User:JPRiley/Lowell

WARREN LYMAN FLOYD
Warren L. Floyd (1836-1918) was an American architect practicing in Lowell, Massachusetts.

Life and career
Warren Lyman Floyd was born February 1, 1836 in Warner, New Hampshire to Daniel Floyd and Susan M. (Bushee) Floyd. He was educated in the public schools of Methuen and Billerica, Massachusetts. He trained as a carpenter in New Hampshire and Boston and briefly operated a grocery in Billerica. In 1872 he moved to Lowell and began working for builder George W. Pearson. In 1875, after self-education in architecture, he established himself as an architect in Lowell. He formally retired in 1909, though he continued to work on small projects from his home.

Personal life
In 1859 Floyd married Nancy Louise Holden of Billerica. At the time, Floyd was a resident of Medford. They had three children, one son and two daughters. Floyd and his wife were Baptists and were closely involved with the First Baptist Church in Lowell. The Floyds lived at 124 Stevens Street in Lowell. Floyd died August 2, 1918 in Lowell.

Legacy
A least one building designed by Floyd has been listed on the United States National Register of Historic Places, and others contribute to listed historic districts.

Architectural works

 * First Baptist Church, 101 S Second Ave, Mount Vernon, New York (1887-88)
 * Collinsville School, 2063 Lakeview Ave, Dracut, Massachusetts (1891)
 * Union School, Dunstable, Massachusetts (1895)
 * French Baptist Church (former), Lowell, Massachusetts (1898)
 * Kenwood School, 920 Methuen St, Dracut, Massachusetts (1900)
 * First Primitive Methodist Church, Lowell, Massachusetts (1901-04, demolished)
 * Dunstable Town Hall, Dunstable, Massachusetts (1907-08, NRHP 1999)
 * Wilson Memorial Chapel, Green Cemetery, Carlisle, Massachusetts (1907)

PERLEY FRED GILBERT
Perley F. Gilbert (1868-1956) was an American architect practicing in Lowell, Massachusetts.

Life and career
Perley Fred Gilbert was born December 14, 1868 in St. Johnsbury, Vermont to Charles Henry Gilbert and Sarah Louise (Hale) Gilbert. In 1875 the family relocated to Andover, Massachusetts. He attended the public schools and Phillips Academy in Andover. In 1891 he entered the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, graduating in 1895 with a degree in architecture. He worked for Boston architects for several years, returning to Andover in 1898 to establish his own practice. In April of 1899 he formed a partnership with Otis A. Merrill, a Lowell architect, as Merrill & Gilbert. Merrill retired in November of 1900, and Gilbert suceeded to the practice. For many years Gilbert was chiefly known as a residential architect, and designed worker housing for the American Woolen Company as well as homes for regionally prominent industrialists. In the 1920s he began to design many commercial and schools buildings in the Lowell area. In 1928, he designed Lowell's Masonic Temple.

In 1949, Gilbert reorganized his firm as Perley F. Gilbert Associates, with Herbert H. Glassman (1919-2003), Edmund E. McMahon (1915-1990) and Albert I. Richmond (1910-1958) as fellow principals. Later principals included Arthur P. Cryan, Joseph G. Dion, Robert F. Hudson and Arthur P. Savas. Gilbert's sucessors were best known for schools and other public buildings, and were the designers of the Kenneth R. Fox Student Union of the University of Massachusetts Lowell, the tallest building in Lowell. Gilbert was president of the firm until his death. He was succeeded by Richmond, who died suddenly in an aviation accident in 1958. Glassman was then elected president and held the office until his retirement in 1984. The firm was likely inactive thereafter, and was involuntarily dissolved in 1990.

Personal life
It is not known if Gilbert ever married or had children. After 1875, he lived his entire life in Andover. He first lived with his parents at 115 Main Street. After his parents' deaths he sold the house in 1916, and from then on boarded down the street at 107 Main Street.

Gilbert died May 5, 1956 in Andover.

