NC Architects and Builders is a growing system. We will post this entry as soon as it is ready.
Results 71 to 80 of 81
| Trades: |
|
| Work Locations: |
|
Frank A. Weston (ca. 1850-ca. 1930?), architect, was a native of Rome, New York, who practiced in Denver, Colorado, before coming to Greensboro, North Carolina. In Colorado he was associated for a time with noted architect Henry Trost (1860-1933), who gained fame in western and midwestern architecture. He was in Denver in 1900, an...
| Trades: |
|
| Work Locations: |
|
The architectural firm was formed in 1909 in Charlotte by Oliver Duke Wheeler and Eugene John Stern. This was the last known architectural partnership formed by Wheeler. For the firm's operation and selected building list, see the Oliver Duke Wheeler entry.
| Trades: |
|
| Work Locations: |
|
The architectural firm was formed in 1908 in Charlotte by Oliver Duke Wheeler, C.F. Galliher, and Eugene John Stern. This was one of a series of partnerships formed by Wheeler. For the firm's operation and selected building list, see the Oliver Duke Wheeler entry.
| Trades: |
|
| Work Locations: |
|
The architectural firm was formed in 1901 in Charlotte by Oliver Duke Wheeler and James M. McMichael. This was one of a series of partnerships formed by Wheeler. Both he and McMichael continued as prolific architects after their brief partnership ended in 1902. For the firm's operation and selected building list, see the Oliver...
| Trades: |
|
| Work Locations: |
|
Oliver Duke Wheeler (May 21, 1864-October 27, 1942), was an architect who with his sequence of partners and associates--Luke Hayden, Louis E. Schwend, James M. McMichael, Neil Runge, D. Anderson Dickey, and others--had a long career in North Carolina and one of the state's most prolific practices of the day. Headquartered in Charlotte from...
| Trades: |
|
| Work Locations: |
|
The architectural firm was formed in 1903 in Charlotte by Oliver Duke Wheeler and Neil Runge. This was one of a series of partnerships formed by Wheeler. For the firm's operation and selected building list, see the Oliver Duke Wheeler entry.
| Trades: |
|
| Work Locations: |
|
The architectural firm was formed in 1905 in Charlotte by Oliver Duke Wheeler and Neil Runge, plus the additional partner D. Anderson Dickey. This was one of a series of partnerships formed by Wheeler. For the firm's operation and selected building list, see the Oliver Duke Wheeler entry.
| Variant Names: |
|
| Trades: |
|
| Work Locations: |
|
Hugh Edward White (June 27, 1869- June 25, 1939), a South Carolina-born architect, worked in various locations before moving about 1920 to the growing textile city of Gastonia, North Carolina, where he became the principal architect in his adopted community. Working in a mainstream Beaux-Arts tradition, he served an emerging clientele among the industrialists...
| Variant Names: |
|
| Trades: |
|
| Work Locations: |
|
Charles Coker Wilson (November 20, 1864-1933), a prominent and prolific South Carolina architect headquartered in Columbia, designed numerous buildings in North Carolina during the late 1910s and the 1920s, chiefly in a Beaux-Arts classical mode. Although much of his North Carolina work concentrated in Gastonia and other communities convenient to Columbia, he had projects...
| Trades: |
|
| Work Locations: |
|
Albert Carl Wirth (May 7, 1890-1930 or later), architect, moved to North Carolina from Buffalo, New York, in 1916 and designed buildings in a variety of styles, including commercial buildings, apartment houses, and automobile dealerships in Greensboro, High Point, and Asheville, then returned to Buffalo by 1930. Wirth was born in Buffalo to Philip C...
Brought to you by The NCSU Libraries and The NCSU Libraries Copyright & Digital Scholarship Center.
Please contact us with any additions, corrections, or updates.