User:JPRiley/sandbox

History
Soon after the Providence Theatre closed in 1832, the need of a permanent theatre was felt. In 1838, several Providence businessmen formed a stock company and purchased a lot on Dorrance Street for a new theatre. Architect James C. Bucklin was chosen to design the new building. As soon as the project was announced, it was met with opposition. The City Council was petitioned to refuse to issue any liscenses for theatrical performances. This was supported by the congregation of the Second Baptist Church, across the street at the corner of Pine and Dorrance Streets, which found that a theatre nearby would "impair their rights as a Christian society." Francis Wayland, president of Brown University, was also strongly opposed to the project. However, the City Council rejected these, reserving the right to issue liscenses on a case by case basis. In October, when the building was nearly finished, it was leased to James Gaspard Maeder, who obtained a liscense to operate.

The theatre was opened October 29, 1838, with performances of The Soldier's Daughter (Andrew Cherry, 1804) and A Pleasant Neighbour (Elizabeth Planché, 1836), with a preamble by Sarah Helen Whitman recited by actress Clara Fisher Maeder, wife of manager Maeder. The first season produced a small profit, but the second did not, and Maeder did not renew his lease after 1839. For the rest of its active life, the theatre's managers were not able to make it profitable, and when the 1844 season closed its future was doubt. In fall of that year the building was occupied by George Haswell for the exhibition of the planetarium built by Dionysius Lardner and presentation of Lardner's lectures on astronomy. The morning of October 25, 1844, a fire of unknown origin destroyed the theatre, including Lardner's planetarium and all of the theatre equipment. Only the stone walls were left standing. Due to difficulties with finances and neighbors, the stock company chose not to rebuilt and reopen the theatre. Though the theatre's life was short, a number of notable actors, actresses, dancers and singers performed on its stage. In addition to Clara Fisher, these included Junius Brutus Booth, Charlotte Cushman, Fanny Elssler, Edwin Forrest, Thomas S. Hamblin, Charles and Ellen Kean, Mary Shaw and John and Charlotte Vandenhoff, among others.

Lardner in 1842

Under the ownership of Tillinghast Almy, it was rebuilt for manufacturing uses, though from the exterior it appeared much as before, with pilasters, entablature and pediment still in place. Openings were probably cut in the upper levels at this time. In 1864, the building was purchased by A. & W. Sprague, the state's most successful textile manufacturers, who probably used the building as a warehouse. In 1873 the Spragues became insolvent, with their assets held up in litigation for many years. Construction of the neighboring building in 1883 necessitated the removal and reconstruction of the west wall, causing the westernmost pilaster to be mostly removed. The warehouse was bought in 1890 by B. B. & R. Knight, textile manufacturers who bought many other Sprague properties. The building was probably rebuilt during their ownership. The entablature, pediment and roof were removed, and three additional stories were added, bringing the building to its current appearance. The Knights also connected to the building a small brick building on Orange Street. Like the Spragues, the Knights used the building as a warehouse. In 1903, it was leased by the Ballou, Johnson & Nichols Company, wholesale retailers. They bought the building outright in 1922. In 1977, after the company moved to Cranston, the building was sold to the Dorrance Associates. The new owners renovated the building for offices, which it remains.

Architecture
As originally designed by Bucklin, Shakespeare Hall was a simple Greek Revival building. The lower level, which contained the entrance, was Granite. The remainder of the structure was built with a cheaper stone, which was covered with plaster scored to resemble Granite. Above the lower level, the facade was adorned with five Doric pilasters, which were topped with a simple entablature and pediment. The only other external ornament was a medallion bust of William Shakespeare, which was removed at an unknown date. The architecture of the three upper levels is utilitarian, typical of period industrial architecture.

The original interior was elaborately decorated. The auditorium, which could seat about 1,300, featured a dome, semi-circular gallery and two tiers of boxes. The decorative scheme was based on the signs of the zodiac, and was painted by a young George Heister, who would later be well known as a scenic artist in New York. The fronts of the boxes were also elaborately painted. All of this was destroyed by the fire. The interior of the rebuilt building was completely unornamented. At the time the building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places, it was bare except for supporting columns and a single brick bearing wall. It is now conventional office space, though structural beams are still visible.

Life and career
Stephen Dacatur Hatch was born February 16, 1839 in Swanton, Vermont.

As a teenager he came to New York, and in 1860 joined the office of John B. Snook, a noted architect of commercial buildings, as a draftsman. In 1864, he established his own office as an architect. After a few slow years in the immidiate aftermath of the Civil War, by the 1870s he had developed a succesful practice as a commercial architect, much like his former employer. He worked continuously as a private practitioner until his death.

The project was completed by Hatch's successors, McCabe & Wilkie in association with McKim, Mead & White.

Personal life
Hatch was married in 1889 to Eva Hilton Thrift of San Francisco. They had one child, a daughter.

