Pennsylvania 1901 Darby Paoli Rd.

House designed for Craig Biddle. Original landscape designed by the Olmsted Brothers, later by Ellen Biddle Shipman. Renamed "Inver House" after being sold to Archibald Barklie in 1911. Edith Wilson was a notable guest. Demolished in 1983.

[1][2]
[6]
[892]
[893]
[894]
[895]
Laurento Stable Villanova, Pennsylvania 1901 Darby Paoli Rd.

Stable designed for Craig Biddle at Laurento. Demolished in the 1980s.

Laurento Entry Gate Villanova, Pennsylvania 1901 Darby Paoli Rd. (40°01′21.1″N 75°23′33.7″W / 40.022528°N 75.392694°W / 40.022528; -75.392694 (Laurento Entry Gate))

Entry gate designed for Craig Biddle at Laurento. One of only two remaining structures from the original Laurento estate.

Laurento Roadside Watering Trough Villanova, Pennsylvania 1901 Darby Paoli Rd. (40°01′23.6″N 75°23′39.4″W / 40.023222°N 75.394278°W / 40.023222; -75.394278 (Laurento Roadside Watering Trough))

Roadside watering trough designed for Craig Biddle at Laurento. One of only two remaining structures from the original Laurento estate.

Penshurst Narberth, Pennsylvania 1901 243 Conshohocken State Rd.

Estate designed for Percival Roberts Jr., member of the U.S. Steel Corporation board of directors. Landscape designed by the Olmsted Brothers, interior designed by Irving & Casson. Demolished in 1939.

[1][2]
[6]
[39]
[94]
[893]
[896]
[897]
Penshurst Chapel Narberth, Pennsylvania 1901 Fairview Rd. & Conshohocken State Rd.

Chapel designed for Percival Roberts Jr. at Penshurst. Demolished.

Penshurst Dairy Barns Narberth, Pennsylvania 1901 Dairy barns designed for Percival Roberts Jr. at Penshurst. Demolished.
Penshurst Electrical Plant Narberth, Pennsylvania 1901 Mill Creek Rd.

Electrical plant designed for Percival Roberts Jr. at Penshurst. Located along Mill Creek. Demolished.

Penshurst Gate Narberth, Pennsylvania 1901 243 Conshohocken State Rd. (40°01′42.1″N 75°15′35.9″W / 40.028361°N 75.259972°W / 40.028361; -75.259972 (Penshurst Gate))

Gate designed for Percival Roberts Jr. One of the few surviving structures from the original Penshurst estate.

Penshurst Greenhouse Complex Narberth, Pennsylvania 1901 243 Conshohocken State Rd.

Greenhouse complex designed for Percival Roberts Jr. at Penshurst. Demolished.

Penshurst Stables Narberth, Pennsylvania 1901 Stables designed for Percival Roberts Jr. at Penshurst. Demolished.
Penshurst Water Tower Narberth, Pennsylvania 1901 243 Conshohocken State Rd.

Water tower designed for Percival Roberts Jr. at Penshurst. Demolished.

Remsen Messler House Shadyside, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 1902 651 Morewood Ave.

House designed for Remsen Varick Messler. Later owned by John S. Dickson.

[1][6]
[14]
[869]
[898]
Wootton Double Cottages Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania 1902 401 S Bryn Mawr Ave.

Two cottages designed for George W. C. Drexel to be the servant's quarters at his Wootton estate. Built by George F. Payne & Co.

[2][6]
[899]
Lawrenceville Gymnasium Lawrenceville, New Jersey 1902–1903 Gymnasium building designed for the Lawrenceville School. Demolished. [5]
[836]
[900]
Braemar Tarrytown, New York 1906 99 White Plains Rd.

House designed for Mary Louise Cook, widow of locally prominent judge Martin Rumsey Miller. A 1964 fire destroyed most of the original interior.

[1][6]
[901]
[902]
Douglas Steward House Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 1907 1025 Western Ave.

House designed for Douglas Steward. Demolished.

[903]
Derry Brusk Abington, Pennsylvania 1908 Old York Rd.
House designed for Richard Hickman Harte and his wife Maria H. Ames (daughter of Oakes Ames). Nearly identical to the design of Harte's Northeast Harbor cottage "Highwoods," also designed by the firm. Landscape designed by the Olmsted Brothers. Demolished.
[2][6]
[904]
[905]
Derry Brusk Garage Abington, Pennsylvania 1908 Old York Rd.

Garage designed for Richard Hickman Harte at Derry Brusk. Demolished.

Krisheim Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1910 7514 McCallum St.

House designed for George Woodward and his wife Gertrude Houston, daughter of Henry H. Houston. Landscape designed by James Frederick Dawson of the Olmsted Brothers. Located in the Chestnut Hill Historic District.

[2][6]
[882]
[906]
[907]
[908]
[909]
Westview Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania 1917–1919 21 Shannon Cir.

House designed for Livingston L. Biddle, father of Livingston L. Biddle Jr. and grandson of Anthony Joseph Drexel. Metalwork by Samuel Yellin.

[1][2]
[6]
[893]
[910]
Westview Carriage House Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania 1917–1919 21 Shannon Cir. (40°0′34.3″N 75°19′59.4″W / 40.009528°N 75.333167°W / 40.009528; -75.333167 (Westview Carriage House))

Carriage house designed for Livingston L. Biddle at Westview.

Thomas S. Blair House Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania before 1898 718 Bidwell Ave.

House designed for Thomas Shoenberger Blair. Demolished.

[869]


Missouri[edit]

Building Image Location Year Built Notes Ref
C. P. Burdick House St. Louis 1878 4252 Prairie Ave.

House designed for C. P. Burdick. Demolished.

[1]
Pickwick Theater Midtown, St. Louis 1879 2621 Washington Ave. & Jefferson Ave.

Theater designed for Wayman C. McCreery. Bought by the St. Louis Brass Co. in 1904 and remodeled into a warehouse building. Demolished.

[911]
[912]
Saint Louis School and Museum of Fine Arts Downtown West, St. Louis 1879 1815 Locust St.

Designed for Washington University and commissioned by Wayman Crow. Demolished in 1919.

[1]
[39]
[913]
[914]
[915]
Unitarian Church of the Messiah Midtown, St. Louis 1880 508 N Garrison Ave.

Designed for William Greenleaf Eliot. Demolished in 1987. Added to the NRHP in 1980 and removed in 1994 due to demolition. Listed as a St. Louis Landmark.

[1][6]
[39]
[912]
[914]
[916]
[917]
Henry L. Newman House Central West End, St. Louis 1881 21 Vandeventer Pl.

House designed for Henry Levi Newman. Later sold to Daniel Catlin. Alice Roosevelt was a notable guest. Demolished in 1950.

[1]
[914]
[918]
[919]
W. G. Eliot House St. Louis 1881 2660 Washington Ave.

House designed for William Greenleaf Eliot. Demolished.

[1]
Turner Building St. Louis 1882 304 N 8th St.

Building designed for the Turner Real Estate and Building Company. Built by the Norcross Brothers, supervised by Pierce P. Furber. Demolished in 1902.

[1][5]
[39]
[912]
[914]
[920]
[921]
S. H. Leathe House Downtown West, St. Louis 1883 2700 Lucas Ave.

House designed for Samuel H. Leathe. Demolished.

[1]
[922]
Isaac W. Morton House Central West End, St. Louis 1884 49 Vandeventer Pl. & Cabanne Ave.

House designed for Isaac Wyman Morton. Demolished.

[1][6]
[918]
[923]
Isaac W. Morton Stable Central West End, St. Louis 1884 49 Vandeventer Pl. & Cabanne Ave.

Stable designed for Isaac Wyman Morton. Demolished.

St. Louis Club House Midtown, St. Louis 1884–1885 T. E. Huntley Ave. & Locust Blvd.

Clubhouse designed for the St. Louis Club. Supervised by Pierce P. Furber. Demolished

[1]
[39]
[912]
[914]
[915]
All Souls’ Unitarian Church Kansas City 1885 3425 Baltimore Ave.

Unitarian church. Lester Mondale and Leon Milton Birkhead were notable ministers. Demolished.

[924]
Charles A. Lee House Gate District, St. Louis 1885 3439 Lafayette Ave.

House designed for Charles Avery Lee.

[925]
Dr. George Ashe Bronson House Midtown, St. Louis 1885 3201 Washington Ave.

House designed with Pierce P. Furber (Peabody, Stearns & Furber) for prominent local dentist Dr. George Ashe Bronson as both an office and as a residence. Added to the NRHP in 2015.

[1]
[736]
[926]
George Blackman House West End, St. Louis 1885 5843 Bartmer Ave.

House designed for George Blackman.

[925]
[927]
Alvah Mansur House Midtown, St. Louis 1885–1886 3700–3704 Lindell Blvd.

House designed for Alvah Mansur with Pierce P. Furber (Peabody, Stearns & Furber). Sold to the Queen's Daughters as an annex to its boarding home for women. Burned down in 1924.

[1][6]
[928]
[929]
[930]
Alvah Mansur Stable Midtown, St. Louis 1885–1886 Stable designed for Alvah Mansur. Demolished.
G. S. Meyers House St. Louis 1886 914 N Grand Blvd.

House designed for G. S. Meyers. Demolished.

[1]
[926]
J. E. Erhardt House St. Louis 1886 928 N Grand Blvd.

House designed for J. E. Erhardt. Demolished.

[1]
[926]
Robert Moore House Central West End, St. Louis 1886 61 Vandeventer Pl.

House designed for Robert Moore. Demolished.

[1]
[918]
St. Louis National Bank Building St. Louis 1886 207 N Broadway

Building designed for the St. Louis National Bank. Altheimer & Rawlings Investment Co. was a notable tenant. Demolished and replaced with One Metropolitan Square.

[6]
[931]
[932]
[933]
Charles F. Morse House Hyde Park, Kansas City 1887 200 E 36th St.

House designed for Charles Fessenden Morse. Demolished.

[1][6]
[926]
[934]
[935]
Charles F. Morse Stable Hyde Park, Kansas City 1887 Stable designed for Charles Fessenden Morse. Demolished.
Charles F. Morse Coal and Wood Shed Hyde Park, Kansas City 1887 Coal and wood shed designed for Charles Fessenden Morse. Demolished.
D. E. Evans House Hamilton Heights, St. Louis 1887 5648 Easton Ave.

House designed for David E. Evans. Demolished.

[936]
Thomas Howard House Central West End, St. Louis 1887 33 Vandeventer Pl.

House designed for Thomas Howard. Demolished in 1950.

[1]
[914]
[918]
[937]
Henry L. Newman House Central West End, St. Louis 1889 21 Westmoreland Pl.

House designed for Henry L. Newman with Pierce P. Furber (Peabody, Stearns & Furber). Demolished.

[1]
[914]
[926]
[938]
The Nurses’ Home Peabody–Darst–Webbe, St. Louis 1889 1224 Dillon St.

The Nurses' Home at the St. Louis Training School for Nurses. Named the William G. Eliot Home for Nurses in honor of William Greenleaf Eliot, one of the founders of the School. Demolished.

[939]
Security Building St. Louis 1890–1892 319 N 4th St.

Building designed with Pierce P. Furber (Peabody, Stearns & Furber). Housed the Noonday Club. Added to the NRHP in 2000. The first historic building in Missouri to receive LEED Silver certification. Listed as a St. Louis Landmark.

[1][6]
[39]
[40]
[915]
[940]
[941]
Corinne Dyer House Central West End, St. Louis 1892 38 Westmoreland Pl.

House designed with Pierce P. Furber (Peabody, Stearns & Furber) for Corinne Dyer, granddaughter of Auguste Chouteau. Later the residence of Dwight F. Davis. Located in the Portland and Westmoreland Places historic district.

[1]
[914]
[926]
[938]
Col. Edward C. Rowse House Lafayette Square, St. Louis 1892 10 Benton Pl.

House designed for Col. Edward C. Rowse. Sold to Frederick William Lehmann in 1898 who lived there for 30 years. Now the Lehmann House Bed & Breakfast. Located in the Lafayette Square Historic District.

[1]
[914]
[942]
Lindell Methodist Episcopal Church St. Louis 1892 SW corner of Lindell Blvd. & Newstead Ave.

Church designed with Pierce P. Furber (Peabody, Stearns & Furber). Disassembled and moved in 1913.

[6]
[943]
The Collier Building St. Louis 1892–1893 4th St. & Washington Ave.

Building designed with Pierce P. Furber (Peabody, Stearns & Furber). Demolished in 1963 and replaced with the Bel-Air East Motel.

[944]
[945]
[946]
[947]
John T. Davis House Central West End, St. Louis 1893–1894 17 Westmoreland Pl.

House designed for John Tilden Davis. Later the residence of his son Dwight F. Davis. Landscape designed by Frederick Law Olmsted. Located in the Portland and Westmoreland Places historic district.

[1][6]
[39]
[914]
[938]
[948]
John T. Davis Stable Central West End, St. Louis 1893–1894 17 Westmoreland Pl. (38°38′47.0″N 90°16′4.7″W / 38.646389°N 90.267972°W / 38.646389; -90.267972)

Stable designed for John Tilden Davis.

Nelsonia Normandy 1893–1895 6897 Natural Bridge Rd.

House designed for Louis Cass Nelson. Demolished in 1938.

[1]
[926]
D. R. Wolfe House Central West End, St. Louis 1894 4045 Washington Ave.

House designed with Pierce P. Furber (Peabody, Stearns & Furber) for Daniel Reece Wolfe. Now the Central West End Bed & Breakfast.

[926]
[949]
George M. Maverick House Midtown, St. Louis 1894 2726 Locust St.

House designed with Pierce P. Furber (Peabody, Stearns & Furber) for George Madison Maverick (son of Samuel Maverick). Was the childhood home of Lola Maverick Lloyd. Demolished.

[950]
[951]
[952]
St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad Depot Springfield 1894 Railroad depot designed for the St. Louis–San Francisco Railway. Known as Frisco Station. Demolished in 1977. [1][6]
T. S. McPheeters House Grand Center, St. Louis 1894 3824 Delmar Blvd.

House designed for Thomas Shanks McPheeters. Demolished.

[1]
American Telephone and Telegraph Building St. Louis 1904 Exhibition building designed for the American Telephone and Telegraph Company at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition. Demolished after the fair. [1]
[926]

Other locations[edit]

Building Image Location Year Built Notes Ref
Cutler Hall Colorado Springs, Colorado 1877–1880 912 N Cascade Ave.

First building on the Colorado College campus. Originally called Palmer Hall named for William Jackson Palmer. Added to the NRHP and Colorado State Register of Historic Properties in 1986.