Architectural works

 * Albert E. Hulme house, 93 Main St, Andover, Massachusetts (1899-1900)
 * American Woolen Company housing, Maynard, Massachusetts (1902-03)
 * American Woolen Company housing, Lawrence, Massachusetts (1905-06)
 * Riverside Mills office building, Providence, Rhode Island (1905, demolished 2014)
 * "Orlando" for William M. Wood Jr., Andover, Massachusetts (1916-17, NRHP 1982)
 * Stevens Street Fire Station, 273 Stevens St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1921)
 * Andover Town Home, 80 Carmel Rd, Andover, Massachusetts (1922-23)
 * Cherry & Webb Building, Lowell, Massachusetts (1922)
 * Shawsheen Village laundry, Andover, Massachusetts (1923)
 * West Parish vestry, Andover, Massachusetts (1927)
 * Andover Town Hall remodeling, 20 Main St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1928, NRHP 1982)
 * Masonic Temple, 79 Dutton St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1928–29)
 * Ditson School, 739 Boston Rd, Billerica, Massachusetts (1931, demolished 2021)
 * Andover High School (former) additions, Andover, Massachusetts (1935-36)
 * Polish American Veterans Club, 201 Coburn St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1951)
 * St. Patrick's School (former), 70 Main St, Jaffrey, New Hampshire (1953)
 * Bruce School, 135 Butler St, Lawrence, Massachusetts (1954)
 * Holy Trinity Youth Center, 338 High St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1954)
 * Acton-Boxborough Regional High School (former), 16 Charter Rd, Acton, Massachusetts (1955–57)
 * Riverside School, 13 Fairground Rd, Springfield, Vermont (1955)
 * Arthur D. Healey School, 5 Meacham St, Somerville, Massachusetts (1955, demolished)
 * Temple Emanuel (former), 101 W Forest St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1958–59)
 * Temple Shalom, 475 Winthrop St, Medford, Massachusetts (1959)
 * Ayer Shirley Regional High School, 141 Washington St, Ayer, Massachusetts (1962–63)
 * Temple Isaiah, 55 Lincoln St, Lexington, Massachusetts (1962–63)
 * Maynard High School, 1 Tiger Dr, Maynard, Massachusetts (1963–64, demolished 2017)
 * Pawtucketville Memorial School, 425 W Meadow Rd, Lowell, Massachusetts (1964–65)
 * Brockton High School, 470 Forest Ave, Brockton, Massachusetts (1965-70)
 * Chelmsford Police Department (former), 230 North Rd, Chelmsford, Massachusetts (1965)
 * Henry J. Robinson School, 110 June St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1967–69)
 * Little Harbour School, 50 Clough Dr, Portsmouth, New Hampshire (1968–69)
 * Archambault Towers, 657 Merrimack St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1970–71)
 * Kenneth R. Fox Student Union, University of Massachusetts Lowell, Lowell, Massachusetts (1970-73)
 * Lowell High School additions, 50 Father Morissette Blvd, Lowell, Massachusetts (1978–80)

HARRY PRESCOTT GRAVES


Harry Prescott Graves (1870–1940) was an American architect practicing in Lowell, Massachusetts.

Life and career
Harrison Prescott Graves, known as Harry, was born June 6, 1870 in Lowell, Massachusetts to Orville D. Graves and Annie M. (Clark) Graves. He was educated in the Lowell public schools, graduating in 1888. He then joined the office of Merrill & Cutler as a drafter before establishing himself as an architect in 1895. In 1897 he formed a partnership with Salem engineer John H. Bickford, and the two practiced together as Bickford & Graves until 1899, when Bickford moved to Boston and Graves resumed independent practice. During his career he developed a specialty of public schools and theatre buildings. Graves worked continuously as an architect until his death in 1940. His last major project was an additional building for the Lowell High School. In addition to the projects he was primary architect for, he was consulting architect to Blackall, Clapp & Whittemore of Boston on their design for the Lowell Memorial Auditorium.

Personal life
Graves was married in 1898 to Helen Mabel Osgood of Lowell. They had one daughter. Graves died March 9, 1940 in Lowell. His wife predeceased him in 1933. His architectural library was donated to the Pollard Memorial Library.

Legacy
In addition to his architectural works, Graves also developed a proposal to develop central Lowell along City Beautiful lines. This proposal, published in 1912, showed a proposed network of boulevards, parks and squares connecting Lowell's major centers. Graves also proposed a group of cultural and educational buildings located north of Lowell City Hall along the Merrimack Canal. Graves's proposals were not executed, though some of his proposed elements, including an extension to the high school and the Lowell Memorial Auditorium, were executed at other locations.

Several of Graves' buildings contribute to historic districts listed on the United States National Register of Historic Places.