Architectural works

 * Morristown United Methodist Church, Morristown, New Jersey (1866-70)
 * Asbury and Embury Halls, Drew University, Madison, New Jersey (1867)
 * 213 Water Street, New York, New York (1868)
 * House for Henry T. Ingalls, New York, New York (1868)
 * House for George Opdyke, New York, New York (1868-69, demolished 1953)
 * Gilsey House, New York, New York (1869-71)
 * 1180 Broadway, New York, New York (1870)
 * United Methodist Church in Madison, Madison, New Jersey (1870-71, NRHP 2008)
 * Chapin Home for the Aged and Infirm, New York, New York (1871-73, demolished 1916)
 * Windsor Hotel, New York, New York (1871-73, burned 1899)
 * Jubilee Hall, Fisk University, Nashville, Tennessee (1873-76, NRHP 1971)
 * Union Dime Savings Bank Building, New York, New York (1874, demolished 1956)
 * House for Alfred W. Craven, New York, New York (1875, demolished)
 * The Rockingham, New York, New York (1875, demolished)
 * 838 Broadway, New York, New York (1876-77)
 * House for William Rockefeller, New York, New York (1876, demolished 1925)
 * Boreel Building, New York, New York (1878, demolished)
 * Howard Opera House, Burlington, Vermont (1878)
 * Burritt Block, Burlington, Vermont (1879)
 * Robbins & Appleton Building, New York, New York (1879-80)
 * Liverpool and London and Globe Insurance Company Building, New York, New York (1880, demolished)
 * Grace and St. Paul Lutheran Church, New York, New York (1881-82)
 * Schepp Building, New York, New York (1881)
 * Murray Hill Hotel, New York, New York (1884, demolished 1947)
 * 7 Dutch Street, New York, New York (1886)
 * 168 Duane Street, New York, New York (1886)
 * United States Army Building, New York, New York (1886, reclad 1986)
 * Office suite for the United States Secretary of War in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, Washington, D.C. (1887-88)
 * Meyer-Bannerman Building, St. Louis, Missouri (1888, NRHP 1983)
 * Manhattan Savings Institution Building, New York, New York (1889-90)
 * Merchants Laclede Building, St. Louis, Missouri (1889)
 * 135 Watts Street, New York, New York (1891-92)
 * Roosevelt Building, New York, New York (1893)
 * New York Life Insurance Company Building extension, New York, New York (1894-96)

Gallery of works

 * "Death of S. D. Hatch, Architect," American Architect and Building News 45, no. 974 (August 25 1894): 69.
 * "Personals," Engineering News 32, no. 7 (August 16 1894): 130.
 * "Stephen D. Hatch" in New York's Great Industries (New York and Chicago: Historical Publishing Company, 1885): 134.
 * "Death of Stephen D. Hatch," New York Evening World, August 13 1894, 5.
 * Mosette Glaser Broderick, "Hatch, Stephen D." in The Grove Encyclopedia of American Art, ed. Joan M. Marter (Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2011): 469.
 * "Stephen D. Hatch," Architecture and Building 21, no. 7 (August 18 1894): 78.
 * "Obituary," Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 54, no. 1379 (August 18 1894): 228.

Goldwin Goldsmith

 * Y. M. C. A. Building, Montclair, New Jersey (1898, demolished)
 * First United Methodist Church, Montclair, New Jersey (1901-02, NRHP 1988)
 * Houses for Benjamin A. Williams, New York, New York (1901, NRHP 1999)
 * House for Frederick T. Gates, Montclair, New Jersey (1903-04)
 * "The Knolls" for James A. Bailey, Mount Vernon, New York (1903-04, demolished)
 * House for E. Mead Johnson, East Orange, New Jersey (1905)
 * Mount Hebron Grammar School, Montclair, New Jersey (1908-09)
 * House for Samson Hirsh, Montclair, New Jersey (1910)
 * Grove Street School (former), Montclair, New Jersey (1912-13)
 * Orange Municipal Building, Orange, New Jersey (1912-13, NRHP 2012)
 * Copper Queen Hotel, Bisbee, Arizona (1902)

Life and career
Elias Carter was born May 30, 1781 in Auburn, Massachusetts to Timothy Carter, a carpenter and builder, and Sarah (Walker) Carter. His father died in 1784 when he fell from a church he was building in Leicester. Sarah Carter moved the family to Greenwich before remarrying in 1790 to Nathaniel Haskell, a farmer, of Hardwick. Carter's education is not known, though his interest in architecture may have come from his father's papers, which included a copy of Batty Langley's The City and Country Builder's and Workman's Treasury of Designs of 1756. His education is otherwise unknown. In 1805 he built his first known church, at Brimfield. Two years later he married and settled in Brimfield, where they lived for eight years. In 1815 he was one of the incorporators of the Brimfield Cotton and Woolen Manufacturing Company at East Brimfield, and built its mill. This company quickly failed, and many of its investors, including Carter, were bankrupt. He then moved to Thompson, Connecticut, where he built the Thompson Congregational Church from a design by Ithiel Town. In 1818 he went to Putnam, to built another church, and returned to Massachusetts in 1819 when he was hired to build a church at Mendon. In 1820 he returned to Brimfield.