[1][2]
[5]
[953]
[954]
Edgar Ensign House Colorado Springs, Colorado 1879 1409 Nevada Ave.
House designed for Edgar Tarbell Ensign. Demolished.
[1][6]
[954]
Edgar Ensign Barn Colorado Springs, Colorado 1879 1409 Nevada Ave.
Barn designed for Edgar Tarbell Ensign. Demolished.
The Church of Our Father Portland, Oregon 1879 Broadway & Yamhill St.

Thomas Lamb Eliot was the first pastor. Damaged by a fire in 1891. Demolished and replaced by the First Unitarian Church of Portland in 1924.

[955]
[956]
[957]
L. J. Leiter House Chicago, Illinois 1881 Superior St. & St. Clair St. & Pine St.

House designed for L. J. Leiter. Demolished.

[1]
S. C. Bartlett House Peoria, Illinois 1882 406 N Madison Ave.

House designed for Samuel C. Bartlett of S. C. Bartlett & Co. Demolished.

[1]
U.S. Signal Station El Paso County, Colorado 1882 Signal station designed with Pierce P. Furber (Peabody, Stearns & Furber) at the summit of Pikes Peak. Demolished in 1964. [2]
[958]
The Antlers Colorado Springs, Colorado 1883 Cascade Ave.

Hotel designed with Pierce P. Furber (Peabody, Stearns & Furber) for William Jackson Palmer. Katharine Lee Bates was a guest in 1893 and wrote America the Beautiful (originally titled Pikes Peak) while in her room at the hotel. Burned down in October 1898.

[1][2]
[39]
[959]
[960]
[961]
Charles W. Bingham House Cleveland, Ohio 1883 2445 Euclid Ave.
House designed for Cleveland businessman Charles William Bingham. Alterations in 1894 by Frank Barnum and 1918 by Abram Garfield. Demolished. Now the site of Cleveland State University.
[1][6]
[918]
[962]
Charles W. Bingham Bridge Cleveland, Ohio 1883 Bridge designed for Charles William Bingham. Demolished.
Charles W. Bingham Cottage Cleveland, Ohio 1883 Cottage designed for Charles William Bingham. Demolished.
Charles W. Bingham Cow Barn Cleveland, Ohio 1883 Cow barn designed for Charles William Bingham. Demolished.
Charles W. Bingham Stable Cleveland, Ohio 1883 Stable designed for Charles William Bingham. Demolished.
Lambert Tree House Chicago, Illinois 1884 620 N Wabash Ave.

House designed for Lambert Tree. Demolished.

[1][6]
[963]
[964]
[965]
Lambert Tree Stable Chicago, Illinois 1884 Stable designed for Lambert Tree. Demolished.
First Unitarian Society Church Madison, Wisconsin 1885 15 E Dayton St.

Church designed for the First Unitarian Society of Madison. Parish house added by Claude and Starck in 1910–1911. Demolished.

[966]
[967]
[968]
[969]
Helena Unitarian Chapel Helena, Wisconsin 1886 Chapel designed for the Helena Unitarian Society. Location and status unknown. [970]
James J. Hill House Saint Paul, Minnesota 1887–1891 240 Summit Ave.

House designed with Pierce P. Furber (Peabody, Stearns & Furber) for James J. Hill. Fired from the project in 1889. Interior designed by Irving and Casson, woodwork by Johannes Kirchmayer, built by A. H. Davenport and Co. Designated a National Historic Landmark in 1961. Added to the NRHP in 1966. Located in the Historic Hill District. The largest residence in Minnesota.

[1][2]
[6]
[39]
[971]
[972]
James J. Hill Carriage House Saint Paul, Minnesota 1887–1891 260 Maiden Ln.

Carriage house designed for James J. Hill at his mansion.

James J. Hill Gatehouse Saint Paul, Minnesota 1887–1891 240 Summit Ave. (44°56′42.0″N 93°6′35.3″W / 44.945000°N 93.109806°W / 44.945000; -93.109806 (James J. Hill Gatehouse))

Gatehouse designed for James J. Hill at his mansion.

Durkee Building Colorado Springs, Colorado 1890 17 E Pikes Peak Ave.

Hardware store designed for Charles Edwin Durkee. Demolished.

[973]
Duluth Union Depot Duluth, Minnesota 1890–1892 506 W Michigan St.

Union station designed with Pierce P. Furber (Peabody, Stearns & Furber). Added to the NRHP in 1971. Now the depot for the North Shore Scenic Railroad and home to the St. Louis County Historical Society and Duluth Art Institute.

[1][6]
[39]
[974]
[975]
[976]
[977]
Machinery Hall Chicago, Illinois 1893 Building designed at the World's Columbian Exposition. Winged victory figures crowning the towers were designed by Adolph Robert Kraus. Notable exhibits and companies featured in this building include White and Middleton, Lowell Machine Shop, E. P. Allis & Co., Nordyke & Marmon, Greenlee Brothers, and Yale & Towne Mfg. Co. Demolished after the fair. [1]
[39]
[40]
[94]
[165]
[978]
[979]
[980]
[981]
Massachusetts State Building Chicago, Illinois 1893 State building at the World's Columbian Exposition. Designed in the style of John Hancock's house, Hancock Manor, on Beacon Hill. Front parlor furnished by the Essex Institute. Demolished after the fair.
The Exposition Memorial Monument Chicago, Illinois 1893 Memorial monument designed at the World's Columbian Exposition. Located at the south end of Grand Canal. M. Arthur Waagen was the sculptor. Demolished after the fair.
Gammell Building Duluth, Minnesota 1893–1894 N 1st Ave W & W Superior St.

Building designed for Emma Amory Gammell. Later occupied by Jacob Mayer Gidding's clothing and fur store. Was "The Mother Store" of J. M. Gidding & Co. Original building largely replaced, one of the original façades remains on W Michigan St.

[6]
[982]
[983]
E. Gammell House Duluth, Minnesota 1894 House designed for Emma Amory Gammell. Location and status unknown. [1]
Cleveland Chamber of Commerce Building Cleveland, Ohio 1897–1899 Beaux-Arts building designed for the Cleveland Chamber of Commerce, was located at Public Square. Held the offices of the New York, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad. Bought by Cleveland College of Western Reserve University in 1939, occupied until 1953. Demolished in 1955. Two sculptured eagles were salvaged from demolition and are located at an entrance to a farm in Bainbridge Township. [1][6]
[39]
[984]
[985]
[986]
[987]
[988]
Plum Orchard Cumberland Island, Georgia 1898 (30°51′21.4″N 81°27′54.9″W / 30.855944°N 81.465250°W / 30.855944; -81.465250 (Plum Orchard))

Estate designed for George Lauder Carnegie, the son of Thomas M. Carnegie. Woodwork by Irving & Casson and glasswork by Louis Comfort Tiffany. Peabody and Stearns also designed significant additions and alterations in 1902–1904 and 1906–1907. Added to the NRHP in 1984.

[1][2]
[989]
[990]
Dungeness Cottage Cumberland Island, Georgia 1899 Cottage designed for Thomas M. Carnegie Jr., son of Thomas M. Carnegie, and his wife Virginia Beggs at his parents' Dungeness estate. Location and status unknown. [990]
Stafford Plantation Cumberland Island, Georgia 1901–1905 Added to the NRHP in 1984. [1]
Liverpool, London & Globe Insurance Co. Building Montreal, Quebec 1902 Rue Saint-Jacques & Côte de la Place d’Armes

Building designed for the Liverpool, London & Globe Insurance Co. Peabody & Stearns were the associate architects to Hutchison & Wood. The firm's only international design. Demolished.

[6]
[991]
Stevens Boat House Spirit Lake, Iowa 1908 Boat house designed for Benjamin F. Stevens, president of Liggett & Myers Tobacco Company. Location and status unknown. [2]
Stevens Cottage Spirit Lake, Iowa 1908 Log cabin cottage designed for Benjamin F. Stevens. Location and status unknown.
Stevens Dairy Buildings Spirit Lake, Iowa 1908 Dairy buildings designed for Benjamin F. Stevens. Location and status unknown.
Stevens Dock Spirit Lake, Iowa 1908 Steam launch dock designed for Benjamin F. Stevens. Location and status unknown.
Stevens Ice House Spirit Lake, Iowa 1908 Ice house designed for Benjamin F. Stevens. Location and status unknown.
Stevens Milk House Spirit Lake, Iowa 1908 Milk house designed for Benjamin F. Stevens. Location and status unknown.
Stevens Smokehouse Spirit Lake, Iowa 1908 Smokehouse designed for Benjamin F. Stevens. Location and status unknown.
Stevens Water Tower Spirit Lake, Iowa 1908 Water tower designed for Benjamin F. Stevens. Location and status unknown.

Additions, remodels, and alterations[edit]

Building Image Location Year Built Notes Ref
Boylston Hall Cambridge, Massachusetts 1870 (42°22′24.0″N 71°07′02.4″W / 42.373333°N 71.117333°W / 42.373333; -71.117333 (Harvard University Boylston Hall))

Harvard University academic building originally built in 1858. Addition of a third floor with mansard roof. Further expanded by Benjamin Thompson in 1959.

[367]
[992]
[993]
South Boston Savings Bank Building South Boston, Massachusetts 1870 368 W Broadway

Remodeling of the bank's existing building.

[994]
[995]
Appleton Chapel Cambridge, Massachusetts 1872 Harvard University chapel. Interior remodeling. Demolished in 1931 and replaced with Memorial Church. [367]
[996]
Cathedral Church of St. Paul Boston, Massachusetts 1873 Tremont St.

Redecorated the interior. Including the redecoration of walls and ceilings by tinting and frescoing. Added to the NRHP and designated a NHL in 1970.

[997]
J. Murray Forbes House Milton, Massachusetts 1873 215 Adams St.

Addition of a third floor, ell, and interior alterations. Original house designed by Isaiah Rogers in 1833. Designated a National Historic Landmark and added to the NRHP in 1966.

[218]
Moraine Farm House Beverly, Massachusetts 1874 729 Cabot St. (42°34′59.8″N 70°53′55.0″W / 42.583278°N 70.898611°W / 42.583278; -70.898611 (Moraine Farm House))

Designed a major addition to the original 1840 farmhouse. Transformed the original farmhouse residence to a workers dormitory. Also designed a two-story addition, extended porch wing by two bays, and added two bay cross gable in 1907.

[998]
Coddington School Quincy, Massachusetts 1878 Repairs designed for the old Coddington School. Demolished and replaced in 1909 by the new Coddington School. [999]
The Evergreens Dining Room Ceiling Amherst, Massachusetts 1880s 232 Main St.

Designed a "solid oak-paneled manorial ceiling" for the dining room of Austin Dickinson's house The Evergreens. Was a gift to Dickinson for helping the firm secure the Walker Hall commission at Amherst College.

[265]
Union Club of Boston Beacon Hill, Boston 1880s 7–8 Park St.

Designed the fifth floor and added an elevator in the early 1880s. Originally built in 1835 for Abbott Lawrence.

[1000]
[1001]
The Moors Woods Hole, Massachusetts 1880 Designed slight alterations in 1880 and significant alterations and additions in 1889 to the house of Henry Fay. House originally designed by A. C. Martin in 1879. Demolished in 1947. [2]
Saint Paul's Episcopal Church Brookline, Massachusetts 1880 15 Saint Paul St.

Designed a significant enlargement to the original church designed in 1851 by Richard Upjohn. Added to the NRHP in 1985.

[355]
[1002]
W. R. Robeson House Lenox, Massachusetts 1880 Designed additions and alterations to the house of W. R. Robeson. Location and status unknown. [1003]
Massachusetts Charitable Eye and Ear Infirmary Boston, Massachusetts 1881 176 Charles St.

Addition designed for the Massachusetts Charitable Eye and Ear Infirmary. Demolished.

[1004]
Glen Eyrie Lodge Colorado Springs, Colorado 1881–1882 3820 N 30th St. (38°53′30.3″N 104°53′8.5″W / 38.891750°N 104.885694°W / 38.891750; -104.885694 (Glen Eyrie Lodge))

House of William Jackson Palmer. Added a tower, additional rooms, and remodeled the Interior. Work completed by C. H. Blackall. Remodeled again in 1901 by Frederick Sterner. Added to the NRHP in 1975.

[1][2]
[6]
[39]
[1005]
Second Harrison Gray Otis House Boston, Massachusetts 1882 85 Mount Vernon St.

Remodeling to original house designed in 1800 by Charles Bulfinch for Harrison Gray Otis. Added to the NRHP in 1973.

[30]
[31]
[1006]
Boylston Street Primary School Brookline, Massachusetts 1882–1883 Boylston St.
Enlargement of original schoolhouse. Also designed modifications to the school's porches and two unfinished rooms. Demolished in 1971.
[20]
[64]
G. Nixon Black House Boston, Massachusetts 1883 57 Beacon St.

Designed extensive alterations and extensions to the house of George Nixon Black (owner of Kragsyde). House originally designed in 1819 by Ephraim Marsh.

[1007]
Brookline High School Brookline, Massachusetts 1884 School St. & Prospect St.

Designed an addition to the original 1856 high school building designed by Joseph L. Richards. Demolished in 1902.

[20]
[64]
J. A. Garland House New York City, New York 1884 259 Madison Ave.

Two story brick extension, tin roof, and internal alterations. Demolished.

[6]
[1008]
Wigglesworth Building Boston, Massachusetts 1884 89–93 Franklin St.

Designed the fifth floor. Repaired and restored building after 1884 fire. Originally designed in 1873 by Bradlee & Winslow. Added to the NRHP in 1982.

[6]
[1009]
Trinity Hall Cambridge, Massachusetts 1885 Renovation of Trinity Hall at the Harvard Divinity School. Burned down in 1901. [1010]
Cragston Highland Falls, New York 1886 Hired by J. P. Morgan to design significant additions and to remodel the original 1859 house. Added wings, a third story, widow's walk, and conservatory. A dairy building and second house were later added in 1888–1889, as well as other outbuildings. Main house burned down in the 1940s. [2][6]
[1011]
Charles Lanier House New York City, New York 1886 30 E 37th St.

House of Charles D. Lanier. Added a two story brick extension, bay window, and copper roof. Demolished.

[2][6]
[244]
[1012]
Divinity Hall Cambridge, Massachusetts 1886 14 Divinity Ave.

Renovated the original building designed for the Harvard Divinity School in 1826 by Solomon Willard and Thomas Sumner. Added to the NRHP in 1986.

[1013]
George S. Meyers House St. Louis, Missouri 1886 Grand Ave. between Franklin Ave. & Easton Ave.

Brick addition designed for George S. Meyers.

[1]
[1014]
King's Chapel Governor's Pew Boston, Massachusetts 1886 Tremont St. & School St.