Architectural works

 * Middlesex Village School, Middlesex St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1895, demolished)
 * Pine Street School (former), 341 Pine St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1896-97)
 * Antrim Congregational Church, 233 Clinton Rd, Antrim, New Hampshire (1897–98)
 * Sweetwater Hotel, 96 Sweetwater Ave, Bedford, Massachusetts (1897)
 * Lowell High School Commercial and Manual Training Department Building, 64 John St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1899-1900)
 * First Baptist Church reconstruction, 99 Church St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1900–01)
 * Greenhalge School, 149 Ennell St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1905–06, demolished)
 * Merrimack Square Theatre, 146 Paige St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1910, demolished)
 * Temple Court, 15 Lynde St, Salem, Massachusetts (1911)
 * Pollard Memorial Library rebuilding,, 401 Merrimack St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1915–16)
 * Ravine House, Durand Rd, Randolph, New Hampshire (1915, demolished 1963)
 * Crown Theatre, 74 Merrimack St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1916)
 * Strand Theatre, 128 Central St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1917, demolished)
 * Palace Theatre, 85 Washington St, West Warwick, Rhode Island (1920–21, demolished)
 * Lowell Memorial Auditorium, Lowell, Massachusetts (1921-22)
 * BPOE Building, 15 Warren St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1923)
 * Pawtucketville War Memorial, Riverside St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1927–28, destroyed 1949)
 * Rex Center, 50 Middle St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1933–34, burned 1960, demolished 1971)
 * Lowell High School Trade School Building, 43 French St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1939)

OTIS ADDISON MERRILL
Otis A. Merrill (1844–1935) was an American architect. In association with various partners he practiced architecture in Lowell, Massachusetts from 1873 until 1900.

Life and career
Otis Addison Merrill was born August 22, 1844 in Hudson, New Hampshire to Benjamin Arnold Merrill and Mary Jane (Winn) Merrill. He was educated in the local schools, and when he turned 18, during the American Civil War, he enlisted in the Union Army with the 7th New Hampshire Infantry Regiment. He was awarded a Gillmore Medal for his conduct during the Second Battle of Charleston Harbor. He was discharged July 7, 1865 at Concord with the rank of sergeant. After the war he went to Haverhill, Massachusetts, where he learned the carpentry trade. In 1869 he moved to Lowell. After four more years and with some self-training in architecture, he established himself as an architect in Lowell in 1873. In 1878 he formed a partnership with Charles S. Eaton, a Lowell native who had just graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The partnership of Merrill & Eaton was dissolved in 1880. Three years later in 1883 he formed a partnership with Arthur S. Cutler, an Andover native, who had joined Merrill's office as a draftsman in 1876. Merrill & Cutler was dissolved in 1897, and Merrill formed a new partnership, Merrill & Clark, with draftsman Edwin R. Clark. In April of 1899 Clark left to open his own office, and Merrill was joined by Perley F. Gilbert, a St. Johnsbury native who was a graduate of MIT. Merrill & Gilbert practiced together until Merrill's retirement in November of 1900. The office continued under Gilbert and his successors until 1990.

Merrill's practice was centered on Massachusetts, and he and his partners were well known as architects of public buildings and schools in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. His most prominent building was the Lowell City Hall, begun in 1890 and completed 1893, with a design based on the Allegheny County Courthouse by H. H. Richardson. An unusual foreign project was for a YMCA in Madras, now Chennai, in India. Plans for this building, which was the gift of John Wanamaker, were drawn and accepted in the United States in 1896. Merrill & Cutler designed the building in an Italian Gothic style. In 1897, after being sent to India, they were revised by local architect George S. T. Harris at the suggestion of Governor Arthur Havelock. Though the floor plans were unchanged, Harris redrew the elevations to be more in keeping with the local architecture, in what is now known as the Indo-Saracenic style. The building was finished in 1899.

Personal life
Merrill was married three times. He was married first in 1870 to Maria Jennie Moore of Pelham, New Hampshire, who died in 1882. He married second in 1883 to Anna Maud Smith of Worcester, who died in 1886. He married third in 1889 to Anna E. Boynton of Pepperell. He had a total of six children. During their time in Lowell, Merrill and his family lived in a house now numbered 92 Wannalancit Street, a Second Empire cottage which he may have designed and built himself. After his retirement, Merrill and his wife moved to her hometown of Pepperell. She died there March 6, 1929, followed by her husband September 14, 1935.

Legacy
At least two buildings designed by Merrill and his partners have been listed on the United States National Register of Historic Places, and others contribute to listed historic districts.

