Guilbert and Betelle

{{Short description|American architectural firm and designer of schools}}Guilbert and Betelle was an architecture firm formed as a partnership of Ernest F. Guilbert and James Oscar Betelle. The firm specialized in design of schools on the East Coast of the United States, with an emphasis on the "Collegiate Gothic" style.

Betelle took over the firm after Guilbert died in 1916, and oversaw design of hundreds of schools, including Greenwich High School in Greenwich, Connecticut and the Radburn School in Fair Lawn, New Jersey, both of which are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Other notable buildings for which the firm was responsible include the Essex County Hall of Records and the Essex Club (now home of the New Jersey Historical Society).[http://www.vineland.org/history/landisschool/architecture/architecture.htm Architecture] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070930193848/http://www.vineland.org/history/landisschool/architecture/architecture.htm# |date=2007-09-30 }}, Vineland Public Schools. Accessed September 13, 2008.

Structures

The following is a list of structures designed by the firm, ordered by state and locality:

=Connecticut=

: Cos Cob School, c. 1916

: Greenwich High School (Greenwich Town Hall), c. 1925

: State Normal School (Davidson Hall, CCSU), c. 1922

=Delaware=

: Pierre S. duPont Rural Schools, c. 1919-1921

: William P. Bancroft School, c.1928

: Charles B. Lore School ('Lorelton' assisted living home), c. 1932

File:Lore School DE.JPG

Image:ColumbiaHighSchoolMaplewoodNJ.jpg]]

File:Essex Co Hall Recs jeh.jpg

File:Weequahic High School, Newark, NJ.jpg]]

=New Jersey=

: East Orange High School (demolished), c. 1911

: State Normal School at Jersey City, c. 1930

: Newark Central High School, c. 1912

: Chamber of Commerce Building, c. 1923

: Cleveland School, c. 1913

: East Side High School, c. 1911

: The Essex Club (New Jersey Historical Society), c. 1926 (NRHP-listed)

: Essex County Boys Vocational School, c. 1931

: Essex County Girls Vocational School, c. 1930

: Essex County Hall of Records, c. 1926

: Home of Ernest F. Guilbert, c. 1910

: Home of Franklin Murphy, Jr., c. 1925

: Newark Normal School, c. 1913 (currently Technology High School)

: Newark Public School of Fine and Industrial Arts, c. 1931

: Ridge Street School, c. 1913

: Robert Treat Hotel, c. 1916

: South Side High School, c. 1913 (currently Malcolm X Shabazz High School)

: Weequahic High School, c. 1932 (NRHP-listed)

: West Side High School, c. 1926

: Clinton Elementary, c. 1929

: Columbia High School, c. 1927

: First Street School, c. 1924

: Jefferson Elementary, c. 1924

: Montrose Elementary, c. 1924

: Maplewood Junior High, c.1930

: Maplewood Municipal Building, c.1931

: Marshall Elementary, c.1922

: South Mountain Elementary, c.1929

: Tuscan Elementary, c. 1924

File:Old Summit HS Morris Av jeh.jpg

: Franklin Elementary

: Jefferson Elementary

: Summit High School (Summit Middle School), c. 1923

: Washington Elementary, c. 1931

: Vineland High School (the Landis School), c. 1927

: Thomas A. Edison Jr. High, c. 1927

: West Orange High School (Seton Hall Preparatory School)

=New York=

Image:Bronxville HS.jpg.]]

: The Bronxville School, c. 1930

: Great Neck High School, c. 1926

: New Rochelle High School, c. 1926

: Washington Irving School, c. 1925

=Pennsylvania=

: Thaddeus Stevens Jr. High School, c. 1927

: Science Hall, Lincoln University, c. 1925

=NRHP-listed=

Duplicative to the above, the buildings designed by these architects which survive and are listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) are:

References