Recreated and rebuilt the Governor's Pew at King's Chapel for the church's 200 anniversary. Restored by Edgar T. P. Walker in 1928. Original pew designed for the Governor of Massachusetts and was demolished in 1826. Channing H. Cox and Alvan T. Fuller used the restored pew.

[1015]
[1016]
Cohasset Club Cohasset, Massachusetts 1887 South Nantasket Ave.

House originally designed for Edward Silas Tobey. Estate bought by Henry M. Whitney and others for the Cohasset Club. Peabody & Stearns were hired to reconstruct, refit, and improve the mansion, stables, and outbuildings. Location and status unknown.

[1017]
[1018]
S. E. Grote Paint Co. Store St. Louis, Missouri 1887 519–521 Saint Charles St.

Designed alterations to five-story brick store building owned by S. E. Grote Paint Co.

[6]
[1019]
Mount Holyoke Library South Hadley, Massachusetts 1888 Addition to the original 1870 building designed by Hammatt Billings for Mount Holyoke College. Library torn down in 1904. [110]
Pierce Grammar School Brookline, Massachusetts 1888 Two additional rooms designed for Pierce Grammar School. Demolished in 1971. [64]
Rev. William Lawrence House Cambridge, Masaschusetts 1888 101 Brattle St.

House remodeling designed for William Lawrence. Added to the NRHP in 1970. Located in the Old Cambridge Historic District.

[1020]
George F. Baker House New York City, New York 1889 256–258 Madison Ave.

Alterations to the house of George Fisher Baker. Demolished.

[1][6]
[1021]
Fairlawn Newport, Rhode Island 1891 Bellevue Ave. & Ruggles Ave.

Alterations to house originally designed in 1852 by Seth C. Bradford for I. Townsend Burden. Now the Young Building at Salve Regina University.

[6]
[729]
Abbot Hall Exeter, New Hampshire 1892 Designed the remodel of and additions to Abbot Hall at Phillips Exeter Academy. Complete remodeling of the basement and designed the addition of a large L. Originally built in 1855 and named for Benjamin Abbot. [1022]
Allen Winden Old Stable Lenox, Massachusetts 1893 Designed alterations to the old stable building at Charles D. Lanier's Allen Winden. Demolished in 1928. [244]
Susan Batchelder House Cambridge, Masaschusetts 1894 Kirkland St. & Oxford St.

Addition to wooden dwelling for Susan C. Batchelder. Demolished. Now the site of the Harvard Science Center.

[1023]
Conni Sauti Tamworth, New Hampshire 1896 776 Chocorua Mountain Highway

House of Charles P. Bowditch. Originally designed by Charles Howard Walker. Peabody & Stearns designed a service ell and a drive through porte-cochère with second story porch. Located in the Chocorua Lake Basin Historic District.

[6]
[798]
[799]
Dungeness Cumberland Island, Georgia 1896 Hired by Lucy Coleman Carnegie, widow of Thomas M. Carnegie, to design an addition to the mansion. Destroyed in a 1959 fire. [989]
Fairholme Newport, Rhode Island 1896 237 Ruggles Ave.

A complete remodeling of John R. Drexel's villa originally designed by Frank Furness in 1874. Located in the Bellevue Avenue Historic District and Ochre Point–Cliffs Historic District.

[6]
[1024]
[1025]
Wootton Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania 1896–1910 401 S Bryn Mawr Ave. (40°0′42.3″N 75°20′17.4″W / 40.011750°N 75.338167°W / 40.011750; -75.338167 (Wootton))

Originally designed by John McArthur for George William Childs, a good friend of Anthony Drexel. Inherited by Childs' godson and Drexel's son, George William Childs Drexel who hired Peabody & Stearns to significantly expand the main house and estate. Also designed a servant's ell, an aviary, greenhouses, a stable/garage, and ornamental bridges. Sold to the St. Aloysius Academy for Boys in 1950.

[2][6]
[1026]
[1027]
Great Hill Farm Tamworth, New Hampshire 1897 1968 Great Hill Rd.

House of Elliott Channing Clarke. Peabody & Stearns designed a two-story wing expansion to main house. Located in the Chocorua Lake Basin Historic District.

[6]
[798]
Captain Storms House Bourne, Massachusetts 1898 85 Monument Neck Rd.

Alterations and additions designed at John Parkinson's The Plainfield, designs executed by Moses Waterhouse. House originally built in 1824 for Captain Peter Storms.

[497]
[1028]
Town Stable Brookline, Massachusetts 1898 235 Cypress St.

A large expansion. Added more stable space along Cypress Street, and converting the original building into carriage storage and maintenance. The addition has a mansard roof and Georgian Revival detailing. Added to the NRHP in 1985.

[127]
[1029]
[1030]
Trinity Episcopal Church Lenox, Massachusetts 1898–1899 88 Walker St.

Interior remodel. Designed a new one-story stone choir room and sacristy. Donated as a memorial to Sarah L. Lawrence, daughter of Sarah and Charles Lanier. Added to the NRHP in 1996.

[2]
[244]
[1031]
Highwood Stockbridge, Massachusetts 1899 3 Hawthorne Rd. (42°20′51.4″N 73°18′30.5″W / 42.347611°N 73.308472°W / 42.347611; -73.308472 (Highwood))

Designed alterations to William Story Bullard's Highwood estate originally built in 1845 by Richard Upjohn for Samuel Gray Ward.

[6]
[244]
[1032]
Herald Building Boston, Massachusetts 1899 235–237 Washington St.

Remodel of existing six-story building. Originally built for the Boston Herald. Demolished.

[1033]
Beck-Johnson House Milton, Massachusetts 1900s 198 Randolph Ave.

Enlarged and updated original house, designed the addition of the bay windows and the side ell.

[1034]
Elmhurst Bath, Maine 1900 618 High St.

Extensive improvements designed for Annie Hayden, widow of Thomas W. Hyde, at Elmhurst. The firm designed a 3-story addition. Replaced with the Hyde Mansion in 1913. Now the Hyde School.

[1035]
[1036]
Old Grammar School Hopedale, Massachusetts 1900 Responsible for the plans and supervision of repairs to old grammar school originally built in 1868. Demolished. [1037]
Tome School Port Deposit, Maryland 1900 (39°36′10.0″N 76°6′26.0″W / 39.602778°N 76.107222°W / 39.602778; -76.107222 (Tome School))

Peabody served as the consulting and supervising architect. Designed by William Boring and Edward Lippincott Tilton. Named for Jacob Tome. Added to the NRHP in 1984.

[1038]
Arlington Street Church Memorial Window Boston, Massachusetts 1901 Memorial window named "The Good Shepherd" designed for Rebecca Andrews Browne (wife of Francis Bunker Greene of Greene Acres) at the Arlington Street Church. Design executed by Louis Comfort Tiffany. [2]
[1039]
Robert Evans House Boston, Massachusetts 1901 17 Gloucester St.

Significant interior and exterior remodeling to house originally designed by Sturgis & Brigham. Located in the Back Bay Historic District.

[1040]
[1041]
Nathan Perry House Cleveland, Ohio 1901–1902 2157 Euclid Ave.

Renovated and enlarged the Nathan Perry house on Charles W. Bingham's estate. House originally built in the 1830s for Nathan Perry. Demolished in 1959.

[6]
[962]
Brookline Trust Company Building Brookline 1902 1–5 Harvard St.

Significant additions and remodeling. Building originally designed by Hartwell & Richardson in 1892 for the Brookline Trust Company. Located in the Brookline Village Commercial District.

[6]
[20]
[127]
[1042]
[1043]
Lawrence House Brookline, Massachusetts 1902 19 Colchester St.

Designed a two-story rear addition to the house originally built in 1860 by Amos A. Lawrence for one of his daughters.

[1044]
Rhode Island Hospital Trust Building Providence, Rhode Island 1902–1903 15 Westminster St.

A major eight-story brick addition to the building originally designed in 1891 by Robert W. Gibson. Addition built by the Norcross Brothers Demolished in 1915 and replaced with the Rhode Island Hospital Trust Building.

[1][6]
[756]
[1045]
[1046]
James F. Rhodes House Back Bay, Boston 1902–1908 392 Beacon St.

Designed significant interior renovations and a rear bay addition to the house of James Ford Rhodes. Demolished.

[6]
[1047]
[1048]
St. Barnabas Episcopal Church Rectory Falmouth, Massachusetts 1903 91 W Main St.

Hired by E. Pierson Beebe to remodel and renovate the rectory at St. Barnabas Episcopal Church.

[2]
[155]
Wolff Store Portland, Maine 1903 Hannover St. & Portland St.

Designed the remodeling and refitting of J. H. Wolff's clothing store.

[1049]
Roger Wolcott Memorial Tablet Boston, Massachusetts 1905 Tremont St. & School St.

Memorial tablet of Roger Wolcott designed by Peabody for King's Chapel. Inscription by Charles William Eliot.

[1015]
Allen Winden Tea Room Lenox, Massachusetts 1906 Designed alterations to the tea room at Charles D. Lanier's Allen Winden. Demolished in 1928. [244]
Charles Pelham Curtis Memorial Tablet Boston, Massachusetts 1906 Tremont St. & School St.

Memorial tablet of Charles Pelham Curtis designed by Peabody for King's Chapel. Built by John Evans and Co.

[1015]
John Cotton Memorial Back Bay, Boston 1907 294 Berkeley St.

Memorial of minister John Cotton designed by Bela Pratt at the First Church in Boston. Peabody & Stearns designed the base and the architectural surroundings of the memorial. Destroyed by a fire in 1968.

[1050]
[1051]
Hovey Building Boston, Massachusetts 1908–1910 31–37 Summer St.

Designed alterations to the department store building of C. F. Hovey & Co. Built by George A. Fuller Company. Absorbed by Jordan Marsh in 1947. Demolished.

[6]
[463]
Crocker Hall Framingham, Massachusetts 1909 100 State St.

Enlarged the kitchen, added additional bath and toilet rooms, and a sleeping room. Framingham State University's oldest building.

[6]
[1052]
South End House South End, Boston 1909 20–22 Union Park St.

Interior remodel to original house designed by Shepard S. Woodcock for the headquarters of the South End House. Lois Howe and Eleanor Manning were associate architects.

[6]
[1053]
[1054]
W. W. Vaughan Cottage no. 2 Northeast Harbor, Maine 1909 Additions and alterations designed for W. W. Vaughan at his second cottage. Location and status unknown. [2][6]
[772]
Francis G. Peabody Stable Cambridge, Massachusetts 1910 Kirkland St. & Oxford St.

Stable remodel for Peabody's brother, Francis Greenwood Peabody. Demolished. Now the site of the Harvard Science Center.

[1055]
New Hampshire State House Concord, New Hampshire 1910 107 N Main St.

Commissioned by Nahum J. Bachelder to significantly enlarge and alter the New Hampshire State House. Added a third floor, extension in the rear.

[1][6]
[789]
[1056]
[1057]
Frank Everett Peabody Stable Back Bay, Boston 1911 328 Newbury St.

Hired by Frank Everett Peabody to remodel the existing stable and covert it into a private garage. 328 Newbury was originally built in 1880 for Thomas Forbes Cushing.

[1058]
South Boston Aquarium South Boston, Massachusetts 1912 Farragut Rd.

Designed by William D. Austin under the supervision of Peabody. Demolished in 1954.

[1059]
[1060]
C. E. Woodward House Bangor, Maine 1914 Designed alterations to the house of Charles E. Woodward and his wife Marion E. Lyford. Location and status unknown. [772]
Birchcroft Northeast Harbor, Maine 1914 1–3 Asticou Hill Trail

Additions and alterations to Carroll Sargent Tyson's cottage, originally designed by Fred L. Savage in 1892.

[6]
[772]
King's Chapel Chancel Floor Boston, Massachusetts 1915 Tremont St. & School St.

Marble floor in the chancel of King's Chapel designed by Peabody. Built in memory of Fannie Bartlett

[1015]
Northeast Harbor Library Northeast Harbor, Maine 1915 South Shore Rd.

Designed an addition to the Northeast Harbor Library originally designed by Fred L. Savage.

[6]
[772]
Arthur Theodore Lyman Bust Corbel Boston, Massachusetts 1916 Tremont St. & School St.

Corbel for bust of Arthur Theodore Lyman designed by Peabody for King's Chapel. Bust designed by Frank Duveneck.

[1015]
New England Trust Co. Building Boston 1916 133 Devonshire St.

Alterations, remodel, and addition designed for the New England Trust Co. Built by George A. Fuller Co. Originally designed in 1906 by McKim, Mead & White. Demolished.

[463]
[1061]
Eleanor Blodgett House Bedford Hills, New York 1917 Designed alterations to the summer home of Eleanor Blodgett, daughter of William Tilden Blodgett. Location and status unknown. [2]
Frank Everett Peabody House Marblehead, Massachusetts 1917 Foster St. & Valley Rd.

One-story addition to Frank Everett Peabody's summer residence on Marblehead Neck. Demolished.

[1062]
Runnells Electric Power Plant Chocorua, New Hampshire 1917 Commissioned by John Sumner Runnells to design an addition to his electric power plant. Location and status unknown. [2]
W. Rodman Peabody House Milton, Massachusetts 1917 760 Brush Hill Rd.

Commissioned by Peabody's nephew, W. Rodman Peabody (son of Francis Greenwood Peabody), to make alterations to his house. Originally built in 1887 for William L. P. Boardman. Included enlarging the cross hip roof with gabled additions. Located in the Brush Hill Historic District.

[6]
[141]
King's Chapel Iron Fence Boston, Massachusetts 1922 Tremont St. & School St.

Wrought iron fence designed in 1917 by Peabody for King's Chapel. Built posthumously in 1922 by F. Krasser Company.

[6]
[1015]
[1016]
King's Chapel Foote Memorial Tablet Boston, Massachusetts after 1896 Tremont St. & School St.

Memorial tablet of Frances Eliot Foote designed by Peabody for King's Chapel. Built by John Evans and Co.

[1015]

Unconfirmed, disputed, unbuilt, and competition designs[edit]

Building Image Location Year Built Notes Ref
Army and Navy Monument Boston, Massachusetts 1870 Competition design by Peabody, Stearns & Chandler, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Martin Milmore. [1063]
Museum of Fine Arts Boston, Massachusetts 1870 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by John Hubbard Sturgis. [1][5]
[1064]
Trinity Church Boston, Massachusetts 1872 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Henry Hobson Richardson. [1][5]
[1065]
Turner Library Randolph, Massachusetts 1873 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. [1]
Wakefield Hall Cambridge, Massachusetts 1872 Building designed for Harvard University for use by the Signet Society and the Wakefield Library of the Everett Athenaeum. Proposed, not built. [1066]
Thayer Memorial School Braintree, Massachusetts 1875 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Hartwell & Swasey. [1]
[1067]
Woburn Town Library Woburn, Massachusetts 1876 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Henry Hobson Richardson. [1]
[1068]
Highfield Hall Falmouth, Massachusetts 1878 56 Highfield Dr.