Architectural works

 * Branch Street Fire Station, 45 Branch St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1877)
 * Fiske Building, 219 Central St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1877)
 * Lowell City Stable (former), 276 Broadway St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1877)
 * Appleton Bank Building, 166 Central St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1878)
 * Asa C. Russell house, 331 Wilder St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1879)
 * Tucker House, Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts (1880)
 * Central Block, Central and Middle Sts, Lowell, Massachusetts (1881, demolished)
 * Gates Block, 307 Market St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1881)
 * Old Ladies' Home (former), 520 Fletcher St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1881)
 * Graves Hall, Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts (1882–83 and 1891–92)
 * Abel T. Atherton house, 236 Fairmount St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1883)
 * Wilton Town Hall, 40 Main St, Wilton, New Hampshire (1883–84, NRHP 2009)
 * First Congregational Church (former), 400 Merrimack St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1884–85)
 * Sargent School (former), 7 Cross St, Graniteville, Massachusetts (1884)
 * Phillips Hall, Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts (1885)
 * Seventh New Hampshire Veteran Association Building, Lakeside Ave, Weirs Beach, New Hampshire (1885)
 * The Moosilauke, Breezy Point Rd, Warren, New Hampshire (1886, burned 1953)
 * Varnum School addition, Lowell, Massachusetts (1886, NRHP 1995)
 * Central Fire Station (former), 45 Palmer St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1889)
 * Concord High School (former), School St, Concord, New Hampshire (1889–90, demolished 1958)
 * Eliot School (former), 10 Favor St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1889)
 * Charles E. Bartlett house, 22 Bartlett St, Chelmsford, Massachusetts (1890)
 * Lowell Armory, Westford and Grand Sts, Lowell, Massachusetts (1890–91, demolished)
 * Lowell City Hall, 375 Merrimack St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1890–93)
 * YMCA Building, William and 6th Sts, New Bedford, Massachusetts (1890–91, demolished)
 * Howe Building, 11 Kearney Sq, Lowell, Massachusetts (1891–92)
 * Odd Fellows Building, 84 Middlesex St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1891–92, demolished 1948)
 * Sylvia Ann Howland School, Pleasant and Kempton Sts, New Bedford, Massachusetts (1892–93, demolished)
 * Congregational Church of North Chelmsford, 15 Princeton St, North Chelmsford, Massachusetts (1893–94)
 * Samuel Robinson house, 180 Jackson St, Lawrence, Massachusetts (1893)
 * Jewett Building, 492–496 Merrimack St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1893)
 * Stowe School, Bartlett St, Andover, Massachusetts (1894–95, demolished 1982)
 * The Lincolnshire, 22 Hidden Rd, Andover, Massachusetts (1897–98, NRHP 1982)
 * YMCA Building, NSC Bose Rd, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India (1897–99)
 * North Chelmsford School, North Chelmsford, Massachusetts (1899, demolished)

Life and career
James Hovey Rand was born October 25, 1813 in Boston to Gardner Hammond Rand and Sarah (Frothingham) Rand.

Rand & Place.

In 1858, following the controversy over his jail design, Rand relocated his family and practice to Boston. He originally moved to Roxbury, but by 1860 had settled in Charlestown, his mother's birthplace. He was a vocal proponent of the annexation of Charleston to Boston, which was eventually carried out in 1874. Rand practiced architecture in Boston until his death in 1883, but no projects are known after the 1860s.

Personal life
In 1835 Rand married Laurinda Moore. They had two children. Rand died September 6, 1883 in Charlestown.

Architectural works

 * House for John Nesmith, Lowell, Massachusetts (1842)
 * House for Samuel Lawrence, Lowell, Massachusetts (1844, demolished)
 * Boott and Massachusetts Cotton Mills Agents' House, Lowell, Massachusetts (1845-46)
 * Appleton Block, Lowell, Massachusetts (1848, demolished 1877)
 * House for James H. Rand, Lowell, Massachusetts (1849-50, burned 1894)
 * Church of the Pilgrims (former), Lowell, Massachusetts (1850)
 * House for Abiel Rolfe, Lowell, Massachusetts (1854, NRHP 1982)
 * Middlesex County Jail (former), Lowell, Massachusetts (1855-58)
 * Portland City Hall, Portland, Maine
 * Warren Institution for Savings Building, Charlestown, Boston, Massachusetts (1859, demolished)
 * House for Henry Whitwell, Boston, Massachusetts (1863)
 * House for John Mixer, Boston, Massachusetts (1865, altered 1869)
 * Bunker Hill School, Charlestown, Boston, Massachusetts (1866-67, NRHP 1987)
 * Warren School, Charlestown, Boston, Massachusetts (1868, demolished)

HENRY LAWRENCE ROURKE
Henry L. Rourke (1873-1963) was an American architect practicing in Lowell, Massachusetts during the first half of the twentieth century.