His father Timothy and uncle Benjamin were both builders and were in partnership as Carter & Carter. This ended in 1784, when Timothy Carter died following a fall from a church they were building in Leicester. Sarah Carter and her children first moved to Greenwich, the home of her father-in-law. About 1790 she remarried to Nathaniel Haskell of Hardwick, where they then moved and Elias Carter was raised. His education is not known, though he may have been drawn to architecture and building through Batty Langley's The City and Country Builder's and Workman's Treasury of Designs of 1756, a copy of which had been owned by his father. He may also have had some training in Georgia. About 1807 he settled in Brimfield, where he remained for eight years. In 1815 he was one of the incorporators of the Brimfield Cotton and Woolen Manufacturing Company at East Brimfield, and built its mill. This company quickly failed, and many of its investors, including Carter, were bankrupt. Later the same year he moved to Thompson, Connecticut, where he built the Thompson Congregational Church to a design by Ithiel Town of New Haven, a Thompson native. In 1818 he went to Putnam to build another church, and in 1819 returned to Massachusetts to build a church at Mendon. After the Mendon church was completed he may have returned to Brimfield. In 1828 he moved to Worcester, where he built much of his best-known work.

Architectural works

 * First Congregational Church, Brimfield, Massachusetts (1805, demolished)
 * House for William Brown, Brimfield, Massachusetts (c.1807)
 * Brimfield Hotel, Brimfield, Massachusetts (1808, burned)
 * First Church, Templeton, Massachusetts (1811)
 * Third Fitzwilliam Meetinghouse, Fitzwilliam, New Hampshire (1817, NRHP 1977)
 * First Parish Church, Mendon, Massachusetts (1819-20)
 * House for John Wyles, Brimfield, Massachusetts (1819)
 * Acworth Congregational Church, Acworth, New Hampshire (1821, NRHP 1975)
 * Church of Christ in Granby, Granby, Massachusetts (1821)
 * First Congregational Church, North Brookfield, Massachusetts (1823)
 * House for Samuel A. Hitchcock, Brimfield, Massachusetts (1823)
 * First Presbyterian Church (former), Millbury, Massachusetts (1828, NRHP 2010)
 * Second Congregational (Unitarian) Church, Worcester, Massachusetts (1828-29, burned 1849)
 * House for Daniel Waldo, Worcester, Massachusetts (1829-30, demolished)
 * First Baptist Church, Savannah, Georgia (1831-33, altered 1922)
 * Granite Row, Worcester, Massachusetts (1831, demolished)
 * Leicester Academy, Leicester, Massachusetts (1832-33, demolished)
 * Worcester Insane Asylum (former), Worcester, Massachusetts (1832-33 and 1843, demolished)
 * House for Simeon Burt, Worcester, Massachusetts (1834, demolished)
 * House for Alfred D. Foster, Worcester, Massachusetts (1835, demolished)
 * House for Samuel M. Burnside, Worcester, Massachusetts (1836, demolished)
 * House for Elias Carter, Chicopee, Massachusetts (1836-37, demolished)
 * House for Spencer Field, Barre, Massachusetts (1836)
 * House for Charles Lee, Barre, Massachusetts (1836)
 * House for Samuel Lee, Barre, Massachusetts (1836)
 * House for Levi Lincoln Jr., Worcester, Massachusetts (1836, relocated)
 * Union Congregational Church (former), Worcester, Massachusetts (1836-37, demolished)
 * House for Clark S. Bixby, Barre, Massachusetts (1837)
 * House for Stephen Salisbury II, Worcester, Massachusetts (1837)
 * New Hampshire State Hospital, Concord, New Hampshire (1841-42)
 * House for James Nisbet, Macon, Georgia (1844)
 * House for Skelton Napier, Macon, Georgia (1846)
 * State Reform School for Boys, Westborough, Massachusetts (1847-48, NRHP 1994, demolished 2019)
 * Hitchcock Free Academy (former), Brimfield, Massachusetts (1855)
 * House for Horatio Lyon, Monson, Massachusetts (1859)

Carson & Lundin
All dates are date of completion.

Carson & Lundin, 1941–1960

 * 1944 – 75 Rockefeller Plaza, 15 W 51st St, New York City
 * 1948 – I. Miller & Sons building, 75 Mamaroneck Ave, White Plains, New York
 * 1949 – 600 Fifth Avenue, New York City
 * 1950 – Esso Building, 4045 Scenic Hwy, Baton Rouge, Louisiana
 * 1950 – First National Bank Building, 15 E 5th St, Tulsa, Oklahoma
 * 1955 – 660 Fifth Avenue, New York City
 * 1955 – Liberty Life Insurance Company Building, 2000 Wade Hampton Blvd, Greenville, South Carolina
 * 1956 – 125 Maiden Lane, New York City
 * 1956 – 399 Park Avenue, New York City
 * 1956 – 730 Third Ave, New York City
 * 1956 – Deering Milliken Building, 1045 Sixth Ave, New York City
 * 1956 – FDNY Engine 28/Ladder 11, 222 E 2nd St, New York City
 * 1956 – PS 175 Henry H. Garnet, 175 W 134th St, New York City
 * 1958 – 55 Public Square, Cleveland
 * 1958 – Carrier Corporation administration and research center, 4800 Carrier Pkwy, DeWitt, New York
 * 1959 – 28 East 28th Street, New York City
 * 1962 – United States Courthouse and Emmanuel Cellar Federal Office Building, 225 Cadman Plz E, Brooklyn

