Maginnis & Walsh

{{short description|American architecture firm}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=June 2023}}

File:Basilica Washington DC.jpg in Washington, D.C.]]

File:Gasson Hall, Boston College, Chestnut Hill MA.jpg in 1908]]

File:Bronze doors to Saint Patrick's Cathedral, New York, New York LCCN2011631248.tif in Midtown Manhattan in 1949]]

Maginnis & Walsh was a Boston-based architecture firm started by Charles Donagh Maginnis and Timothy Francis Walsh in 1905. It was known for its innovative design of churches in Boston in the first half of the 20th century.

Partners

{{Main|Charles Donagh Maginnis|Timothy Francis Walsh}}

Maginnis was born January 7, 1867, in Derry, Ireland. He emigrated to Boston at age 18 and got his first job apprenticing for architect Edmund M. Wheelwright as a draftsman. Influenced by the work of modern architect Ralph Adams Cram, Maginnis became a distinguished Gothic architect and an articulate writer and orator on the role of architecture in society. In 1948, Maginnis received the AIA Gold Medal for "outstanding service to American architecture," the highest award in the profession. He died in 1955 at the age of 88 in Brookline, Massachusetts.

Timothy Francis Walsh was born in 1868 in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He attended The English High School in Boston, and worked as a draftsman for Peabody and Stearns from 1887 to 1893, when he left to study in Europe. Walsh returned to Boston in 1895 and went into business as Walsh & Kearns. He worked as a solo practitioner in 1896 and 1897, and 1898 went into partnership with Charles Donagh Maginnis and Matthew Sullivan. He died on July 7, 1934, at the age of 66 in North Scituate, Massachusetts.{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fueGx_iEnoIC&dq=timothy+walsh,+architect&pg=PA260|title=Cheap and Tasteful Dwellings: Design Competitions and the Convenient Interior, 1879-1909|first=Jan|last=Jennings|date=28 June 2005|publisher=Univ. of Tennessee Press|isbn=978-1-57233-360-4 |accessdate=28 June 2023|via=Google Books}}

Matthew Sullivan was born in Boston and trained in the office of Edmund M. Wheelwright, Boston City Architect (1891-1894). Sullivan succeeded Wheelwright as City Architect and served in that position from 1895 to 1901, when he became a junior partner in the firm of Maginnis, Walsh and Sullivan, which was widely known for its ecclesiastical work. He withdrew from that partnership to carry on work independently in 1906.

Between the firm's founding in 1898 and the death of Timothy Walsh in 1934, the firm is credited with over 115 ecclesiastical works. The Maginnis and Walsh collection at the Boston Public Library contains work of the architectural firm from 1913 to 1952.

Eugene F. Kennedy Jr. was born in Brooklyn, New York City, on January 31, 1904, to Eugene F. Kennedy Sr. and Anna T. Lee. The family had moved to the Boston area by 1910. In 1924, he was awarded the Rotch Traveling Scholarship, established by architect Arthur Rotch to provide an American student of architecture a minimum of eight months study and travel abroad.{{Cite web|url=http://rotch.org/about/index.html#history|title=Rotch - About - The Rotch Trust|website=rotch.org|accessdate=28 June 2023}} Kennedy joined M&W in 1926, and married Carol Gertrude Fox (1903-1975) in 1928. He became a senior partner in the firm in 1941, which became known as Maginnis and Walsh and Kennedy. Kennedy died November 7, 1986, in Jamaica Plain, Boston.{{Cite web|url=https://www.apnews.com/7cf416cb3998e557c6ab0e7813d001f0|title="Eugene F. Kennedy, Prominent Church Architect, Dead at 82", AP News, November 9, 1986|website=Associated Press News |accessdate=28 June 2023}}

Maginnis, Walsh and Sullivan (1898–1905)

File:St. John's exterior.JPG in Cambridge, Massachusetts]]