Life and career
Henry Lawrence Rourke was born March 14, 1873 in Lowell to Lawrence Rourk and Jane (Sears) Rourk. His education is unknown, but by 1894 he was a draftsman in the office of Lowell architects Stickney & Austin. Circa 1906 he left Stickney to open his own office, but returned in 1908 to form the partnership of Stickney, Austin & Rourke. This was dissolved in 1910 and Rourke returned to private practice, which he continued for over thirty years. Rourke was best known as an architect of schools, designing many for public and Catholic clients in and around Lowell. Rourke died February 17, 1963.

Rourke was a member of the American Institute of Architects from 1925 until 1939.

Legacy
Rourke is best known as the architect of the Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church in Lowell, the first church built specifically for a Greek Orthodox congregation in the United States. This building has been listed on the United States National Register of Historic Places, and others contribute to listed historic districts.

Architectural works

 * Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church, Lowell, Massachusetts (1906-08, NRHP 1977)
 * Lothrop School, 3447 US-7, Pittsford, Vermont (1911–13)
 * St. Peter's School (former), 230 Gorham St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1912–13)
 * St. Jean Baptiste R. C. Church rebuilding, 741 Merrimack St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1913-15)
 * Oblate House of Studies, 391 Michigan Ave NE, Washington, DC (1915–16, demolished)
 * Lowell High School addition, 50 Father Morissette Blvd, Lowell, Massachusetts (1920-22, altered)
 * Sisters Hospital (former), 7 Highwood St, Waterville, Maine (1922–23)
 * St. Michael's School, 21 6th St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1922–23)
 * Parker Avenue School, 77 Parker Ave, Dracut, Massachusetts (1924)
 * Keith Academy (former), 201 Thorndike St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1925–26)
 * Pollard's Department Store, Lowell, Massachusetts (1926-27, altered)
 * St. Margaret's School (former), 486 Stevens St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1941)

FREDERICK WARREN STICKNEY
Frederick W. Stickney (1853–1918) was a prolific American architect based in Lowell, Massachusetts. He was active for nearly forty years, from 1881 to his death 1918. Major works include the Pollard Memorial Library (1890–93), the Lowell High School (1892–93) and Coburn Hall at the University of Massachusetts Lowell (1895–97).

Life and career
Frederick Warren Stickney was born June 17, 1853 in Lowell, Massachusetts to Daniel Stickney and Betsey (Emery) Stickney. He attended the Lowell public schools and in 1873 entered the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as a special student in architecture, graduating from the two-year program in 1875. He worked for Otis A. Merrill in Lowell and for Hartwell & Swasey in Boston. In 1881 he opened his own office at 131 Devonshire Street in Boston, moving it to the new Hildreth Building in Lowell in 1883.

In 1892 he formed a partnership with Boston architect William D. Austin, following the retirement of Austin's former partner, William E. Chamberlin. The new firm of Stickney & Austin was initially based in Lowell, but in 1893 Austin returned to Boston to open a second office. Thereafter the architects remained in partnership and practiced under the name of Stickney & Austin, but rarely if ever collaborated. Stickney was not involved in the major works of the Boston office, which included the numerous buildings for the Metropolitan Park Commission and its sucessor, the Metropolitan District Commission, and the former Charlestown High School. The two architects finally dissolved their partnership around 1908, though both continued to practice under the Stickney & Austin name. Stickney completed fewer major projects during the last years of his career. One of his last was the 1915 reconstruction, following a major fire, of the Pollard Memorial Library, which he had originally completed in 1893.

In 1908 Stickney formed a new partnership with architect Henry L. Rourke, who had been an employee of Stickney before opening his own office. The new partnership, known as Stickney, Austin & Rourke, lasted only until 1910. Circa 1914 Stickney moved from his suite in the Hildreth Building to a smaller office in the Lowell Institution for Savings Building, and in 1916 he dropped the Stickney & Austin name, practicing under his name alone until his death in early 1918.