Also claimed to be designed by Carl Fehmer. House designed for James Madison Beebe.

[155]
[1069]
[1070]
[1071]
Washington University Building St. Louis, Missouri 1879 Building designed for Washington University. Status unknown. [1][5]
[1072]
Charles H. Stearns House Brookline, Massachusetts 1880 26 Babcock St.

Likely, but not confirmed. House designed for Stearns' cousin, Charles H. Stearns.

[1073]
New York Stock Exchange Building New York City, New York 1880 Competition design for a new building for the New York Stock Exchange, unbuilt/not selected. [1074]
Summer Hotel Unknown 1880 Proposed design for a summer hotel. Abandoned/not built. [1075]
Denver & Rio Grande Railroad Depot Manitou, Colorado 1881 Manitou Ave.

Also claimed to be designed by William Abraham Bell. Depot station designed for William Jackson Palmer and his Denver & Rio Grande Railway. Last train at the station was in 1931. Bought in 1946 by Villa Motel and demolished in 1969.

[2]
[1076]
James R. Keene Villa Newport, Rhode Island 1881 Unlikely. Villa designed for James R. Keene following the destruction of his Manshurd Hall. [729]
[1077]
Crescent Hotel Eureka Springs, Arkansas 1885 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Isaac S. Taylor. [1078]
Suffolk County Courthouse Boston, Massachusetts 1885 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by George Albert Clough. [1079]
Denver Club House Denver, Colorado 1886 17th St. & Glenarm Pl.

3-story stone clubhouse designed for the Denver Club. Unconfirmed design. Demolished.

[1080]
Kansas City Exchange Building Kansas City, Missouri 1886 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Designed three different designs: "clover leaf," "crescent," and "puritan." [1081]
Cambridge Public Library Cambridge, Massachusetts 1887 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Van Brunt & Howe. [1082]
[1083]
Cambridge City Hall Cambridge, Massachusetts 1888 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Longfellow, Alden & Harlow. [1084]
[1085]
[1086]
Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument Indianapolis, Indiana 1888 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Bruno Schmitz. [1087]
St. Cloud Unity Church St. Cloud, Minnesota 1888 4th Ave. S & Division St.

Unitarian church. Demolished in the 1930s. Unconfirmed design.

[1088]
Cathedral of St. John the Divine New York City, New York 1889 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Heins & LaFarge. [1]
Coffee Exchange Building New York City, New York 1890 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. [1]
Lambert Building St. Louis, Missouri 1891 2101–2107 Locust St.

Original architect is unknown, but possibly designed by Peabody & Stearns. Larger section (corner of N 21st St.) was an addition designed in 1902 by Samuel Sherer. Added to the NRHP in 1983.

[1][6]
[1089]
St. Louis Union Station St. Louis, Missouri 1891 Competition design by Peabody, Stearns & Furber, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Theodore Link. [1090]
[1091]
Stevens Block Spirit Lake, Iowa 1892 Hill Ave. & Lake St.

Building designed for Benjamin F. Stevens. Likely designed by Peabody & Stearns.

[2]
Harvard University A.D. Club House Cambridge, Massachusetts 1893 Mt. Auburn St. & Dunster St.

Club house designed for the A.D. Club at Harvard University. Proposed, status unknown.

[1092]
[1093]
[1094]
[1095]
Newport Country Club Newport, Rhode Island 1894 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Whitney Warren. [1]
Washington State Capitol Olympia, Washington 1894 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Ernest Flagg. [1096]
Wisconsin State Library Madison, Wisconsin 1895 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. [1097]
Albany Savings Bank Building Albany, New York 1896 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. [1098]
New Bedford Savings Bank New Bedford, Massachusetts 1896 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Charles Brigham. [1099]
New York Public Library New York City, New York 1897 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. [1100]
Pennsylvania State Capitol Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 1897 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Henry Ives Cobb. [1]
Madris Building Brookline, Massachusetts 1899 Boylston St. & Cypress St. (42°19′48.9″N 71°7′34.4″W / 42.330250°N 71.126222°W / 42.330250; -71.126222 (Madris Building))

Building designed for Joseph E. Davis. Also claimed to be designed by Franz Joseph Untersee.

[127]
Jacob Tome Institute Port Deposit, Maryland 1900 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Boring & Tilton. [1]
U.S. West Point Academy West Point, New York 1903 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Cram, Goodhue & Ferguson. [1]
Peace Palace The Hague, Netherlands 1906 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Louis Marie Cordonnier. [1]
Wisconsin State Capitol Madison, Wisconsin 1906 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by George B. Post. [1]
Y.M.C.A. Central Building Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1906 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Horace Trumbauer. [1]
Brookline Public Library Brookline, Massachusetts 1907 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Richard Clipston Sturgis. [1]
International Bureau of American Republics Washington, D.C. 1907 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. [1]
[1101]
[1102]
Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Hall and Museum Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 1907 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Henry Hornbostel. [1]
[1103]
Springfield Library Springfield, Massachusetts 1907 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Edward Lippincott Tilton. [1]
[1104]
Springfield Municipal Group Springfield, Massachusetts 1908 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Pell & Corbett. [1]
[1105]
Boston College Newton, Massachusetts 1909 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Maginnis & Walsh. [1]
Arthur Anderson House Noank, Connecticut 1910 23 Brook St.

House designed for Arthur Anderson (father of Robert P. Anderson) by W. Cornell Appleton, possibly for/under Peabody & Stearns. Appleton was the firm's last chief designer and succeeding partner.

[2]
Forsyth Dental Infirmary Boston, Massachusetts 1910 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. [1]
Oakland City Hall Oakland, California 1910 Competition design. Winning design by Palmer & Hornbostel. [1]
[1106]
Boston Elevated Railway Apartment House Cambridge, Massachusetts 1910–1911 Charles River Rd. & Boylston St. (now John F. Kennedy St.)

Apartment house designed for the Boston Elevated Railway. Proposed, not built.

[1107]
[1108]
[1109]
New Haven Post Office Building New Haven, Connecticut 1911 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. [1110]
Hartford Municipal Building Hartford, Connecticut 1911 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. [1]
U.S. Government Post Office Orange, New Jersey 1911 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. [1]
Allston Armory Boston, Massachusetts 1913 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by James E. McLaughlin. [1]
George Washington Memorial Washington, D.C. 1914 Competition design, unbuilt/not selected. Winning design by Tracy and Swartwout. [1]
[1111]
[1112]
L. M. Keeler House Whitinsville, Massaschusetts 1914 House designed for Lawrence M. Keeler. Also claimed to be designed by Loring & Leland. [1]
William J. Hutchinson Cottage Sea Bright, New Jersey Unknown Cottage designed for William J. Hutchinson. Location and status unknown. Unconfirmed design. [2]
J. A. Atwood House Wauregan, Connecticut Unknown House designed for James Arthur Atwood. Location and status unknown. Unconfirmed design. [2]

References[edit]