  • St. Patrick's Roman Catholic Church, Whitinsville, Massachusetts, Diocese of Worcester (1898). (very influential, referred to as the 'Concord Bridge' of Catholic church architecture, Maginnis' first church).{{cite web |title=Church History |url=https://mystpatricks.com/documents/History50Anniv.pdf |website=St. Patrick's RCC Whitinsville, Massachusetts |accessdate=19 July 2018}}
  • St. John the Evangelist Church in Cambridge, Massachusetts: The church was built in 1904, largely built by Irish immigrants. House Speaker "Tip" O'Neill, was a lifelong parishioner.{{Cite web|url=http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=o000098|title = Bioguide Search}} Modeled after a 12th-century Lombardo-Romanesque basilica, of four gold medals awarded to Maginnis, Walsh and Sullivan from the American Institute of Architects, one was for St. John's. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.
  • St. Thomas the Apostle Catholic Church in Los Angeles: The Mission Revival style church was built in 1904. The Los Angeles Times, said, "In its character this church unites itself with the days of the humble followers of St. Francis, as it is the same form and the same faith, is to a great degree of the same style of architecture and is carried on by the same authority as that of the olden days."{{cite news|title=Is Dedicated To St. Thomas: Solemnities of Opening of Fine New Church; Gathering of Catholics on Pico Heights|newspaper=Los Angeles Times|date=1905-02-20}}

=Brighton, Massachusetts=

{{Further|Brighton, Boston}}

Now a neighborhood of Boston, Brighton was a farming community just northwest of the city. The farms became estates, the estates came into the possession of religious institutes. M&W had a number of commissions in Brighton.

One of the earliest was St. John's Seminary Chapel in Brighton, designed in 1898 in the Romanesque Revival style. It was constructed in 1899 of yellow and gray Brighton pudding stone with limestone trimmings.{{Cite web|url=http://www.bahistory.org/StJohnsHistory.html|title=St John's Seminary History|accessdate=28 June 2023}} Our Lady of the Presentation Catholic Church in the Oak Square neighborhood of the Brighton section of Boston was begun in 1913 and completed in 1921. The parish closed in 2005; in 2013 the building was reopened as St. John's Seminary Our Lady of the Presentation Lecture Hall and Library.{{Cite web|url=https://www.thebostonpilot.com/article.asp?ID=16455|title=Seminary dedicates new lecture hall and library in Brighton|website=www.thebostonpilot.com|accessdate=28 June 2023}}

The Convent of the Sisters of the Cenacle in Brighton was built in 1911. The building now houses the EF Language Institute.

In 1908, the Passionist Fathers purchased the David Nevins Estate in Brighton and built St. Gabriel's Monastery. In 1927, M&W was engaged to design a church to replace the chapel.[http://www.cpprovince.org/archives/histsummary/brighton-sum.php "Brighton, Massachusetts", Passionist Historical Archives] St. Gabriel's is in the Renaissance Revival architecture style, constructed of buff-colored brick with cast stone accents and red mission tile roof. Due to personnel shortages, the monastery closed in 1978; St. Gabriel's Parish Church in 2006.[http://www.cpprovince.org/archives/heritage/winter2010/winter10-3-1.php Eliot C.P., Roger. "The Closing of St. Gabriel's in Brighton", Passionist Historical Archives] In 2017 plans were approved to convert the monastery property into a combination of condominiums and apartments, largely geared to graduate students. The plan also has an affordable housing component. St. Gabriel's Church is to be retained and renovated as a community center.

Maginnis and Walsh (1906–1940)

File:Administration Building, Emmanuel College, Boston MA.jpg in Boston]]

In the Boston area, the firm built St. Catherine of Genoa Church on Spring Hill in Somerville, Massachusetts, regarded as a masterpiece. St. Catherine's, was begun in 1907 and completed in 1921. In July 2019, St. Catherine's. St. Ann's, and St. Thomas merged to form Sts. Louis and Zelie Martin Parish; masses are still scheduled at St. Catherine's.{{Cite web|url=https://www.thebostonpilot.com/articleprint.asp?id=185209|title=Three Somerville parishes to merge July 1. Published 6/7/2019|website=www.thebostonpilot.com|accessdate=28 June 2023}}

St. Mary's School in Taunton, Massachusetts, built in 1907, is a three-story brick building in Collegiate Gothic style. The Girls' Latin School, Huntington Avenue Building was built in 1907 in collaboration with Peabody & Stearns and Coolidge & Carlson.

In 1914, the firm designed the administration building of Emmanuel College. Located in the Fens area of Boston, it was founded by the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur and opened in 1919 as the first women's Catholic college in New England. For thirty years, it was the only building on campus.{{Cite web|url=http://www.emmanuel.edu/discover-emmanuel/campus/administration-building.html|title="Administration Building", Emmanuel College|accessdate=28 June 2023}}