Personal life
Stickney was closely involved in the social life of Lowell. Stickney and his associates attempted to establish in Lowell a version of the club life common amongst the upper classes in larger cities. To this end he was among the founders of the Vesper Boat Club, later the Vesper Country Club, in 1875 and the Yorick Club in 1882. Many of his fellow members in these clubs were also later to be his clients.

For his entire professional career, Stickney lived in his parents' home at 53 3rd Street in Lowell's Centralville neighborhood. He never married. He died January 17, 1918 in Lowell.

Architectural works

 * Elizabeth Burrows house, 157 Nesmith St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1879)
 * Vesper Boat Club (former), Lowell, Massachusetts (1879, altered)
 * Butler School, 812 Gorham St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1882, NRHP 1995, demolished 2013)
 * Shedd Block, 295 Central St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1883–84)
 * E. W. Hoyt and F. B. Shedd carriage houses, 386 and 396 Andover St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1884)
 * Pawtucket School, 131 Mammoth Rd, Lowell, Massachusetts (1884, demolished)
 * Rosemary Lodge, 322 Rose Hill Rd, Water Mill, New York (1884, NRHP 2000)
 * Oliver E. Cushing house, 48 Wannalancit St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1885)
 * Talbot Memorial Chapel, Lowell Cemetery, Lowell, Massachusetts (1885)
 * Chase Block, 11–19 N Main St, Concord, New Hampshire (1887)
 * Alice (Keys) Hollister house, 1825 Keys Crescent Ln, Walnut Hills, Cincinnati, Ohio (1887)
 * Office building, Lowell Cemetery, Lowell, Massachusetts (1887)
 * Elliot Hospital, 1 Elliot Way, Manchester, New Hampshire (1888–90, demolished)
 * Herbert Jefferson house, 7 Fairmount St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1888)
 * Kingsley School, 30 Pine St, Rutland, Vermont (1888)
 * Edward Swift Isham house, 1842 Main St, Manchester, Vermont (1889)
 * Kennebunk River Club, 116 Ocean Ave, Kennebunkport, Maine (1889–90, NRHP 1975)
 * Longfellow School, 6 Church St, Rutland, Vermont (1889–90, NRHP 1976)
 * James E. Nesmith house, 257 Andover St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1889)
 * Pembroke Building, 795 Elm St, Manchester, New Hampshire (1889–90)
 * Varney School, 84 Varney St, Manchester, New Hampshire (1889–90, NRHP 1982)
 * Pollard Memorial Library, 401 Merrimack St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1890–93, burned and rebuilt 1915)
 * Milford Town House Library Annex, 1 Union Sq, Milford, New Hampshire (1891–92, NRHP 1988)
 * Moody School, 158 Rogers St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1891–93)
 * Lowell High School, 50 Father Morissette Blvd, Lowell, Massachusetts (1892–93)
 * Elizabeth Rogers house, 206 Rogers St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1892)
 * James W. Bullock house, 2831 Vernon Pl, Cincinnati, Ohio (1893, demolished)
 * Abraham Lincoln School, 300 Chelmsford St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1893–94, demolished)
 * Coburn Hall, University of Massachusetts Lowell, Lowell, Massachusetts (1895–97)
 * Merrimack Manufacturing Company agent's house, 285 Andover St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1895)
 * Pelham Library and Memorial Building, 5 Main St, Pelham, New Hampshire (1895–96, NRHP 2011)
 * Ambrose Cramer house, 57 Stone Gate Rd, Lake Forest, Illinois (1896)
 * Park Street School, 31 Park St, Rutland, Vermont (1896)
 * Mark Skinner Library (former), 48 West Rd, Manchester, Vermont (1896–97)
 * Watkins School, 26 Watkins Ave, Rutland, Vermont (1897, NRHP 2014)
 * Yorick Club remodeling, 91 Dutton St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1901)
 * Tyngsborough Public Library (former), 252 Middlesex Rd, Tyngsborough, Massachusetts (1904–05)
 * Vesper Country Club, 185 Pawtucket Blvd, Tyngsborough, Massachusetts (1904, burned 1923)
 * Herbert E. Fletcher house, Groton Rd, Westford, Massachusetts (1909)
 * Rogers Hall School gymnasium (former), 196 Rogers St, Lowell, Massachusetts (1912)


 * Harley T. Proctor house, Williamstown, Massachusetts