  1. ^ 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 bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu cv cw cx cy cz da db dc dd de df dg dh di dj dk dl dm dn do dp dq dr ds dt du dv dw dx dy dz ea eb ec ed ee ef eg eh ei ej ek el em en eo ep eq er es et eu ev ew ex ey ez fa fb fc fd fe ff fg fh fi fj fk fl fm fn fo fp fq fr fs ft fu fv fw fx fy fz ga gb gc gd ge gf gg gh gi gj gk gl gm gn go gp gq gr gs gt gu gv gw gx gy gz ha hb hc hd he hf hg hh hi hj hk hl hm hn ho hp hq hr hs ht hu hv hw hx hy hz ia ib ic id ie if ig ih ii ij ik il im in io ip iq ir is it iu iv iw ix iy iz ja jb jc jd je jf jg jh ji jj jk jl jm jn jo jp jq Holden, Wheaton A. (May 1973). "The Peabody Touch: Peabody and Stearns of Boston, 1870-1917". Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. 32 (2). University of California Press: 114–131. doi:10.2307/988826 – via JSTOR.
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  117. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3764 – Freeland, Charles House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
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  129. ^ "Historic Building Detail: MDF.22 – Bradlee, Dudley H. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
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  131. ^ "Historic Building Detail: NTH.717 – First Church of Christ Congregational Church". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
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  135. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BKL.1090 – Peabody, Robert S. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
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  143. ^ "Deerfield Academy/Dickinson High School". Memorial Hall Museum Online: American Centuries. Pocumtuck Valley Memorial Association.
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  145. ^ "House for E. S. Barrett, Esq., Concord, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. IV (152). Houghton, Osgood & Co. November 23, 1878.
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  147. ^ Childs; Bertman; Tseckares (2013). Fry, Debbie; Browne, Beth (eds.). Boston & Beyond (1st ed.). The Images Publishing Group. p. 110. ISBN 9781864704044.
  148. ^ "Historic Building Detail: NTH.724 – Clarke, Charles House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  149. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3100 – Hodges, R. M. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
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  152. ^ "Historic Monument Detail: WAT.971 – Mount Auburn Cemetery - Everett, Edward Monument". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  153. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3989 – Grinnell, Elizabeth House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
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  158. ^ "Building Intelligence: Completed Buildings—Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. IV (154): vii. December 7, 1878.
  159. ^ Boston: Its Commerce, Finance and Literature. A. F. Parsons Publishing Company. 1892. p. 86.
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  162. ^ "212 Commonwealth". Back Bay Houses.
  163. ^ "Historic Building Detail: FAL.641 – Fay, Joseph Story Jr. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  164. ^ "Historic Building Detail: NTH.728 – Smith College - Hatfield House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
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  167. ^ "Historic Building Detail: NTH.741 – Smith College - Hubbard Hall". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  168. ^ "Summary of the Week: Boston". The American Architect and Building News. V (174): vii. April 26, 1879.
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  173. ^ "Fay's Faith in Knots Costly—Houdini's Skill Takes $5800 From Him". The Boston Daily Globe. Vol. LXXI, no. 26. The Globe Newspaper Co. January 26, 1907. pp. 1–2.
  174. ^ "Historic Building Detail: FAL.582 – Glidden - Nims House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  175. ^ Witzell, Susan Fletcher. "The Larches" (PDF). Gardeners and Caretakers of Woods Hole. Woods Hole Historical Museum: 2–5.
  176. ^ "Building Intelligence, Summary of the Week—Boston: Building Permits". The American Architect and Building News. VII (210). James R. Osgood & Co.: vii. January 3, 1880.
  177. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3486 – Baker, R. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  178. ^ "150 Commonwealth". Back Bay Houses.
  179. ^ "Summary of the Week: Boston". The American Architect and Building News. VI (202): vii. November 8, 1879.
  180. ^ "173 Commonwealth". Back Bay Houses.
  181. ^ "Building Intelligence: Summary of the Week—Brookline, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. VI (191): viii. August 23, 1979.
  182. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BKL.1387 – Sewall School". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  183. ^ "Sewall–Street Schoolhouse". Treasurer's Report of the Receipts and Expenditures of the Town of Brookline. Brookline Chronicle Press. 1879. p. 59.
  184. ^ "Historic Building Detail: NTH.742 – Smith College - Washburn House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  185. ^ "125 Marlborough". Back Bay Houses.
  186. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3136 – Freeland, Charles House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  187. ^ "127 Marlborough". Back Bay Houses.
  188. ^ "129 Marlborough". Back Bay Houses.
  189. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3138 – Freeland, Charles House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  190. ^ "131 Marlborough". Back Bay Houses.
  191. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3139 – Freeland, Charles House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  192. ^ "133 Marlborough". Back Bay Houses.
  193. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3140 – Freeland, Charles House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  194. ^ "Historic Building Detail: NTH.2201 – Williston, A. Lyman House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  195. ^ Friedberg, Betsy (July 22, 2019). "RE: Clarke School for the Deaf, Northampton" (PDF). Letter to Douglas J. Kelleher.
  196. ^ "Dupee Estate". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  197. ^ "Historic Building Detail: NWT.2607 – Dupee Estate". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  198. ^ a b Yuhasz, Amy; Ingerson, Alice; Lever, Brian (March 2010). Newton's Heritage Landscapes: A Community-Based Reconnaissance Report (Report). City of Newton Planning & Development Department. p. 52.
  199. ^ "Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts (1908-1910)". Longyear Museum.
  200. ^ "Building Intelligence, Summary of the Week—Boston: Building Permits". The American Architect and Building News. VII (299). James R. Osgood & Co.: 207. May 8, 1880.
  201. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3564 – Appleton, F. H. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  202. ^ "265 Commonwealth". Back Bay Houses.
  203. ^ "Brooks, Shepherd, Estate". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  204. ^ "Historic Building Detail: MDF.81 – Brooks, Shepherd Estate". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  205. ^ "History of the Brooks Estate". The Brooks Estate. 2022. Archived from the original on June 1, 2023.
  206. ^ "Brooks Estate Seeks New President". Medford Historical Commission. January 2, 2024.
  207. ^ "Trustees Acquires 66 Acres at Moraine Farm in Beverly". Northshore Magazine. February 3, 2022. Archived from the original on September 25, 2022.
  208. ^ a b "Historic Area Detail: BEV.K – Moraine Farm". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  209. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BEV.450 – Moraine Farm - Main House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  210. ^ a b c d e f Fox, Pamela W. (2005). North Shore Boston: Houses of Essex County, 1865–1930. New York: Acanthus Press. ISBN 0-926494-28-7. LCCN 2004030118.
  211. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BEV.451 – Moraine Farm - Ladies Room - Pavilion". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  212. ^ "Historic Other Detail: BEV.927 – Moraine Farm - Shed". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  213. ^ a b "Historic Area Detail: BKL.AC – Saint Mary of the Assumption Complex". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  214. ^ "Saint Mary of the Assumption Church, Rectory, School and Convent". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  215. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BKL.1761 – Saint Mary of the Assumption Church". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  216. ^ Leahy, William A., ed. (1892). "Church of the Assumption—Harvard Street, Brookline". The Catholic Churches of Boston and its Vicinity—A Folio of Photo-Gravures with Notes and Historical Information (de Luxe ed.). Boston and New York: McClellan Hearn and Company. pp. 141–143.
  217. ^ "Historic Building Detail: MLT.154 – Perkins, Charles E. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  218. ^ a b c Sammarco, Anthony Mitchell; Buchanan, Paul (2000). Images of America: Milton Architecture. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7385-0496-4. LCCN 00107745.
  219. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3495 – Merriman, Charles House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  220. ^ "175 Commonwealth". Back Bay Houses.
  221. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3522 – White, C. T. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  222. ^ "213 Commonwealth". Back Bay Houses.
  223. ^ "279 Beacon". Back Bay Houses.
  224. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.2850 – Freeland, G. W. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  225. ^ "281 Beacon". Back Bay Houses.
  226. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.2851 – Freeland, G. W. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  227. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3533 – Spooner, D. N. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  228. ^ Lewis, Arnold; Turner, James; McQuillin, Steven (1987). The Opulent Interiors of the Gilded Age: All 203 Photographs from "Artistic Houses," with New Text. Mineola, New York: Dover Publications, Inc. p. 160. ISBN 9780486319476.
  229. ^ a b "25 Exeter (196 Commonwealth)". Back Bay Houses.
  230. ^ "Summary of the Week: General Notes". The American Architect and Building News. VII (214): viii. January 31, 1880.
  231. ^ Thurlow, Emily (March 3, 2023). "A new chapter: Library in Easthampton changes its name". Daily Hampshire Gazette. Archived from the original on March 6, 2023.
  232. ^ "Historic Building Detail: EAH.38 – Easthampton Public Library". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  233. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BKL.1973 – White, J. H. Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  234. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BKL.1975 – White, J. H. Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  235. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3334 – Hubbard, J. M. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  236. ^ "382 Marlborough". Back Bay Houses.
  237. ^ "Historic Building Detail: SOH.83 – Mount Holyoke College Observatory". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  238. ^ a b "New Bedford Architecture: A Walking Tour West of County St" (PDF). New Bedford Preservation Society. New Bedford Preservation Society, Inc. 1994.
  239. ^ "88 Commonwealth (Demolished)". Back Bay Houses.
  240. ^ "Sketches in Nahant, Mass.: House of Mrs. S. E. Guild". The American Architect and Building News. XVIII (506). James R. Osgood & Co. September 5, 1885.
  241. ^ a b "Historic Building Detail: NAH.2 – Eliot, Harrison P. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  242. ^ Nahant Reconnaissance Report: Essex County Landscape Inventory (Report). Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation. May 2005.
  243. ^ "Building Intelligence—Lenox, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. IX (271). James R. Osgood & Company: 120. March 5, 1881.
  244. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Owens, Carole (1984). Schein, Jerome; Montgomery, Elizabeth; Smith, Claudia Chyle (eds.). The Berkshire Cottages: A Vanishing Era. Cottage Press, Inc. ISBN 0-918343-00-3. LCCN 84-71191.
  245. ^ a b c d e Gilder, Cornelia Brooke (January 5, 2011). "Legacy survives the fire". The Berkshire Eagle. Andrew H. Mick. p. 4.
  246. ^ "Beechers Cottage". Wyndhurst Golf & Club.
  247. ^ a b "Some Lenox Places III". The Valley Gleaner. Vol. 28, no. 9. February 27, 1884. p. 3.
  248. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3528 – Sprague, F. R. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  249. ^ "229 Commonwealth". Back Bay Houses.
  250. ^ "Historic Building Detail: MDF.25 – Bradlee, Henry Jr. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  251. ^ Schuyler, Montgomery (May 1912). Desmond, Harry W.; Whitehead, Russell F. (eds.). "Architecture of American Colleges: Three Women's Colleges—Vassar Wellesley & Smith". The Architectural Record. XXXI (V). The Architectural Record Company: 528.
  252. ^ Rose, Peter I., ed. (1998). "Connections: Sculpture, Graphic Art and Students". Professorial Passions: Eight Lectures in Honor of the Inauguration of Ruth J. Simmons, Ninth President of Smith College. Hadley Printing. p. 87. ISBN 0-9664547-0-7.
  253. ^ Zhang, Fan (November 4, 2013). "Vision Beyond Borders: The Legacy of Dwight Tryon and Charles Freer" (PDF). Arts of Asia: 28–45.
  254. ^ a b "Notes on Art and Artists—Smith College, Northampton, Mass". The New York Times. Vol. XXXII, no. 9711. October 22, 1882. p. 4.
  255. ^ Handbook of American Museums. Washington, D. C.: The American Association of Museums. 1932. p. 297.
  256. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3174 – Peabody, J. E. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  257. ^ "183 Marlborough". Back Bay Houses.
  258. ^ Gilder, Cornelia Brooke (May 26, 2011). "A dilapidated sleeping beauty". The Berkshire Eagle.
  259. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3976 – Matthews, Nathan House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  260. ^ Diesenhouse, Susan (August 7, 1992). "Seeking deals from the FDIC". The Day. Vol. 112, no. 37. New London, Connecticut. pp. 39–40.
  261. ^ "Historic Building Detail: NTH.739 – Smith College - Pierce Hall". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  262. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3519 – Peabody, Endicott House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  263. ^ "205 Commonwealth". Back Bay Houses.
  264. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BKL.1762 – Saint Mary of the Assumption Rectory". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  265. ^ a b Gibson, Elise, ed. (March 3, 1994). "A peek inside Dickinson house". Daily Hampshire Gazette. Vol. 208, no. 150. Newspapers of New England. p. 23.
  266. ^ a b Schuyler, Montgomery (October–December 1891). "The Romanesque Revival in America". The Architectural Record. I (2). Clinton W. Sweet: 151–198.
  267. ^ "A Palace of Trade: The Magnificent New Store of R. H. White & Co.—A Very Successful Opening This Morning at 10 O'Clock—A Brief Sketch of the Firm and Description of the Store". The Boston Daily Globe. Vol. XXIII, no. 29. The Globe Newspaper Co. January 29, 1883. p. 2.
  268. ^ "Historic Building Detail: SAL.2253 – U.S. Post Office - Old Salem Branch". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  269. ^ a b Tolles Jr., Bryant F.; Tolles, Carolyn K. (1983). Architecture in Salem: An Illustrated Guide. Hanover and London: University Press of New England. pp. 76, 96. ISBN 9781584653851. LCCN 83-80766.
  270. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BKL.1172 – Mills, Arthur House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  271. ^ Local Historic District Report: 22 Irving Street (Report). Brookline Preservation Commission. September 8, 2015.
  272. ^ "Historic Building Detail: GBR.169 – The Society of the Congregational Church". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  273. ^ Abbott, Lyman, ed. (October 11, 1888). "Correspondence—A Beautiful Church". The Christian Union. XXVIII (15). New York and Brooklyn Publishing Co.: 300.
  274. ^ Howe, Katherine S.; Frelinghuysen, Alice Cooney; Voorsanger, Catherine Hoover (1994). Frankel, Lory (ed.). Herter Brothers: Furniture and Interiors for a Gilded Age. Harry N. Abrams, Inc. In Association With The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. p. 235. ISBN 0-8109-3426-4. LCCN 94-70768.
  275. ^ Izikson, Shaw Israel (November 5, 2022). "Manse restoration project continues at First Congregational Church". The Berkshire Edge.
  276. ^ "House of Wm. G. Saltonstall, Esq., Fairfield Street, Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. XXI (579). January 29, 1887.
  277. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3993 – Saltonstahl, W. G. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  278. ^ "30 Fairfield". Back Bay Houses.
  279. ^ "378-380 Commonwealth". Back Bay Houses.
  280. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3675 – Park Entrance Land Company". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  281. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3676 – Park Entrance Land Company". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  282. ^ a b O'Donnell, Bill (May–June 1987). Poore, Patricia (ed.). "Kragsyde: A century later, they're building this masterpiece again". The Old-House Journal. XV (3): 20–27. ISSN 0094-0178.
  283. ^ a b c d e Lewis, Arnold (1982). American Country Houses of the Gilded Age (Sheldon's "Artistic country-seats"). Dover Publications, Inc. ISBN 9780486243016.
  284. ^ "Bayley House". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  285. ^ "Historic Building Detail: NWT.2805 – Bayley House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  286. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3175 – Grew, Edward House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  287. ^ "185 Marlborough". Back Bay Houses.
  288. ^ a b c d e "Historic Area Detail: GRO.E – Groton School". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  289. ^ "Historic Building Detail: GRO.519 – Groton School - Brooks House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  290. ^ "Schools and Colleges—Groton, Mass". The American Contractor. 36: 29. June 19, 1915.
  291. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3214 – White, J. C. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  292. ^ "259 Marlborough". Back Bay Houses.
  293. ^ "Davis, Joseph, House". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  294. ^ "Historic Building Detail: WOR.692 – Davis, Joseph Estabrook House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  295. ^ a b "Historic Building Detail: BEV.453 – Moraine Farm - Farm Barn". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  296. ^ "Horse and 400 Hens Burned—Large Stock Barn on Moraine Farm at North Beverly Destroyed by Fire". The Boston Globe. Vol. LXXII, no. 47. August 16, 1907. p. 8.