Carson, Lundin & Shaw, 1960–1972

 * 1963 – Brooklyn Savings Bank Building, 205 Montague St, Brooklyn
 * 1966 – 4 New York Plaza, 25 Water St, New York City
 * 1966 – Chaney Dining Hall and Heritage Residence Hall, State University of New York at Canton, Canton, New York
 * 1966 – Union Bank Building, 300 Ottawa Ave NW, Grand Rapids, Michigan
 * 1967 – French and Nevaldine Halls, State University of New York at Canton, Canton, New York
 * 1967 – Mohawk and Payson Residence Halls, State University of New York at Canton, Canton, New York
 * 1968 – Cook and Payson Halls, Miller Campus Center and Southworth Library, State University of New York at Canton, Canton, New York
 * 1968 – Smith Residence Hall, State University of New York at Canton, Canton, New York
 * 1968 – Swan Street Building, Empire State Plaza, Albany, New York
 * 1969 – 25 Park Place, 25 Park Pl NE, Atlanta
 * 1969 – Dana Hall, State University of New York at Canton, Canton, New York
 * 1971 – Cooper Service Complex, State University of New York at Canton, Canton, New York
 * 1972 – Faculty Office Building and Wicks Hall, State University of New York at Canton, Canton, New York

Carson, Lundin & Thorson, 1972–1976

 * 1972 – Belson Hall, St. John's University, Queens
 * 1976 – Chase Tower, 400 Texas St, Shreveport, Louisiana

Carson Lundin & Thorson PC, 1976–1996

 * 1990 – Dawnwood Apartments, 500 Fairview Ave, Hudson, New York
 * 1994 – Finley Hall, St. John's University, Queens

Other

 * Bank interior, New York City
 * Bank interior, New York City
 * Bank interior, New York City
 * Bank interior, New York City
 * Bank computer center, New York City


 * 600 Fifth Avenue, New York City
 * Chase National Bank branch (Rockefeller Center), New York City
 * Pan American ticket office (600 Fifth Avenue), New York City
 * Cunningham & Walsh offices, New York City
 * Restaurant Mayan, Rockefeller Center, New York City
 * Office building in a southern city
 * Liberty Life Insurance Company office building, Greenville, South Carolina
 * Office lobby (1270 Avenue of the Americas), New York City
 * Northwest Orient Airlines ticket office, New York City
 * 666 Fifth Avenue, New York City
 * Esso Building, Baton Rouge, Louisiana
 * Marschalk & Pratt offices, New York City
 * 399 Park Avenue, New York City
 * Illuminating Building, Cleveland
 * Deering Milliken Building, New York City
 * Rockefeller Foundation offices (Rockefeller Center), New York City
 * Chrysler Corporation offices (Pan Am Building), New York City
 * State University of New York Agricultural and Technical College at Canton, Canton, New York
 * Four New York Plaza, New York City
 * Paramount Theatre (Gulf and Western Building), New York City
 * Seamen's Bank for Savings branch (1271 Avenue of the Americas), New York City

Merwin Austin
Merwin Austin (1813-1890) was an American architect practicing in Rochester, New York, from 1844 to circa 1868.

Life and career
Merwin Austin was born in 1813 in Hamden, Connecticut to Daniel Austin and Adah (Dorman) Austin. He was a younger brother of Henry Austin. His early education is unknown, but in 1837 when Henry Austin opened an architect's office in Hartford, he was joined by Merwin. He followed him to New Haven in 1841, but in 1844 moved to Rochester to open his own office. He was among the first professional architects to settle in Rochester, preceded only by Daniel and Isaac Loomis. In 1849 he took on as an apprentice Andrew Jackson Warner, his nephew. In 1855 they formed a partnership, Austin & Warner, which lasted until 1858. Austin continued to practice in Rochester for the next ten years, returning to New Haven circa 1868. In New Haven he again worked for his brother, from at least 1869 to 1872 and again in 1884.

Personal life
Austin was married in 1851 to Almira Hayward. They had one daughter, who died in childhood, and she died in 1857. Austin died April 22, 1890 in New Haven.

Legacy
Austin adopted his brother's idiosyncratic Italianate style and developed it in Rochester, which can be seen in the Brewster and Osborne houses.

Austin was the first architectural employer of two notable architects, Andrew Jackson Warner and John Rochester Thomas. Two buildings designed by Austin have been listed on the United States National Register of Historic Places, and others contribute to listed historic districts.

Architectural works

 * Elm-Wood Cottage, Genesee St, Rochester, New York (1845, demolished)
 * Henry R. Brewster house, 130 Spring St, Rochester, New York (1849)
 * Monroe County Courthouse, 39 W Main St, Rochester, New York (1850-51, demolished 1894)
 * Smith Block, 38 Walton St, Port Hope, Ontario (1850-51)
 * Port Hope Town Hall, 56 Queen St, Port Hope, Ontario (1851)
 * Plymouth Church, Troup St and Plymouth Ave, Rochester, New York (1853-54, demolished)
 * St. Lawrence Hall, 87 Walton St, Port Hope, Ontario (1853)
 * Elmwood, 19 N Walnut St, Nunda, New York (circa 1855, NRHP 2015)
 * David Henry Osborne house, 146 Maple Ave, Victor, New York (circa 1855, NRHP 1980)
 * St. Paul's Universalist Church (former), 21 Maple Ave, Victor, New York (1856)
 * Patrick Barry house, 692 Mount Hope Ave, Rochester, New York (1856-58)