The firm also designed St. Edward's church in Brockton, Massachusetts, in 1914.{{Cite web|url=https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/st-edwards-church-brockton-ma-1914-1040217319|title=St. Edwards Church, Brockton, MA, 1914, Original Plan | #1040217319|website=Worthpoint|accessdate=28 June 2023}} St. Edward's Church was founded in 1915, and merged with St. Nicholas Church in Abington, Massachusetts, in 2003, with the combined parish being renamed St. Edith Stein. St. Edith Stein parish bears striking resemblance to Ascension of Our Lord Church in Montreal, Canada, which is another church designed by the firm.{{cite web | url=https://www.digitalcommonwealth.org/search/commonwealth:0k225s831 | title=St. Edward's Church, Montello, Brockton, Mass }}{{cite web | url=https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Ascension_of_Our_Lord_Catholic_Parish,_Westmount,_Montreal.jpg | title=File:Ascension of Our Lord Catholic Parish, Westmount, Montreal.JPG - Wikipedia }}{{Circular reference|date=November 2022}}

The Church of Ascension of Our Lord was built between 1927 and 1928, for the English-speaking Roman Catholic population in Westmount municipality of Montreal, Canada, on land originally belonging to the Grey Nuns. It was designed by Maginnis & Walsh of Boston, with Edward J. Turcotte of Montreal as Associate Architect. Its architect, Maginnis & Walsh was “based in Boston and was considered the foremost specialist in Catholic ecclesiastical architecture of the period. The church is built on a monumental scale. Although its architectural style looks to the Gothic churches of Europe, its construction was modern for the period: a steel frame, encased in brick or concrete and clad in Montreal limestone, with Berea sandstone trim. The plan is a conventional Latin cross, the intersection of the nave and the transepts marked by an imposing bell tower. The front façade, facing Sherbrooke Street, is dominated by a gabled wall, flanked by shallow buttresses. Three lancet windows surmount a secondary, projecting gable, which contains the central entrance.”{{cite web |url= https://westmount.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/V2-Church-of-Ascension-of-Our-Lord-The-Value-Statement-2.pdf|title=THE HERITAGE VALUE STATEMENT, ASCENSION OF OUR LORD CHURCH|accessdate=2022-10-22|url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20221022000000/https://westmount.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/V2-Church-of-Ascension-of-Our-Lord-The-Value-Statement-2.pdf |archivedate=2022-10-22 }} [https://archive.org/details/v-2-church-of-ascension-of-our-lord-the-value-statement-2 Alt URL] Ascension of Our Lord Church, Westmount, Montreal, Quebec, Canada Ascension of Our Lord Church's design may be based on or influenced by the firm's 1914 design of St. Edward's Church (now St. Edith Stein Church) in Brockton, MA.{{Circular reference|date=November 2022}}

In 1929 the firm designed Our Lady of Sorrows Church in South Orange, New Jersey, in the French Gothic style, to replace the 1889 St Mary's.{{Cite web|url=https://olschurch.com/|title=Our Lady of Sorrows – 217 Prospect Street South Orange, NJ 07079|website=olschurch.com|accessdate=28 June 2023}}

=Boston College, Chestnut Hill=

{{Further|Boston College|Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts}}

File:Bapst Library 4 Seat of Wisdom.jpg, Seat of Wisdom]]

Maginnis & Walsh won the bid to build the new campus of Boston College in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. Designed by Maginnis, in 1908, the Boston College campus is a seminal example of Collegiate Gothic architecture. Combining Gothic Revival architecture with principles of Beaux-Arts planning, Maginnis proposed a vast complex of academic buildings set in a cruciform plan. The design suggested an enormous outdoor cathedral, with the long entry drive at the "nave," the main quadrangle at the "apse" and secondary quadrangles at the "transepts."

Maginnis's design broke from the traditional Oxbridge models that had inspired it, and that had until then characterized Gothic architecture on American campuses. At the "crossing", Maginnis placed the university's main building. Using stone quarried on the site, the building was constructed at the highest point on Chestnut Hill, commanding a view of the surrounding landscape and the city to the east. In its unprecedented scale, Gasson Tower was conceived not as the belfry of a singular building, but as the crowning campanile of Maginnis' new "city upon a hill". Dominated by a soaring 200-foot bell tower, Recitation Hall was known simply as the "Tower Building" when it finally opened in 1913. Gasson Hall is credited for the typology of dominant Gothic towers in subsequent campus designs, including those at Princeton University (Cleveland Tower, 1913–1917), Yale University (Harkness Tower, 1917–1921), and Duke University (Chapel Tower, 1930–1935).