  297. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BEV.455 – Moraine Farm - Gatehouse". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  298. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3526 – Richardson, W. L. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  299. ^ "225 Commonwealth". Back Bay Houses.
  300. ^ a b "The New Boston: Wonderful Growth of the Back Bay—Its Architectural Attractiveness—A List of New Residences Now Building". Boston Evening Transcript. Vol. LVIII, no. 17813. Boston Transcript Company. May 19, 1885. p. 1.
  301. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3527 – Bartlett, N. S. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  302. ^ "227 Commonwealth". Back Bay Houses.
  303. ^ 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 Pollan, Rosalind; Kennedy, Carol; Gordon, Edward (1984). Fenway Project Completion Report (Report). Boston Landmarks Commission and the Boston Redevelopment Authority. pp. 205–211.
  304. ^ 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 "Historic Area Detail: BOS.ABC – Saint Stephen Street, 23-86". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  305. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7680 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  306. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7641 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  307. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7642 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  308. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7643 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  309. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7644 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  310. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7645 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  311. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7669 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  312. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7670 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  313. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7671 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  314. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7672 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  315. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7673 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  316. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7674 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  317. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7675 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  318. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7676 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  319. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7677 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  320. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7678 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  321. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7679 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  322. ^ a b c Town Records and Reports of the Town Officers of Brookline, Massachusetts, for the Year Ending January 31, 1888 (Report). The Chronicle Press: C. A. W. Spencer. 1888. pp. 312–314.
  323. ^ a b "Historic Area Detail: CAM.AE – Old Cambridge Historic District". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  324. ^ "Exterior view of the Woodward Emory [sic] House, Cambridge, Mass., 1919". Historic New England.
  325. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Woodbury & Leighton Co., Building Contractors. Boston, Mass.: The Tudor Press. 1912.
  326. ^ "Built for Unitarians—The Massive Structure on Beacon Hill—Description of the Architecture—Channing Hall—Extraordinary Precautions Taken Against Fire". The Boston Daily Globe. Vol. XXVIII, no. 126. November 3, 1885. p. 6.
  327. ^ "The Unitarian Building—A Description of the New Home of the American Unitarian Association". Boston Evening Transcript. Vol. LIX, no. 18142. Boston Transcript Company. June 18, 1886. p. 6.
  328. ^ Barrows, Samuel J., ed. (March 11, 1886). "The New Unitarian Building". The Christian Register. LXV (10): 152–154.
  329. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3591 – Thayer, N. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  330. ^ "305 Commonwealth". Back Bay Houses.
  331. ^ "Summary of the Week: Boston—Building Permits". The American Architect and Building News. XV (420). James R. Osgood & Co.: 25. January 12, 1884.
  332. ^ "Elm Court". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  333. ^ "Historic Building Detail: STO.620 – Elm Court". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  334. ^ "Vanderbilt mansion in Berkshires sells for $8 million". Boston.com. Boston Globe Media Partners. March 13, 2023.
  335. ^ "Historic Building Detail: STO.459 – Elm Court Barn". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  336. ^ "Historic Building Detail: STO.460 – Elm Court Gardner House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  337. ^ Partial Demolition Application Report: 135 St. Paul Street (Report). Brookline Preservation Commission. July 2021.
  338. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BKL.1207 – Williams, Moses - Hunt House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  339. ^ Ochsner, Jeffrey; De Witt, Dennis; Howard, Hugh; Kowsky, Francis; Banks, Alan; Meier, Lauren; Levee, Arleyn (November 2021). Study Report: Olmsted-Richardson Thematic Local Historic, District Brookline, Massachusetts (Report). Brookline Preservation Commission, Department of Planning and Community Development. p. 33.
  340. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BKL.1208 – Williams, Moses B. Carriage House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  341. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7646 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  342. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7647 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  343. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7648 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  344. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7649 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  345. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7650 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  346. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7651 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  347. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7652 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  348. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7653 – Whitney, Henry M. Row House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  349. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BKL.415 – Brookline Firehouse #3 - Chemical Engine House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  350. ^ "338 Newbury". Back Bay Houses.
  351. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BKL.575 – Winthrop, Robert G. Elementary School". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  352. ^ "Saint Paul's Rectory". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  353. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BKL.1765 – Saint Paul's Rectory". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  354. ^ "Thirty Years Ago: Week ending Oct 24, 1885 (From The Chronicle's files)". The Chronicle. Vol. 42, no. 43. Brookline, Mass.: The Riverdale Press. October 23, 1915. p. 8.
  355. ^ a b Bigelow, Robert Payne (1949). A Sketch of the History of St. Paul's Church in Brookline (PDF).
  356. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3210 – Appleton, F. H. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  357. ^ "251 Marlborough". Back Bay Houses.
  358. ^ "Local Chips". Brookline News. Vol. II, no. 44. June 4, 1887. p. 1.
  359. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BKL.524 – Stearns, Charles H. Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  360. ^ a b c "Building Intelligence: Miscellaneous—Boston, Mass". The Engineering & Building Record. 16 (25): 720. November 19, 1887.
  361. ^ "398 Marlborough". Back Bay Houses.
  362. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3342 – Crowninshield and Cabot House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  363. ^ "400 Marlborough". Back Bay Houses.
  364. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3343 – Crowninshield and Cabot House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  365. ^ "402 Marlborough". Back Bay Houses.
  366. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3344 – Crowninshield and Cabot House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  367. ^ a b c Bunting, Bainbridge (1985). Harvard: An Architectural History. Completed and Edited by Margaret Henderson Floyd. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-37290-5.
  368. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.2825 – West, Mary House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  369. ^ "246 Beacon". Back Bay Houses.
  370. ^ "Building Intelligence—Boston, Mass". The Engineering & Building Record. 18 (13): ix. August 25, 1888.
  371. ^ "330 Beacon". Back Bay Houses.
  372. ^ "Historic Area Detail: MAR.AN – Peach's Point". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  373. ^ "Historic Building Detail: MAR.1382 – Crowninshield, Sarah Gool Putnam - Peabody, Robert Swain Cottage". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  374. ^ "Historic Building Detail: MLT.1843 – Forbes House Museum Carriage House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  375. ^ "Forbes House Museum Awarded Grants for Historic Building Restoration". Forbes House Museum. September 1, 2023.
  376. ^ "Building Intelligence—Brookline, Mass". The Sanitary Engineer and Construction Record. 16 (4): 105. June 25, 1887.
  377. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.4023 – Adams, C. F. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  378. ^ "20 Gloucester". Back Bay Houses.
  379. ^ "The Money Market". The Boston Post. Vol. CXV, no. 105. October 31, 1888. p. 6.
  380. ^ Laska, Vera, ed. (1997). "The First Parish Church in Weston" (PDF). The Weston Historical Society Bulletin. XXVIII (1): 1–6. ISSN 1083-9712.
  381. ^ Barrows, Samuel J., ed. (April 22, 1886). "Religious Intelligence—Weston". The Christian Register. LXV (16): 247.
  382. ^ "Historic Building Detail: WSN.95 – Weston First Parish Unitarian Church". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  383. ^ Ripley, Emma F. (1961). "Building the Stone Church, 1887–1888". Weston: A Puritan Town. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Riverside Press.
  384. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.2017 – Fiske Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  385. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BKL.1546 – Greystone". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  386. ^ Demolition Application Report: 62 Buckminster Road (Report). Brookline Preservation Commission. August 8, 2023.
  387. ^ "Hasty Pudding Club". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  388. ^ Campbell, Robert (October 14, 2007). "A standing ovation for a Harvard stage: Modernist designers honor tradition at New College Theatre". Boston Sunday Globe. pp. 155 (N7).
  389. ^ "Real Estate Chronicles". The Cambridge Chronicle. Vol. 42, no. 2172. F. Stanhope Hill. October 1, 1887. p. 8.
  390. ^ Snyder, Nick (July 20, 2001). "Hubbub at Harvard's Hasty Pudding Club—The Hasty Pudding Club—undergraduate hangout of four US presidents—has given up its historic digs at 12 Holyoke Street. Is a 206-year-old tradition over for good?". The Boston Phoenix. Vol. 30, no. 29. pp. 1, 24–26.
  391. ^ "A Fine Residence". Bangor Daily Whig and Courier. Vol. LV, no. 115. Boutelle & Burr. May 15, 1888. p. 3. Gale GT3007476948.
  392. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BKL.1547 – Davis, L. Shannon House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  393. ^ "L. Shannon Davis residence - 36 Sumner Road". Digital Commonwealth.
  394. ^ "A Tree Garden.—The Estate of Thomas Stetson, Esq., New Bedford, Mass". Scientific American Building Monthly. Munn & Co.: 91, 101 November 1902.
  395. ^ "Building Record—Highland Street". The Cambridge Tribune. Vol. XI, no. 23. William B. Howland. August 11, 1888. p. 11.
  396. ^ "Building Intelligence—Boston, Mass". The Engineering & Building Record. 19 (18): 238. March 30, 1889.
  397. ^ "Building Intelligence—Boston, Mass". The Engineering & Building Record. 20 (27): 391. November 30, 1889.
  398. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BKL.1163 – Cross, Charles House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  399. ^ "Building Intelligence—Waltham, Mass". The Engineering & Building Record. 20 (1): 14. June 1, 1889.
  400. ^ "Building Intelligence: Miscellaneous—Boston, Mass". The Engineering and Building Record. 20 (5): 70. June 29, 1889.
  401. ^ "The Ludlow Building, Boston, Mass". The Engineering Record. 24 (26): 412. November 28, 1891.
  402. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.1907 – Hark Beef Company Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  403. ^ "Building Intelligence—Boston, Mass". The Engineering & Building Record. 20 (14): 196. August 31, 1889.
  404. ^ "Historic Building Detail: HIN.456 – Old Ship Parish House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  405. ^ Lincoln, Francis H. (1893). "Ecclesiastical History". History of the Town of Hingham, Massachusetts. II. Vol. I. The Town of Hingham, University Press: John Wilson and Son. p. 37.
  406. ^ "Residence of W. G. Corthell, Wolloston [sic] Heights, Mass". The Engineering & Building Record. 19 (18): 227. March 30, 1889.
  407. ^ "Historic Building Detail: PIT.41 – Saint Stephen's Church". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  408. ^ Beach, Moses Y., ed. (March 21, 1889). "New Episcopal Church: The Plans of Peabody & Stearns Accepted". The Berkshire County Eagle. Vol. 100, no. 12. p. 5.
  409. ^ Beach, Moses Y., ed. (July 4, 1889). "St. Stephen's Episcopal Church". The Berkshire County Eagle. Vol. 100, no. 27. p. 1.
  410. ^ "The New St. Stephens". The Pittsfield Sun. Vol. 88, no. 35. March 22, 1888. p. 5.
  411. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.2015 – Stock Exchange Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  412. ^ "Historic Building Detail: GRO.511 – Groton School - Fives Courts". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  413. ^ Arthur, A. B., ed. (May 10, 1890). "Building Permits". The Chronicle. Vol. XVII, no. 19. Brookline, Mass.: C. A. W. Spencer. p. 1.
  414. ^ "Building Intelligence: Miscellaneous—Boston, Mass". The Engineering & Building Record. 20 (10): 140. August 3, 1889.
  415. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.1825 – Willard, Zabdiel A. Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  416. ^ Harryman, A. H., ed. (April 5, 1890). "Building—Notes from Architects". The Sanitary News. XV (322). Thomas Hudson: 582.
  417. ^ "Building Intelligence: Miscellaneous—Boston, Mass". The Engineering & Building Record. 21 (16): 256. March 22, 1890.
  418. ^ "The New Plant of the Brookline Gas Light Company in Allston". The Chronicle. Vol. XVIII, no. 17. Brookline, Mass. April 25, 1891. p. 2.
  419. ^ Harryman, A. H., ed. (August 2, 1890). "Contracting News—Where New Work Will Be Done". The Sanitary News. XVI (339). Thomas Hudson: 166.
  420. ^ "Building Intelligence—Boston, Mass". The Engineering & Building Record. 22: xi. July 26, 1890.
  421. ^ "Historic Area Detail: CON.AG – Concord Home School". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  422. ^ "Historic Building Detail: CON.399 – Concord Home School Boathouse". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  423. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.1996". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  424. ^ "Historic Building Detail: GRO.590 – Groton School - Headmasters House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  425. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BKL.2946 – Peabody, Robert S. Carriage Barn". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  426. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3673 – Minot, William Jr. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  427. ^ "24 Charlesgate East (419 Commonwealth)". Back Bay Houses.
  428. ^ "Building Intelligence: Miscellaneous—Boston, Mass". The Engineering Record. 24 (6): 99. July 11, 1891.
  429. ^ "Historic Building Detail: NWT.2609 – Dupee, W. R. Estate Gatehouse and Carriage House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  430. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.2959 – Sears, Emily House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  431. ^ "420 Beacon". Back Bay Houses.
  432. ^ "Historic Building Detail: MLT.275 – Burr, I. Tucker House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  433. ^ "Burr Estate: History". The Burr Estate Condominium Association. Archived from the original on January 19, 2021.
  434. ^ "359-363 Newbury / 92-100 Massachusetts Avenue". Back Bay Houses.
  435. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BKL.1146". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  436. ^ Muller Jr., L.; McLean, Robert Craik, eds. (September 1895). "Residence of George B. Dexter, Brookline, Massachusetts". The Inland Architect and News Record. XXVI (2) (Photogravure ed.). The Inland Publishing Co. Full access to photogravure edition not freely available online, see page scan at Ryerson & Burnham Libraries archive.
  437. ^ Local Historic District Reports: Pill Hill, 5 Maple Street (Report). Brookline Preservation Commission. October 13, 2013.
  438. ^ "Historic Building Detail: CAM.125 – Foster, Dr. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  439. ^ "10 Traill Street [Sold]". Harvard Property Information Resource Center. Harvard University.
  440. ^ Arthur, A. S., ed. (September 9, 1893). "Locker Building". The Chronicle. Vol. XX, no. 36. Brookline, Mass.: C. A. W. Spencer. p. 1.
  441. ^ "Locker Building [Demolished]". Harvard Property Information Resource Center. Harvard University.
  442. ^ "J. W. Bishop & Co". The Architectural Record. VI. The Architectural Record Company: 113. July 1896.
  443. ^ "New Athletic House". The Harvard Crimson. December 5, 1893.
  444. ^ "Harvard's New Building—Athletic Quarters Will be Ready for Use by Next Spring". The Boston Daily Globe. Vol. XLIV, no. 169. December 16, 1893. p. 8.
  445. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BKL.1081 – Page, Mary Hutcheson House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  446. ^ Local Historic District Report: 17 Hawthorne Road (Report). Brookline Preservation Commission. June 2019.
  447. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BKL.1082 – Page, Mary Hutcheson House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  448. ^ "Historic Building Detail: NBE.718 – Masonic Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  449. ^ Miller, Wilhelm (January 1903). "The Cook Estate at Lenox: A Restful Summer Home Amid the Berkshire Hills". Country Life in America. III (3). Doubleday, Page & Company: 115–117.