GRECO
Charles R. Greco was born October 15, 1873 in Cambridge, Massachusetts to Letterio C. Greco and Catherine (Reggio) Greco, natives of Messina and Genoa, respectively. Greco was educated in the public schools, with supplementary courses in architecture at the Lawrence Scientific School of Harvard University. After leaving school he began working as a draftsman in Boston. In 1893, at the age of 19, he and a young architect, Ernest L. Condon, submitted plans for the new fire station at Lafayette Square in Cambridge. Despite their age and lack of experience, their design was accepted. They completed the fire station and some other small work but dissolved their partnership in 1894. Also in 1893 Greco had taken a job with the Wait & Cutter, a politically-connected firm of architects. When that firm was dissolved in 1897, he stayed on with successor Olin W. Cutter until 1899. That year he joined Peabody & Stearns, one of the Boston's leading architectural firms. During his employment by Cutter and Peabody & Stearns, Greco continued to take independent work, mostly in Cambridge, including the Taylor Square Firehouse in 1904 and the Blessed Sacrament R. C. Church, announced just before he opened his own office in 1907. After eight years with Peabody & Stearns, in March of 1907 he formally established his own practice, with offices at 8 Beacon Street in Boston. During the 1920s he relocated his offices to 11 Beacon Street, where they remained until his retirement.

In 1915 Greco was appointed to the State Art Commission by Governor David I. Walsh for a five year term. In 1920, he was appointed a second time by Governor Calvin Coolidge, and in 1924 he was chosen chair. Designed markers for the Massachusetts Tercentenary Commission, 1930.

In 1917 Greco established a branch office in the Guardian Building in Cleveland, Ohio in association with Edward G. Reed, a Harvard-educated architect who had joined Greco's office in 1910. Greco and Reed were associated in Cleveland for about twenty years, after which Reed opened his own office in Cleveland. George B. Mayer was also a member of the Cleveland office.

During the administration of Mayor John W. Lyons of Cambridge, Greco was chosen architect for several municipal projects, most significantly the new Cambridge High and Latin School, completed in 1940. In November Robert F. Bradford, the District Attorney of Middlesex County announced charges of bribery against Lyons and Paul Mannos, a Brookline contractor who was associated on many Cambridge building projects. They were accused of soliciting and accepting bribes from architects and engineers, who would need to pay to win a job. Greco admitted to paying $21,000 in bribes to Lyons and Mannos, about one third of the fees he received for his architectural work for the Lyons administration. Lyons and Mannos were both found guilty and sentenced to prison, and although Greco did not face legal consequences, he was obliged to resign the chair of the State Art Commission. In 1942 he and the other four architects were expelled from the American Institute of Architects, which he had joined in 1915, on ethics grounds. He was ultimately readmitted in 1956. In 1960, due to his declining health, Greco retired from practice.

Architectural works

 * Lafayette Square Firehouse, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1893)
 * Taylor Square Firehouse, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1904, NRHP 1982)
 * Blessed Sacrament R. C. Church (former), Cambridge, Massachusetts (1907-16)
 * St. Matthew R. C. Church (former), Dorchester, Boston, Massachusetts (1910-23)
 * Charles Bulfinch School (former), Boston, Massachusetts (1911)
 * St. Patrick R. C. Church, Brockton, Massachusetts (1912)
 * Blessed Sacrament R. C. Church (former), Jamaica Plain, Boston, Massachusetts (1913-17)
 * Medford Building, Medford, Massachusetts (1915)
 * Radding Building, Springfield, Massachusetts (1915, NRHP 1983)
 * Convent of St. Joseph R. C. Church, Roxbury, Boston, Massachusetts (1916-17)
 * Maynard High School (former), Maynard, Massachusetts (1916)
 * Radnor Hall and Hampstead Hall, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1916)
 * St. Mary R. C. Church, Quincy, Massachusetts (1917)
 * Malden Fire Headquarters, Malden, Massachusetts (1918-19)
 * Sacred Heart R. C. Church, Middleborough, Massachusetts (1918)
 * St. Mary R. C. School (former), Painesville, Ohio (date?)
 * Montefiore Home for the Aged, Cleveland Heights, Ohio (1920, demolished)
 * First District Court of Eastern Middlesex (former), Malden, Massachusetts (1921-22)
 * Sacred Heart R. C. School, Newton, Massachusetts (1922)
 * Temple Tifereth-Israel (former), Cleveland, Ohio (1923-24, NRHP 1974)
 * District Court of Lowell (former), Lowell, Massachusetts (1925)
 * District Court of Somerville (former), Somerville, Massachusetts (1925)
 * 512 Beacon Street Apartments, Boston, Massachusetts (1925-26)
 * Temple on the Heights (former), Cleveland Heights, Ohio (1925-26, NRHP 1984)
 * Donald McKay School, East Boston, Boston, Massachusetts (1926)
 * House for Harvey S. Firestone Jr., Akron, Ohio
 * Cabot School, Newton, Massachusetts (1928-29)
 * Cambridge Home for the Aged and Infirm (former), Cambridge, Massachusetts (1928, NRHP 2002)
 * Hebrew School of Congregation Mishkan Tefila (former), Roxbury, Boston, Massachusetts (1928)
 * Hotel Continental, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1928-29)
 * House for Elroy J. Kulas, Gates Mills, Ohio (1929, NRHP 1988)
 * Middlesex Jail and House of Correction, Billerica, Massachusetts (1930-31)
 * Temple Anshe Hesed (former), Erie, Pennsylvania (1930)
 * Eliot School, Boston, Massachusetts (1931)
 * Third District Court of Eastern Middlesex (former), Cambridge, Massachusetts (1931-33)
 * Congregation Beth Israel, West Hartford, Connecticut (1933-36, NRHP 1995)
 * Joseph H. Barnes School addition, East Boston, Boston, Massachusetts (1933, NRHP 2006)
 * Clifton Merriman Post Office Building, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1933-35, NRHP 1986)
 * Winchester Theatre, Winchester, Massachusetts (1937, demolished)
 * Second District Court of Eastern Middlesex, Waltham, Massachusetts (1938-40, NRHP 1989)
 * Cambridge High and Latin School, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1939-40, demolished)
 * Temple Emanu-El, Miami Beach, Florida (1947)
 * Taxiarchae/Archangels Greek Orthodox Church, Watertown, Massachusetts (1949)
 * Temple B'nai Abraham, Meriden, Connecticut (1951)
 * St. Demetrios Greek Orthodox Church, Fall River, Massachusetts (1954)