Although Maginnis' ambitious Gothic project never saw full completion due to the Wall Street Crash of 1929, its central portion was built according to plan and forms the core of what is now Boston College's middle campus. According to Boston College historian, Fr. Charles F. Donovan, Gasson Hall (1913), the signature building of Boston College, St. Mary's Hall and Chapel (1917), Devlin Hall (1924), and Bapst Library (commissioned 1922, completed 1928), called the "finest example of Collegiate Gothic architecture in America"), are the "original architectural gems" of the campus.{{Cite web|url=https://www.bc.edu/offices/historian/resources/guide.html|title="Campus Guide", Boston College|accessdate=28 June 2023}}

In 1926, the Devlin Hall science building won the Harleston Parker Medal for "most beautiful building in Boston". M&W also built Fulton Hall (1948), Lyons Hall (1951), St. Thomas More Hall (1954 -demolished 2014), and Campion (1955).[http://bcm.bc.edu/issues/fall_2014/endnotes/workhouse.html Index of /issues/fall_2014/endnotes/workhouse.html] Birnbaum, Ben. "The Brief, Effective Life of More Hall", Boston College Magazine'', Fall 2014]

Maginnis also designed the chancel at Trinity Church in Copley Square, the high altar at St. Patrick's Cathedral in Midtown Manhattan, and the Massachusetts Veterans War Memorial Tower on the summit of Mount Greylock.

The firm also built St. Aidan's Church in Brookline, Massachusetts in 1911, where Maginnis was a parishioner and where former U.S. President John F. Kennedy was christened; St. Aidan's, has since been closed and converted to housing.

Maginnis and Walsh and Kennedy (1941–1956)

Maginnis designed the bronze doors at St. Patrick's Cathedral to replace the original wooden ones. Each 16 1/2-foot by 5 1/2-foot door weighs 9,200 pounds and is decorated with sculptures of saints created by John Angel. The doors were blessed by Cardinal Spellman and opened for the first time just before Christmas 1949. In 2013, the doors underwent a major conservation and restoration.{{Cite web|url=https://www.cbsnews.com/newyork/news/st-patricks-cathedral-shows-off-restored-bronze-doors/|title=St. Patrick's Cathedral Shows Off Restored Bronze Doors - CBS New York|date=14 August 2013|website=www.cbsnews.com|accessdate=28 June 2023}}

Maginnis and Walsh were the original architects for St. Julia Church, in Weston, Massachusetts, in 1919. The firm returned in 1961 to design an addition to the back of St. Julia Church to increase seating capacity.{{Cite web|url=https://stjulia.org/st-julia-church/|title=St. Julia Church|website=stjulia.org|accessdate=28 June 2023}}

Works

=Archdiocese of Boston=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston}}

=Diocese of Worcester=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Diocese of Worcester}}

=Diocese of Fall River=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River}}

=Diocese of Springfield=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield in Massachusetts}}

Blessed Sacrament Church, Northampton, Massachusetts

=Diocese of Providence=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence}}

=Diocese of Burlington, Vermont=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Diocese of Burlington}}

=Diocese of Portland, Maine=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland}}

=Archdiocese of Hartford=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Hartford}}

=Archdiocese of Cincinnati=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cincinnati}}

=Archdiocese of New York=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York}}

=Diocese of Brooklyn=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn}}

=Diocese of Albany=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany}}

=Diocese of Ogdensburg=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Diocese of Ogdensburg}}

=Diocese of Marquette (Michigan)=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Diocese of Marquette}}

=Archdiocese of Newark=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Newark}}

=Archdiocese of Baltimore=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Baltimore}}

=Archdiocese of Philadelphia=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia}}

=Diocese of Scranton=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Diocese of Scranton}}

=Archdiocese of Washington, D.C.=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Washington, D.C.}}

File:St. Gabriel Church DC 01.JPG in the Petworth neighborhood of Washington, D.C.]]

  • Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, Washington, D.C.{{Cite book |last=Tucker |first=Gregory W. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=G_Q9HG34cRkC&dq=%22Maginnis+and+Walsh%22&pg=PT17 |title=America's Church: The Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception |date=2000-01-01 |publisher=Our Sunday Visitor Pub. |isbn=978-0-87973-700-9 |language=en}}
  • Sacred Heart Church, Washington, D.C. (Murphy & Olmsted, architects, Maginnis and Walsh, associate architects)http://dcfossils.org/index.php/gallery7/ Sacred Heart Church, Washington DC
  • Chapel, Trinity College, Washington, D.C.
  • St. Gabriel Church, Washington, D.C.
  • New Apostolic Mission House, Washington, D.C.http://www.booktown.com/stcroixprints/plan.php?id=6438 drawing of New Apostolic Mission House

=Diocese of Gary, Indiana=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Diocese of Gary}}