  450. ^ "Historic Building Detail: STO.430 – Wheatleigh". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  451. ^ "Historic Building Detail: STO.431 – Wheatleigh Gatehouse". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  452. ^ "Historic Building Detail: STO.435 – Wheatleigh Outbuilding". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  453. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.11944". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  454. ^ "Building for the Ludlow Mfg. Co., Essex St., Boston". The Brickbuilder. II (6). Boston: The Collins Press. June 1893.
  455. ^ "Contracting Intelligence: Public Buildings—Springfield, Mass". The Engineering Record. XXXI (3): 52. December 15, 1894.
  456. ^ "Historic Building Detail: NBE.711 – Standard Times Newspaper Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  457. ^ "New Bedford". Fall River Daily Evening News. Vol. XXXV. January 26, 1894. p. 4.
  458. ^ "Historic Building Detail: LEN.265 – Sloane, John House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  459. ^ Owens, Carole (May 15, 2022). "From Gilded to Grounded: Berkshire Cottages, then & now". The Berkshire Edge.
  460. ^ "Historic Building Detail: WOR.455 – Second State Mutual Life Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  461. ^ "Building News—Worcester, Mass". Real Estate Record and Builders' Guide. LV (1404): 212. February 9, 1895.
  462. ^ "State Mutual Life Assurance Company Building, Worcester, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. L (1036): 62–67. November 2, 1895.
  463. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n George A. Fuller Company, General Contractors, 1882–1937: A Book Illustrating Recent Works of this Organization. New York City: George A. Fuller Company. 1937.
  464. ^ "Cold Storage, Copper Mining, Etc.: Metropolitan Storage Warehouse Company". Commercial and Financial New England. The Boston Herald: 397–398. 1906.
  465. ^ "Historic Building Detail: CAM.332 – Metropolitan Storage Warehouse". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  466. ^ Morgan, Keith N. (2012). Esperdy, Gabrielle; Kingsley, Karen (eds.). "Metropolitan Storage Warehouse". SAH Archipedia. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press.
  467. ^ "Historic Building Detail: LEN.127 – Winthrop, Grenville Lindall Stable". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  468. ^ "Historic Building Detail: MAR.1381 – Davenport, George Howe Cottage". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  469. ^ "Building Intelligence: Warehouses—Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LII (1067): 4. June 6, 1896.
  470. ^ "Historic Building Detail: FRM.739 – Eastman, Frank W. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  471. ^ "Building Intelligence: Stables—Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LVIII (1144): xvii. November 27, 1897.
  472. ^ Sammarco, Anthony Mitchell (1998). Images of America: Boston's South End. Arcadia Publishing. p. 122. ISBN 0-7524-0977-8.
  473. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.2379 – Pope Manufacturing Company Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  474. ^ "Recent Brick and Terra-Cotta Work in American Cities, and Manufacturers' Department". The Brickbuilder. VI (3). Rogers & Manson: 59. March 1897.
  475. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.1515 – Russia Wharf Complex - Russia Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  476. ^ "Building Intelligence: Mercantile Buildings—South Framingham, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LV (1103): xvi. February 13, 1897.
  477. ^ "Historic Building Detail: FRM.412 – Concord Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  478. ^ Yudis, Anthony J. (November 23, 1986). "A Framingham restoration: 1897 building and its neighbors being recycled as office and retail space". The Boston Globe. pp. A33.
  479. ^ ""Mystic Side Opera House"—Is to Be Built in Malden in Time for Use Next Winter". Boston Evening Transcript. Boston Transcript Company. May 27, 1897. p. 5.
  480. ^ "Building Intelligence—Malden, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LVI (1120): x. June 12, 1897.
  481. ^ "An Opera House for Malden—Proposed Building to be Erected at Corner Washington and Pleasant Sts". The Boston Daily Globe. Vol. LI, no. 147. May 27, 1897. p. 4.
  482. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.5427 – Revere, Paul Elementary School". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  483. ^ "Building Intelligence: Educational—Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LVI (1115): xiii. May 8, 1897.
  484. ^ "School Board: Its Closing Session Devoted to Reports—Some of the Year's Work". Boston Daily Advertiser. Vol. 170. December 29, 1897. p. 8. Gale GT3007035994.
  485. ^ Poore, Patricia. "Reviving a Victorian Shingle Style by Peabody & Stearns: An important carriage house designed by Peabody & Stearns becomes a stunning residence". The Old-House Journal. Active Interest Media. Archived from the original on June 10, 2023.
  486. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BEV.776 – Sears, Henry F. Carriagehouse". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  487. ^ "Building Intelligence—Waltham, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LIII (1073): xvii. July 18, 1896.
  488. ^ "Historic Building Detail: WLT.191 – Christ Episcopal Church and Parish House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  489. ^ Report of the Building Committee of the Building of the New Christ Church and the Fales Memorial Parish House in Waltham, 1895–1900. Boston: Alfred Mudge & Son. 1900.
  490. ^ "Plan Record: Christ Church Parish House". Massachusetts Archives. William F. Galvin. September 7, 1897.
  491. ^ "Building Intelligence—Manchester, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LIX (1150). The American Architect and Building News Co.: xii January 8, 1898.
  492. ^ "Building Intelligence: Houses—Manchester, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LIX (1156): xiv. February 19, 1898.
  493. ^ Werner, Harold; Windolph, August P. (April 1908). "The Public Bath—III: The American Type". The Brickbuilder. XVII (4). Boston: Rogers & Monson: 72.
  494. ^ Wililams, Marilyn Thornton (1991). Washing "The Great Unwashed": Public Baths in Urban America, 1840–1920. Ohio State University Press. p. 73. ISBN 0-8142-0537-2. LCCN 90-14212.
  495. ^ "Groton—Lawrence Brooks of Boston..." Fitchburg Daily Sentinel. Vol. XXV, no. 275. March 29, 1898. p. 5.
  496. ^ "Historic Building Detail: CON.314 – Sellors House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  497. ^ a b "Historic Area Detail: BOU.AM – Rocky Point Area". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  498. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOU.608 – Parkinson, John and Gertrude Barn". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  499. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOU.605 – Parkinson, John and Gertrude Carriage House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  500. ^ "Historic Other Detail: BOU.956 – Storms, Capt. Peter Water Tower Foundation". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  501. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3669 – Minot, William House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  502. ^ "409 Commonwealth". Back Bay Houses.
  503. ^ Campion, Tracy (September 2023). "409 Commonwealth Avenue Boston, Massachusetts 02215". Boston.com. Boston Globe Media Partners.
  504. ^ Stefanescu, Victor (February 12, 2024). "In Back Bay, a $7m-plus condo with gold leaf ceilings and an infrared sauna". Boston.com. Boston Globe Media Partners.
  505. ^ "Worcester City Hall and Common". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  506. ^ "Historic Building Detail: WOR.770 – Worcester City Hall". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  507. ^ Brisbane, John F., ed. (September 6, 1899). "Miscellaneous". The Philadelphia Real Estate and Builders' Guide. XIV (36). John N. Gallagher: 578.
  508. ^ Martin, T. C.; Weaver, W. D.; Taltavall, T. R., eds. (September 16, 1899). "Special Correspondence: New England Notes—The American Bell Telephone Company". Electrical World and Engineer. XXXIV (12). New York: Electrical World and Engineer, Inc.: 434.
  509. ^ "Building Intelligence: Factories—Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXVI (1247): xi. November 18, 1899.
  510. ^ "297 Commonwealth". Back Bay Houses.
  511. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3590 – Draper, James House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  512. ^ "Building Intelligence: Apartment-Houses—Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXVI (1248): xi. November 25, 1899.
  513. ^ "Building Intelligence: Mercantile Buildings—Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXIII (1208): xii. February 18, 1899.
  514. ^ "Current Items of Interest: Waldo Brothers". The Brickbuilder. 8 (7). Rogers & Manson: 146. July 1899.
  515. ^ Kirchhoff, Charles; Cope, George W., eds. (May 4, 1899). "Manufacturing—Miscellaneous". The Iron Age. 63. David Williams Company: 22.
  516. ^ "Historic Building Detail: GRO.508 – Groton School - School House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  517. ^ "School Building, Groton School, Groton, Mass". The Brickbuilder. XII (5). Rogers & Manson. May 1903.
  518. ^ "New Hotel Bellevue Opens to the Public—Modern Building, Elegant Furnishings, Fast Elevators, Long-Distance Telephones, Magnificent Views and Unsurpassed Cuisine". The Boston Sunday Globe. Vol. LVI, no. 100. October 8, 1899. p. 29.
  519. ^ "Building Intelligence—Hotels: Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXIII (1205): xi. January 28, 1899.
  520. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.1554 – Hotel Bellevue". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  521. ^ "Building Intelligence: Mercantile Buildings—Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXIII (1206): xiv. February 4, 1899.
  522. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.1504 – Albany Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  523. ^ Cohen, Edie (June 23, 2023). "How Atelier Cho Thompson Revamped EQ's Boston Office". Interior Design. 94 (5): 57–59.
  524. ^ "Detailed Statement of Expenditures, 1900–1901: Schools—Arlington Street School House". Annual Report of the Town of Framingham. Lakeview Press: 232. 1901.
  525. ^ "Plan Record: Arlington St. School". Massachusetts Archives. William F. Galvin. January 8, 1900.
  526. ^ a b "Contracting News: Business Buildings—Boston, Mass". The Engineering Record. 42 (21): 504. November 24, 1900.
  527. ^ "Buildings—Boston, Mass". Engineering News. XLIV (21): 170. November 22, 1900.
  528. ^ "Plan Record: Coburnville School". Massachusetts Archives. William F. Galvin. August 29, 1900.
  529. ^ "Building Intelligence—Concord, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXX (1295): xi. October 20, 1900.
  530. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.8312 – Harvard University - Newell Boat House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  531. ^ Thayer, William Roscoe; Hart, Albert Bushnell; Coes, Mary, eds. (December 1900). "The New Boat-House". The Harvard Graduates' Magazine. IX (34). The Harvard Graduates' Magazine Association: 242–244.
  532. ^ "Athletics: Harvard's New Boat House". Mind and Body. 6 (70). Freidenker Publishing Co.: 240 December 1899.
  533. ^ Hsu, Carrie (March 24, 2022). "Harvard's Century-Old Boathouses to Undergo Renovations". The Harvard Crimson.
  534. ^ a b c Morgan, Keith N. (2012). Esperdy, Gabrielle; Kingsley, Karen (eds.). "22, 24, and 26 The Fenway". SAH Archipedia. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press.
  535. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7383 – Storey, Moorfield Town House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  536. ^ "Building Intelligence—Houses: Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXVII (1263): xii. March 10, 1900.
  537. ^ a b "Society—Two handsome new houses..." Boston Home Journal. 56 (43): 6. October 27, 1900.
  538. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7382 – Peabody, Robert Swain Town House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  539. ^ "Building Intelligence—Houses: Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXVIII (1272): xii. May 12, 1900.
  540. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.3665 – Brown, A. T. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  541. ^ "401 Commonwealth". Back Bay Houses.
  542. ^ "Building Intelligence: Miscellaneous—Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXXII (1330). The American Architect and Building News Co.: xii June 22, 1901.
  543. ^ "Bussey Institute Greenhouse Headhouse [Sold]". Harvard Property Information Resource Center. Harvard University.
  544. ^ "Building Intelligence: Office-Buildings—Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXVI (1243): xiv. October 21, 1899.
  545. ^ "Building Permits—Miscellaneous". The Philadelphia Real Estate Record and Builders' Guide. XIV (29): 466.
  546. ^ a b Morrison, Craig (2006). "Theaters in an Artist's Eye". Theaters. New York and London: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 116. ISBN 0-393-73108-1. LCCN 2005048839.
  547. ^ "Architectural Criticism". Architecture. XXIII (1). Forbes & Company: 3. January 15, 1911.
  548. ^ "Building Intelligence: Stores—Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXIX (1288): xii. September 1, 1900.
  549. ^ "Historic Other Detail: BOS.9414 – Dudley Station and Elevated North of Dudley". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  550. ^ Dudley Station Historic District: National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form (Report). United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service. 1985. pp. 3–4.
  551. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.10098 – Rice, Elizabeth G. Stable". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  552. ^ "Building Intelligence: Stables—Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXXII (1323): xii. May 4, 1901.
  553. ^ "Real Estate Matters—Busy Times for Dealers in Dorchester". The Boston Daily Globe. Vol. LIX, no. 38. February 7, 1901. p. 2.
  554. ^ "Building Year At Lenox—A Million Dollars Worth of New Cottages". The Pittsfield Sun. Vol. 102, no. 15. October 17, 1901. p. 1.
  555. ^ "Lenox Locals". The Valley Gleaner. Vol. 45, no. 42. Lee, Mass. October 16, 1901. p. 3.
  556. ^ Hopkins, Alfred (September 1902). "Farm Barns". The Architectural Review. IX (IX): 243.
  557. ^ a b c d e f g h "Historic Area Detail: CON.CL – Middlesex Preparatory School". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  558. ^ "Historic Building Detail: CON.435 – Middlesex School - Bryant - Paine House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  559. ^ a b "Middlesex School Buildings, Concord, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXXXVI (1501): 14, 17. October 1, 1904.
  560. ^ "Soldiers' Memorial Library". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  561. ^ "Historic Building Detail: MNF.1 – Soldiers' Memorial Library Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  562. ^ "Building Intelligence—Manchester, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXX (1302). The American Architect and Building News Co.: x December 8, 1900.
  563. ^ "Construction News: Buildings—Boston, Mass". Engineering News and American Railway Journal. XLVI (6). New York: The Engineering News Publishing Company: 44. August 8, 1901.
  564. ^ "Building Intelligence—Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXXVI (1376): x. May 10, 1902.
  565. ^ Parental School—(The Truant School of the City of Boston): Trustees' Report (Report). Municipal Printing Office. 1902. p. 20.
  566. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.11448 – Institution for Savings in Roxbury". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  567. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.2006 – Cunard Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  568. ^ "Building Intelligence: Mercantile Buildings—Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXXIV (1351): xiii. November 16, 1901.
  569. ^ "Building Intelligence: Advance Rumors—Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXXV (1360): x.
  570. ^ A Record of the Dedication of the Monument on Dorchester Heights, South Boston. Boston: Wright & Potter. 1903.
  571. ^ "National Park Service Cultural Landscapes Inventory: Dorchester Heights National Historic Site". National Park Service. 2010.
  572. ^ Historic Structure Report: Dorchester Heights Monument, South Boston, Massachusetts (Report). United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Denver Service Center. August 1993.
  573. ^ "Historic Monument Detail: BOS.9260 – Dorchester Heights Monument". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  574. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7384 – Foster, Fannie Town House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  575. ^ "Contracting News: Dwellings—Boston, Mass". The Engineering Record. 46 (24): 575. December 13, 1902.
  576. ^ Gallerani, Kathryn (June 15, 2022). "This home was designed by the architect of the original Breakers. Could it be in a movie?". South Coast Today. The Standard-Times. Archived from the original on August 14, 2023.
  577. ^ "Historic Building Detail: GRO.499 – Groton School - Old Gymnasium". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  578. ^ "Building Intelligence—Advance Rumors: Groton, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXXV (1369): xi. March 22, 1902.
  579. ^ "Gymnasium, Groton School, Groton, Mass". The Brickbuilder. XII (5). Rogers & Manson. May 1903.
  580. ^ "Boston Brickwork—Suburban Residential Work". The Brickbuilder. XIV (5). Rogers & Manson: 95–98. May 1905.
  581. ^ "House of Henry S. Howe, Esq., Longwood, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXXXV (1488). July 2, 1904.
  582. ^ "160 Beacon". Back Bay Houses.
  583. ^ "Building Intelligence—Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXXV (1362). The American Architect and Building News Co.: x, xii February 1, 1902.
  584. ^ Montgomery, Susan J.; Reed, Roger G. (2000). Cigliano, Jan (ed.). Phillips Academy Andover: An Architectural Tour. New York: Princeton Architectural Press. p. 33.
  585. ^ Domingue, Robert A. (1990). Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts: An Illustrated History of the Property (Including Abbot Academy). The Hampshire Press. p. 160. ISBN 0-9620726-2-1.
  586. ^ "Ground Broken—Completion of the New Gym for Phillips Academy now Only a Matter of Time". The Andover Townsman. The Andover Press. May 17, 1901. p. 4.
  587. ^ a b "Historic Building Detail: BKL.715 – Rogers, Robert King and Agnes Hill Young House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  588. ^ "Industrial Notes". Engineering News. XLVIII (16): 148. October 16, 1902.
  589. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.2002 – India Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  590. ^ Pinanski, Viola R. (1963). A History of the John D. Runkle School (PDF). Proceedings of the Brookline Historical Society for 1959–1963. Brookline Historical Society. pp. 66–73.
  591. ^ "Runkle School, Brookline, Mass". The Brickbuilder. 11 (12): 451, 455. December 1902.
  592. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BKL.435 – Boit, Edward House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  593. ^ Howley, Kathleen (October 24, 1999). "Vases, painting tell it all: Home of the Week". The Boston Sunday Globe. Vol. 256, no. 116. p. 101.