SILLOWAY
Sometimes misspelled "Sulloway"

New churches

 * First Universalist Church, Milford, Massachusetts (1850-51, burned 1900)
 * First Unitarian Church, Somerville, Massachusetts (1853-54, burned 1867)
 * Phillips Congregational Church, Watertown, Massachusetts (1855-56, demolished)
 * Church of the Unity, Unitarian, Boston, Massachusetts (1859, demolished 1898)
 * St. Paul's Universalist Church, Meriden, Connecticut (1859-60, demolished 1891)
 * Congregational Church of Pepperell, Pepperell, Massachusetts (1860)
 * First Parish Church, Lincoln, Massachusetts (1860-61, demolished 1892)
 * First Trinitarian Congregational Church, Medford, Massachusetts (1860-61)
 * Brighton Universalist Church (former), Allston, Boston, Massachusetts (1861)
 * First Universalist Church, Chelsea, Massachusetts (1861-62, burned 1908)
 * First Congregational Church, St. Albans, Vermont (1862-63, burned 1891)
 * Congregational Church of South Hadley Falls, South Hadley, Massachusetts (1864-65, burned 1947)
 * Congregational Church of Wilmington, Wilmington, Massachusetts (1864)
 * Fourth Street Baptist Church, South Boston, Boston, Massachusetts (1864-65, demolished)
 * Saratoga Street Methodist Church, East Boston, Boston, Massachusetts (1865, burned 1893)
 * Unitarian Church of Montpelier, Montpelier, Vermont (1865)
 * United Church of Milton, Milton, Vermont (1865)
 * First Baptist Church, Beverly, Massachusetts (1866, burned 1975)
 * Belleville Congregational Church, Newburyport, Massachusetts (1867)
 * Congregational church, Milton, Massachusetts (1867, unlocated)
 * First Congregational Church, Whitman, Massachusetts (1867)
 * St. Mary's R. C. Church, Ayer, Massachusetts (1867-70, demolished)
 * Winthrop Street (First) M. E. Church, Roxbury, Boston, Massachusetts (1868-69, demolished 1927)
 * Pleasant Street M. E. Church, Waterville, Maine (1869-70, demolished)
 * Winchester Unitarian Church, Winchester, Massachusetts (1869-70, burned 1897)
 * First Congregational Church, Anoka, Minnesota (1870, burned 1931)
 * North Congregational Church, Lynn, Massachusetts (1870, demolished)
 * First Congregational Church, Waltham, Massachusetts (1870-71, altered 1925, NRHP 1989)
 * Bristol Methodist Church, Bristol, New Hampshire (1871-72, burned 1889)
 * Branch Street Baptist Tabernacle, Lowell, Massachusetts (1871-72, demolished)
 * Pilgrim Congregational Church (former), Cambridge, Massachusetts (1871)
 * First Congregational Church, Lyndonville, Vermont (1872, altered)
 * First Congregational Church (former), Quechee, Vermont (1873)
 * North Baptist Church, New Bedford, Massachusetts (1873)
 * West Medford Congregational Church, Medford, Massachusetts (1873-74, burned 1903)
 * Methodist Church of Winchester, Winchester, Massachusetts (1875-76, demolished)
 * Universalist church, South Berwick, Maine (1876)
 * All Souls Church, Unitarian (former), Augusta, Maine (1879, NRHP 1978)
 * Baptist church, Rome, Georgia (1880)
 * First Congregational Church, Greeley, Colorado (1880-83, demolished)
 * Islington Congregational Church, Westwood, Massachusetts (1882, demolished 1966)
 * Maplewood Baptist Church, Malden, Massachusetts (1882, burned 1937)
 * Park Avenue Methodist Church (former), Somerville, Massachusetts (1882-83)
 * Western Avenue Union Chapel, Brighton, Boston, Massachusetts (1882, demolished)
 * St. Paul A. M. E. Church, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1883)
 * Second Congregational Church, Peabody, Massachusetts (1884)
 * Roslindale Baptist Church, Roslindale, Boston, Massachusetts (1884-89, NRHP 1998)
 * Universalist Church of Brunswick, Brunswick, Maine (1885-86, burned 2011)
 * Trinity Baptist Church (former), East Boston, Boston, Massachusetts (1888, altered)
 * Zion Lutheran Church, Boston, Massachusetts (1898-99, demolished 2020)
 * Baptist church, Springvale, Maine (no date)
 * Church, Chelsea, Massachusetts (by 1857, not located)
 * Church, Newark, New Jersey (by 1857, not located)
 * Church, Newton, Massachusetts (by 1857, not located)
 * Second Congregational Church, Biddeford, Maine (no date, altered)
 * Unitarian-Universalist church, Calais, Maine (no date, demolished)


