User:JPRiley/Peck
This is not a Wikipedia article: It is an individual user's work-in-progress page, and may be incomplete and/or unreliable. For guidance on developing this draft, see Wikipedia:So you made a userspace draft. Find sources: Google (books · news · scholar · free images · WP refs) · FENS · JSTOR · TWL |
Theodore B. Peck | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | March 8, 1927 | (aged 71)
Nationality | United States |
Occupation | Architect |
Theodore B. Peck (1856–1927) was an American architect from Connecticut.
Life and career[edit]
Theodore Barnard Peck was born January 14, 1856 in Bristol, Connecticut to Josiah Tracy Peck and Ellen Lewis (Barnard) Peck. He was educated in the public schools of Bristol and Hartford before entering Cornell University, from which he graduated with a BArch in 1877. He spent the next few years working as a drafter for architects in New York City and Bridgeport before briefly opening an office of his own in Bristol. This was soon discontinued and in 1881 he joined Waterbury architect Robert W. Hill. In 1883 he left Hill and opened his own office in Waterbury.[1] Peck practiced architecture in Waterbury for forty years, working into the 1920s.
Personal life[edit]
Peck never married. He died March 8, 1927 at the age of 71.[2]
Legacy[edit]
Peck
Architectural works[edit]
- House for Miles Lewis Peck,[a] 174 Summer St, Bristol, Connecticut (1881)[3]
- Bristol High School (former),[a] 98 Summer St, Bristol, Connecticut (1890)[3]
- Waterbury Industrial School (former),[b] 30 Central Ave, Waterbury, Connecticut (1891)[4]
- House for Chauncey P. Goss, 120 Hillside Ave, Waterbury, Connecticut (1892, demolished)[5]
- Apothecary Building,[b] 63 Bank St, Waterbury, Connecticut (1894)[4]
- Waterbury American Building,[b] 174-176 Grand St, Waterbury, Connecticut (1894, burned and rebuilt 1902)[4]
- Barnard School (former), 11 Draher St, Waterbury, Connecticut (1898)[6]
- Bristol National Bank Building,[c] 245 Main St, Bristol, Connecticut (1904)[7]
- The Frederick[b], 70-78 E Main St, Waterbury, Connecticut (1906)[4]
- House for William C. Langley,[d] 253 Columbia Blvd, Waterbury, Connecticut (1917)[8]
- House for William J. Schlegel,[d] 9 Randolph Ave, Waterbury, Connecticut (1918)[5]
Notes[edit]
- ^ a b A contributing property to the Federal Hill Historic District, NRHP-listed in 1986.
- ^ a b c d A contributing property to the Downtown Waterbury Historic District, NRHP-listed in 1983.
- ^ A contributing property to the Main Street Historic District, NRHP-listed in 1995.
- ^ a b A contributing property to the Overlook Historic District, NRHP-listed in 1988.
References[edit]
- ^ The Town and City of Waterbury, Connecticut, from the Aboriginal Period to the Year Eighteen Hundred and Ninty-Five 3, ed. Joseph Anderson (New Haven: Price & Lee Company, 1896): 1049.
- ^ "Theodore B. Peck '77" in Cornell Alumni News 29, no. 27 (April 14, 1927): 328.
- ^ a b Federal Hill Historic District NRHP Registration Form (1986)
- ^ a b c d Downtown Waterbury Historic District NRHP Registration Form (1983)
- ^ a b William J. Pape, History of Waterbury and the Naugatuck Valley, Connecticut 1 (Chicago: S. J. Clarke Publishing Company, 1918)
- ^ Engineering News 40, no. 14 (October 6, 1898): 108.
- ^ Main Street Historic District NRHP Registration Form (1995)
- ^ Overlook Historic District NRHP Registration Form (1988)