  594. ^ Turner, Grahame (November 10, 2011). "Edward Darley Boit House, a Longwood Art History Hotspot, For Sale". Brookline Patch. Patch Media. Archived from the original on December 14, 2023.
  595. ^ Peabody & Stearns (1903). Specification for a House for F. C. Stevens, Esq., Manchester, Mass. Boston Public Library.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  596. ^ Building Information Form: 241 St. Botolph Street, Cotting School for Handicapped Children (Report). Boston Landmarks Commission. 1984. Form No. 546.
  597. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7587 – Industrial School for Crippled and Deformed Children". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  598. ^ Thorndike, Augustus (1914). "Industrial Training For Crippled Children About Boston". American Journal of Care for Cripples. I (I): 15.
  599. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.2873 – Richmond, J. B. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  600. ^ "310 Beacon". Back Bay Houses.
  601. ^ Blanton, Kimberly (September 5, 2008). "Brady's big score: Condo sales give quarterback a free unit for himself". Boston.com.
  602. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7409 – Simmons College - Main Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  603. ^ "Building Intelligence—Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXXX (1434). American Architect Co.: xiii June 20, 1908.
  604. ^ "The New Heath School". The Chronicle. Vol. 30, no. 30. Brookline, Mass. July 25, 1903. p. 8.
  605. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.1669 – Monks Building - National Shawmut Bank Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  606. ^ "Building Intelligence—Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXXXIV (1475). American Architect Co.: x April 2, 1904.
  607. ^ a b Jetties Beach Pavilion And Bath House: Historic Structures Report (Report). Vol. II. Preservation Institute: Nantucket. 2007.
  608. ^ "Historic Building Detail: WRH.110 – Weld, Stephen Minot Jr. House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  609. ^ a b "Historic Area Detail: WRH.K – Indian Neck". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  610. ^ Fourteenth Report of the Free Public Library Commission of Massachusetts (Report). Vol. VIII. Boston: Wright & Potter Printing Co. 1904. p. 30.
  611. ^ "Building Intelligence—Marlboro, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXXX (1424): xii. April 11, 1903.
  612. ^ "Public Library, Marlboro, Mass". The Brickbuilder. XIII (10). Rogers & Manson. October 1904.
  613. ^ "Historic Building Detail: MRB.84 – Marlborough Public Library". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  614. ^ "RETAINING WALL.—Dedham, Mass". Engineering News. LII (14). New York: The Engineering News Publishing Co.: 172 October 6, 1904.
  615. ^ "The Massachusetts Building, State Street, Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXXXVI (1504). October 22, 1904.
  616. ^ a b c d "Historic Area Detail: BOS.AEK – Normal and Girls' Latin School Group - Massachusetts College of Art and Design". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  617. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.17872 – Boston Normal School and Girls' Latin School Common Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  618. ^ "Normal and Latin School Group, Back Bay Fens, Boston". The Brickbuilder. XVII (3). Rogers & Manson. March 1908.
  619. ^ a b c d "The Normal and Latin School Group, Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. XCIV (1700): 25–30. July 22, 1908.
  620. ^ "Building Intelligence—Dedham, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXXV (1365): xi. February 22, 1902.
  621. ^ "Historic Building Detail: DED.384 – Norfolk County Registry of Deeds". William F. Galvin.
  622. ^ Cook, Louis A., ed. (1918). "The Registry Building". History of Norfolk County, Massachusetts, 1622–1918. Vol. I. The S. J. Clarke Publishing Company. pp. 49–50.
  623. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.1484 – Summerfields Furniture Warehouse". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  624. ^ "Building News—Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXXXVII (1521): xv. February 19, 1905.
  625. ^ McBride, James J., ed. (February 22, 1905). "Building and Real Estate Notes: Miscellaneous—At Boston, Mass". The Philadelphia Real Estate Record and Builders' Guide. XX (8). John N. Gallagher: 121.
  626. ^ "Historic Building Detail: MAR.1395 – Raymond, Samuel B. and Alice Beveridge - Appleton, Samuel and Julia H. Kimball Cottage". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  627. ^ "Historic Building Detail: MAR.1396 – Raymond, Samuel B. - Appleton, Samuel Carriage House and Servant Quarters". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  628. ^ "Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance Co". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  629. ^ a b O'Connell, James C.; Konig, Michael F. (1990). Carvalho III, Joseph (ed.). Shaping an Urban Image: The History of Downtown Planning in Springfield, Massachusetts. Connecticut Valley Historical Museum and the Institute for Massachusetts Studies, Westfield State College.
  630. ^ "The Head Office and Its Branches". Seventy-Five Years of Fire Insurance: An Account of the Origin and Development of the Springfield Fire and Marine Insurance Company. Boston, Massachusetts: Walton Advertising and Printing Company. 1924. p. 100.
  631. ^ "Historic Building Detail: SPR.121 – Springfield Fire and Marine Insurance Company". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  632. ^ Shapiro, Lillian (October 6, 2017). "Elegance, grace, and a touch of history in Manchester-by-the-Sea". The Salem News. Archived from the original on September 11, 2023.
  633. ^ "Historic Building Detail: NBD.51 – Northbridge High School". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  634. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7535 – Boston Normal School - Boston State College". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  635. ^ "Store of Chandler & Co., Tremont Street, Boston, Mass". The American Architect and Building News. LXXXIX (1582). James R. Osgood & Company: 143. April 21, 1906.
  636. ^ "In New and Luxurious Quarters—Tomorrow Chandler & Co Formally Opens Its Thoroughly Modern Establishment on Tremont St". The Boston Sunday Globe. Vol. LXVIII, no. 79. September 17, 1905. p. 46.
  637. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7533 – Normal and Girls' Latin Group - Girls Latin School". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  638. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.7534 – Normal and Girls' Latin Group - Collins, Patrick A. School". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  639. ^ "Historic Building Detail: SAL.2473 – Peabody Museum of Salem - East India Marine Hall". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  640. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.2058 – Cushing, John Perkins Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  641. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BEV.454 – Moraine Farm - Hen House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  642. ^ "Union Trust Company Building". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  643. ^ "Historic Building Detail: SPR.252 – Union Trust Company Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  644. ^ Thayer, William Roscoe; Merriman, Roger Bigelow; Brigham, Dwight Stillman, eds. (December 1907). "New Weld Boathouse". The Harvard Graduates' Magazine. XVI (LXII). The Riverside Press: 334.
  645. ^ "Real Estate and Building—New Weld Boathouse". The Cambridge Chronicle. C. Burnside Seagrave and James W. Bean. September 15, 1906. p. 3.
  646. ^ "Historic Building Detail: WOR.382 – W. P. I. - Electrical Engineering Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  647. ^ "The Worcester Polytechnic Institute". Science. XXIII (598). American Association for the Advancement of Science: 924. June 15, 1906.
  648. ^ "The New Electrical Building of the Worcester Polytechnic Institute". Graphite. X (2). Jersey City, N.J.: Joseph Dixon Crucible Co.: 910–911. February 1908.
  649. ^ "New Electrical Engineering Laboratories at W. P. I." The Worcester Magazine. IX (6). Worcester Board of Trade: F. S. Blanchard & Co.: 124–128 June 1906.
  650. ^ "Historic Statue Detail: WOR.9036 – Hoar, Sen. Memorial". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  651. ^ Dedication of the Statue of the Hon. George Frisbie Hoar, Worcester, June Twenty-Sixth, 1908. Trustees of the George F. Hoar Memorial Fund. Belisle Printing & Publishing Company. 1908. p. 5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  652. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.2663 – Driscoll, The". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  653. ^ "715 Boylston Street". Gorman Richardson Lewis Architects. 2022. Archived from the original on August 16, 2023.
  654. ^ "Historic Statue Detail: BOS.9025 – Commonwealth Avenue Mall - Collins, Patrick Andrew Statue". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  655. ^ Forbes, Allan; Eastman, Ralph M. (1947). "Patrick A. Collins—Commonwealth Avenue at Charlesgate West". Other Statues of Boston. State Street Trust Company. pp. 36–38.
  656. ^ "The Steel Dome of the Boston Stock Exchange". The Architects' & Builders' Journal. XXXIV (880). Westminster: Caxton House: 603–604. December 6, 1911.
  657. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.1660 – Boston Stock Exchange Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  658. ^ "Boston, Mass.—Contracts Awarded: Stock Exchange". The American Contractor. XXXI (30): 47. July 23, 1910.
  659. ^ "Historic Building Detail: CLI.65 – Clinton Town Hall". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  660. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.11462 – Boston Elevated Railway - Egleston Substation". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  661. ^ "Egleston Substation". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  662. ^ "A Lesson in Shoe Store Architecture". The Shoe Retailer. 73 (8): 23. November 20, 1909.
  663. ^ "Historic Building Detail: CLS.36 – Chelsea City Hall". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  664. ^ "First Official Picture of New Chelsea City Hall". The Christian Science Monitor. Vol. I, no. 236. September 3, 1909. p. 1.
  665. ^ "Historic Building Detail: HOP.350 – Draper Corporation Double Worker Housing". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  666. ^ Brown, Frank Chouteau (April 1916). "Workmen's Housing at Hopedale, Mass". The Architectural Review. IV (4): 65.
  667. ^ "Historic Area Detail: HOP.B – Lake Side Group". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  668. ^ Fernald, Clarence T. (November 1912). "Notes on the Construction of the Charles River Bridge; East Cambridge Extension of the Boston Elevated Railway Company". Journal of the Association of Engineering Societies. XLIX (5).
  669. ^ McGinley Hart & Associates (1989). Historical Summary: East Cambridge Viaduct Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (Report). BOS.9032 / CAM.913.
  670. ^ "Historic Bridge Detail: BOS.9032 – East Cambridge Viaduct - Lechmere Viaduct". MACRIS. William F. Galvin. Attached inventory form includes Massachusetts Historic Bridge Inventory (1985), Boston Landmarks Commission Building Information Form (1984), and Historical Summary by McGinley Hart & Associates (1989).
  671. ^ Maycock, Susan E. (1988). East Cambridge: Survey of Architectural History in Cambridge. Cambridge Historical Commission. p. 78. ISBN 0-262-53078-3.
  672. ^ "Building Notices". The Christian Science Monitor. Vol. II, no. 282. October 28, 1910. p. 4.
  673. ^ a b c Morgan, Keith N. (2012). Esperdy, Gabrielle; Kingsley, Karen (eds.). "Wentworth Institute of Technology". SAH Archipedia: Society of Architectural Historians.
  674. ^ "Williston Hall—A brief history of Wentworth buildings". Douglas D. Schumann Library & Learning Commons. Wentworth Institute of Technology. Archived from the original on March 6, 2023.
  675. ^ "Terra Cotta Tile for Exterior Walls". The Brickbuilder. XXI (7). Rogers & Manson: 196. July 1912.
  676. ^ "Boston, Mass.—Contracts Awarded: Telephone Building". The American Contractor. XXXI (30): 47. July 23, 1910.
  677. ^ "Will Erect A New Building—Plans of New England Telephone Co.—Structure to be Located in Fort Hill Sq". The Boston Globe. Vol. LXXVI, no. 163. December 10, 1909. p. 11.
  678. ^ "New Home to Be Ready Next Year". The Christian Science Monitor. II (193): 12. July 15, 1910.
  679. ^ "Historic Building Detail: ARL.678 – Arlington MBTA Power Substation". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  680. ^ Zimmerman, Sarah; Wyman Benka, Carla (June 1985). "National Register of Historic Places – Inventory Nomination Form: Brookline Multiple Resource Area". National Park Service. p. 7.46.
  681. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BKL.445 – Coolidge Corner Station". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  682. ^ "Power Generation and Distribution System of the Boston Elevated Railway". Electric Railway Journal. XXXVIII (27). McGraw Publishing Company: 1313–1319. December 30, 1911.
  683. ^ "Harvard Square Subway Station: Structure Is Gradually Taking On Shape—Is Located in Center of the Square—Base of Polished Granite and Superstructure of Brick". Cambridge Chronicle. Vol. LXVI, no. 23. Cambridge Chronicle Co., C. Burnside Seagrave, and James W. Bean. June 10, 1911. p. 1.
  684. ^ Gamwell, Edward F.; Robinson, J. Lee, eds. (June 24, 1911). "Subway Work Progressing". The Cambridge Tribune. Vol. XXXIV, no. 17. p. 7.
  685. ^ "The Cambridge Subway". Electric Railway Journal. Vol. XXXIX, no. 19. McGraw Publishing Company. May 11, 1912. pp. 782–789.
  686. ^ "Historic Building Detail: CAM.225 – Kendall Square Substation". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  687. ^ Gamwell, Edward F.; Robinson, J. Lee, eds. (June 3, 1911). "Transformer Station for the Boston Elevated Ry Co Kendall Sq Cambridge". The Cambridge Tribune. Vol. XXXIV, no. 14. p. 8.
  688. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.10767 – Roslindale Substation". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  689. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.6753 – Boston Elevated Railway South Boston Power Station". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  690. ^ "South Boston Power Station". Practical Engineer. XVI (21): 1069–1072. November 1, 1912.
  691. ^ Arthur, A. S., ed. (November 25, 1911). "Building Permits". The Brookline Press. Vol. IX, no. 3. p. 1.
  692. ^ Spencer, Arthur W., ed. (November 18, 1911). "Real Estate: Building Permits". The Chronicle. Vol. 38, no. 46. Brookline, Massachusetts: The Riverdale Press. p. 12.
  693. ^ Floyd, Margaret Henderson (1988). The Custom House and Tower: Boston (PDF). Vol. I.
  694. ^ Morgan, Keith N. (2012). Esperdy, Gabrielle; Kingsley, Karen (eds.). "Angell Memorial Park". SAH Archipedia. Society of Architectural Historians.
  695. ^ "Historic Monument Detail: BOS.935 – Angell, George Thorndike Memorial Fountain". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  696. ^ "The Decorative Possibilities of Concrete". Contract Record and Engineering Review. 28 (3). Mugh C. MacLean: 75. January 21, 1914.
  697. ^ Angell, George T., ed. (February 1913). "Angell Fountain Opened—Memorial Started by Boston School Children Will Supply Water to 5000 Horses Daily". Our Dumb Animals. 45 (9): 134–135.
  698. ^ "Historic Other Detail: BOS.9345 – Green Street Rapid Transit Station". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  699. ^ "Historic Monument Detail: WAT.9118 – Mount Auburn Cemetery - Peabody, Robert Swain Monument". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  700. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.1612 – Sargent Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  701. ^ "Real Estate Matters—Newly Organized Clinton Street Trust Buys Property at the North End". The Boston Daily Globe. Vol. LXIII, no. 65. March 6, 1903. p. 11.
  702. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.1816 – Boston Insurance Company Building". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  703. ^ "Boston, Mass.: Contracts Awarded—Office Bldg". The American Contractor. 34: 64. March 15, 1913.
  704. ^ Jones, Harry, ed. (April 1913). "Iron and Steel Construction News: Massachusetts". The Bridgemen's Magazine. XIII (4): 328.
  705. ^ Robinson, J. Lee, ed. (May 17, 1913). "Memorial Flagg-Staff [sic]". The Cambridge Tribune. Vol. XXXVI, no. 12. p. 1.
  706. ^ Mahoney, H. J.; Toomey, D. J., eds. (July 5, 1913). "Mayor Signs Contract". The Cambridge Sentinel. Vol. X, no. 36. Sentinel Publishing Company. p. 4.
  707. ^ Robinson, J. Lee, ed. (August 2, 1913). "Flag Pole Rises: Work on Memorial Staff Now Progressing—President Eliot Assists with the Inspection". The Cambridge Tribune. Vol. XXXVI, no. 23. p. 1.
  708. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BOS.10757 – Havey Beach Parental School for Boys Stable". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  709. ^ "Boston, Mass.: Contracts Awarded—Stable". The American Contractor. 34: 43. January 11, 1913.
  710. ^ "Wentworth Hall—A brief history of Wentworth buildings". Douglas D. Schumann Library & Learning Commons. Wentworth Institute of Technology. Archived from the original on March 6, 2023.
  711. ^ "Boston, Mass.: Contracts Awarded—Garage". The American Contractor. 36: 59. April 17, 1915.
  712. ^ "New and Enlarged Shops: Metal Working—New England States". American Machinist. 38 (12): 75. March 20, 1913.
  713. ^ "New and Enlarged Shops: Metal Working—New England States". American Machinist. 43 (18): 792. November 4, 1915.
  714. ^ "Boston, Mass.: Garage". The American Contractor. 34: 64. March 15, 1913.
  715. ^ "Historic Building Detail: WOR.1347 – Worcester Academy - Daniels Gymnasium". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  716. ^ "Gymnasium, Worcester Academy, Worcester, Mass". The Architectural Forum. XXXVI (2). Rogers & Manson: 41–43. February 1917.
  717. ^ "Boston, Mass.: Contracts Awarded—Gymnasium & Swimming Pool". The American Contractor. 36: 68. June 5, 1915.
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  719. ^ "Schools and Colleges—Boston, Mass". The American Contractor. XXXVI (15): 18. April 10, 1915.
  720. ^ "Historic Building Detail: BLM.709 – McLean Hospital - Arlington House". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  721. ^ "Hospitals and Asylums: Waverly, Mass". The American Contractor. 36: 23. April 24, 1915.
  722. ^ "Historic Area Detail: BLM.A – McLean Hospital National Register District". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  723. ^ "Historic Building Detail: SBD.98 – Wells, Mary E. School". MACRIS. William F. Galvin.
  724. ^ "Buildings—Southbridge, Mass". Engineering News. 73 (13): 171. April 1, 1915.
  725. ^ "Buildings: Proposed Work—Mass., Southbridge". Engineering News. 74 (19): 291. November 4, 1915.
  726. ^ "Former Massachusetts School Becomes Senior Housing". Housing Finance. Zonda Media. July 13, 2022.
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  743. ^ "Tobin Hall". Salve Regina University.
  744. ^ "Drexel Hall". Salve Regina University.
  745. ^ "Stonor Hall". Salve Regina University.
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  749. ^ "The Breakers—Children's Cottage 1878". Buildings of New England. 27 December 2021.
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