 * Bates Street Universalist Church, Lewiston, Maine (1865, demolished)

Altered churches

 * First Church of Christ remodeling, Revere, Massachusetts (1856)
 * First Universalist Church remodeling, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1858)
 * First Universalist Church additions and remodeling, Arlington, Massachusetts (1860, NRHP 1983)
 * First Universalist Church remodeling, Beverly, Massachusetts (1863, demolished)
 * Universalist church remodeling, Charlestown, Boston, Massachusetts (1863)
 * First Universalist Church additions, Lynn, Massachusetts (1864, demolished)
 * First Universalist Church alterations, Salem, Massachusetts (1864, NRHP 1983)
 * First Universalist Church remodeling, Dexter, Maine (1867-70, NRHP 1985)
 * Trinitarian Congregational Church remodeling, Castine, Maine (1867-68)
 * Congregational Church of Westborough remodeling, Westborough, Massachusetts (1869)
 * Bowdoin Square Baptist Church alterations, Boston, Massachusetts (1870, demolished)
 * Unitarian church remodeling, Littleton, Massachusetts (1873)
 * Village Congregational Church additions and alterations, Medway, Massachusetts (1873)
 * First Baptist Church remodeling, Concord, New Hampshire (1875)
 * First Church in Hartland remodeling, Hartland, Connecticut (1875)
 * First Parish Church alterations, Weston, Massachusetts (1875-76, demolished)
 * First Parish Church remodeling, Medfield, Massachusetts (1875)
 * Mystic Congregational Church remodeling, Medford, Massachusetts (1875, altered)
 * First Church in Roxbury chapel, Roxbury, Boston, Massachusetts (1876)
 * New Haven Congregational Church remodeling, New Haven, Vermont (1876, demolished)
 * Ruggles Baptist Church remodeling, Roxbury, Boston, Massachusetts (1877, demolished)
 * Baptist church remodeling, Foxborough, Massachusetts (1878, unlocated)
 * Augusta Universalist Church alterations, Augusta, Maine (1879-80)
 * Congregational Church of Chester remodeling, Chester, Vermont (1879)
 * Prospect Congregational Church additions, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1879-80)
 * First Congregational Church remodeling, Brockton, Massachusetts (1880, demolished)
 * St. Paul's Methodist Church alterations, Lynn, Massachusetts (1880, demolished)
 * First Congregational Church remodeling, Walton, New York (1881, NRHP 2015)
 * St. Paul's Methodist Church alterations, Newport, Rhode Island (1881)
 * First Baptist Church chapel and remodeling, Boston, Massachusetts (1882)
 * Porter Congregational Church additions and alterations, Brockton, Massachusetts (1883)
 * Bunker Hill Baptist Church remodeling, Charlestown, Boston, Massachusetts (1884-85, demolished)
 * Townsend Congregational Church alterations, Townsend, Massachusetts (1884)
 * Unitarian Church in Charleston reconstruction, Charleston, South Carolina (1886-87)
 * First (Scots) Presbyterian Church reconstruction, Charleston, South Carolina (1887)
 * First Universalist Church remodeling, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1888-89))
 * First Universalist Church alterations, Orange, Massachusetts (1889)
 * Central Congregational Church remodeling, Middleborough, Massachusetts (1891-92)
 * East Gloucester Baptist Church alterations, Gloucester, Massachusetts (1891, demolished)
 * First Congregational Church remodeling, Everett, Massachusetts (1892)
 * Trinitarian Congregational Church remodeling, Concord, Massachusetts (1897-98, burned 1924)
 * Cataumet Methodist Church remodeling, Bourne, Massachusetts (1894)
 * First Congregational Church remodeling, Rochester, Vermont (1895, burned 1944)

Civic and institutional projects

 * Crane School, Canton, Massachusetts (1853-54, demolished 1906)
 * Milford Town Hall, Milford, Massachusetts (1853-54, NRHP 1977)
 * Windsor County Courthouse, Woodstock, Vermont (1855-56)
 * Vermont State House reconstruction, Montpelier, Vermont (1857-59)
 * East Hall, Tufts University, Medford, Massachusetts (1860-61)
 * Franklin County Grammar School (former), St. Albans, Vermont (1860-61)
 * Brattleboro Retreat additions, Brattleboro, Vermont (1861, NRHP 1984)
 * Jackson School, Somerville, Massachusetts (1861, demolished)
 * Bigelow Hall, Lawrence Academy, Groton, Massachusetts (1863)
 * Goddard Seminary, Barre, Vermont (1866-70, demolished)
 * Dean Hall, Dean College, Franklin, Massachusetts (1867-68, burned 1872)
 * Engine house, Newton, Massachusetts (1868, unlocated)
 * Civil War Monument, Cambridge Common, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1869-70)
 * Rockport Town Hall, Rockport, Massachusetts (1869, demolished)
 * Memorial Hall, Oakland, Maine (1870-73, NRHP 1977)
 * Buchtel Hall, Buchtel College, Akron, Ohio (1871-72, burned 1899)
 * Spencer Town Hall, Spencer, Massachusetts (1871-72, demolished)
 * Cochituate School, Wayland, Massachusetts (1873, demolished 1910)
 * Pepperell Town Hall, Pepperell, Massachusetts (1873-74)
 * Medfield Town Hall, Medfield, Massachusetts (1874)
 * Merrimac Town Hall, Merrimac, Massachusetts (1876)
 * School, easterly part of Medford, Massachusetts (1876, unlocated)
 * Middlesex County Registry of Deeds Building, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1877)
 * Dover Town Hall, Dover, Massachusetts (1879-80, demolished)
 * Conway Public Library, Conway, New Hampshire (1900-01, NRHP 1983)

Commercial and residential projects

 * House for Aaron C. Mayhew, Milford, Massachusetts (1852, unlocated)
 * Freeman Building, Montpelier, Vermont (1859, unlocated)
 * Railroad shops, St. Albans, Vermont (1862, unlocated)
 * St. James Hotel, Jacksonville, Florida (1868-69, demolished)
 * Agricultural Hall, North Attleborough, Massachusetts (1870-71, demolished)ref>"New England Notes" in Boston Daily Advertiser, October 31, 1870, 2.
 * Rockport National Bank Building, Rockport, Massachusetts (1870)
 * Gloucester National Bank Building, Gloucester, Massachusetts (1871-72, demolished)
 * House for Dr. O. S. Sanders, Boston, Massachusetts (1872)
 * Massasoit Hotel, Spencer, Massachusetts (1873, burned 1982)
 * Waverley masonic hall, Belmont, Massachusetts (1879, unlocated)
 * House for Sullivan H. McCollester, Marlborough, New Hampshire (1880, unlocated)
 * Tenements for B. F. Hahan (converted from industrial building), Malden, Massachusetts (1880, unlocated)
 * House for William H. Devens, Concord, Massachusetts (1882, unlocated)
 * House for John S. Doyle, Lynn, Massachusetts (1882, unlocated)
 * Warehouse for the Boston Rubber Shoe Company, Boston, Massachusetts (1883)
 * Lenox and Washington Street building remodeling, Boston, Massachusetts (1892, unlocated)
 * Blackstone Market, Boston, Massachusetts (by 1857, not located)
 * Hotel, Milford, Massachusetts (by 1857, not located)

Kelley
Adeline C. Kelley (1889-1972) was an American architect practicing in Bridgeport, Connecticut. She was one of the first woman architects to practice in Connecticut.

Life and career
Adeline C. Kelley was born February 19, 1889 in Southport, Connecticut to Thomas F. Kelley, a contractor and architect, and Mary Josephine (Otis) Kelley. She was educated in the schools of Southport and Bridgeport, to which the family moved in 1905. After moving to Bridgeport, Thomas F. Kelley practiced soley as an architect, and Adeline Kelley trained in his office. He died November 6, 1913, after which his daughter suceeded to the practice under the name A. C. Kelley. From 1914 to 1916 she was assisted by J. Gerald Phelan, who would later become a noted architect in his own right.

Except for a leave of absence during World War I, Kelley practiced architecture in Bridgeport until 1920. Her practice primarily consisted of houses and apartments in and around Bridgeport. Her largest work was the American Theatre, built in 1915 for theatre operator Martin W. Leighton. This was the first theatre building in the United States designed by a woman architect. Though in an altered state, this building still stands at 1126 East Main Street in Bridgeport.

Personal life
Kelley was married in 1917 to George Stuart Brady, an engineer. Brady was then stationed at Rock Island in the ordnance department, and the couple briefly lived there during the war. Following the war they returned to Bridgeport, where Adeline briefly resumed practice under the name Adeline K. Brady. In 1920 George S. Brady was appointed trade commissioner, and they traveled extensively in South American in the course of his work, with headquarters in Buenos Aires. In 1929 he published the first edition of the Materials Handbook, a reference book of industrial and building materials, which had a total of fifteen editions. Adeline was his assistant in the preparation of the first ten. In 1933 they moved to Washington, DC where he became deputy administrator of the National Recovery Administration, and held several other government jobs in the ensuing decades.

Adeline and George Brady had three children. Adeline Brady died April 24, 1972 in Washington, followed by her husband August 11, 1977.