=Archdiocese of Milwaukee=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Milwaukee}}

=Archdiocese of San Francisco=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Archdiocese of San Francisco}}

  • Carmelite Monastery, Santa Clara, Californiahttp://www.waymarking.com/waymarks/WM2ET4_Carmelite_Monastery_Santa_Clara_CA Carmelite Monastery, Santa Clara, California

=Archdiocese of Los Angeles=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles}}

=Archdiocese of Dubuque=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Dubuque}}

=Diocese of Des Moines=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Diocese of Des Moines}}

=Diocese of Cheyenne=

{{Further|Roman Catholic Diocese of Cheyenne}}

  • Chapel, St. Joseph's Children's Home, Torrington, Wyoming{{cite web |url=http://www.dioceseofcheyenne.org/history/1912_McGovern_Stansell.html |title=A Durable Bishop, Patrick Aloysius McGovern |accessdate=2011-02-15 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080604033530/http://www.dioceseofcheyenne.org/history/1912_McGovern_Stansell.html |archivedate=2008-06-04 }} St. Joseph Children's Home, Torrington, Wyoming
  • Our Lady of Sorrows Church, Rock Springs, Wyoming

Schools, colleges, universities, and seminaries

=Catholic University of America, Washington, D.C.=

{{Further|Catholic University of America}}

  • Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception (started in 1919; completed 1959), the largest Catholic Church in North America{{cite web |url=http://www.nationalshrine.com/site/c.osJRKVPBJnH/b.4747303/k.C02F/Visit.htm |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081205083501/http://www.nationalshrine.com/site/c.osJRKVPBJnH/b.4747303/k.C02F/Visit.htm |archive-date=2008-12-05 |title=Visit-National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception}} "The architectural style is composite of a Romanesque exterior and a Byzantine interior."{{cite web |url=http://www.nationalshrine.com/site/c.osJRKVPBJnH/b.4764147/k.9FF6/Architecture.htm |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081206022711/http://www.nationalshrine.com/site/c.osJRKVPBJnH/b.4764147/k.9FF6/Architecture.htm |archive-date=2008-12-06 |title=Architecture-National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception}}

=Georgetown Preparatory School, North Bethesda, MD=

{{Main|Georgetown Preparatory School}}

  • Our Lady of the Lourdes Chapelhttp://msa.maryland.gov/megafile/msa/stagsere/se1/se5/017000/017900/017907/pdf/msa_se5_17907.pdf National Register of Historic Places (Form){{Cite web |title=Maginnis & Walsh (fl. 1908 - 1955) -- project list -- Philadelphia Architects and Buildings |url=https://www.philadelphiabuildings.org/pab/app/ar_display_projects.cfm/35557 |access-date=2023-11-30 |website=www.philadelphiabuildings.org}}

=College of the Holy Cross, Worcester, MA=

{{Main|College of the Holy Cross}}

  • Dinand Library – 1927{{Cite web|url=http://hcap.artstor.org/cgi-bin/library?a=d&d=p432|title = Artstor}}{{Cite web|url=http://www.worldarchitecturemap.org/architects/charles_donagh_maginnis|title = WAM | Architecture by Charles Donagh Maginnis}}{{Cite web|url=http://www.holycross.edu/support-and-resources/holy-cross-libraries/about-libraries/dinand-library|title = Dinand Library | College of the Holy Cross}}
  • Saint Joseph Memorial Chapel – 1922{{Cite web|url=http://hcap.artstor.org/cgi-bin/library?a=d&d=d317|title = Artstor}}{{Cite web|url=http://hcap.artstor.org/cgi-bin/library?a=d&d=p431|title = Artstor}}{{Cite web|url=http://college.holycross.edu/projects/worcester/neighbors/holycross.htm|title = College of the Holy Cross}}

= Nazareth Hall Preparatory Seminary, Minnesota =

{{Main|Nazareth Hall Preparatory Seminary|University of Northwestern – St. Paul}}

  • Nazareth Hall – 1923http://hcap.artstor.org/cgi-bin/library?a=d&d=d317 Historic Campus Architecture Project{{Cite news |date=27 May 1922 |title=Cornerstone of Nazareth Hall is Laid |pages=1 |work=The Catholic Bulletin |url=https://newspapers.mnhs.org/jsp/PsImageViewer.jsp?doc_id=3c3d806b-3f84-4372-9fd7-43a77c1fedb5%2Fmnhi0031%2F1HMBHS5C%2F22052701 |access-date=8 November 2022}}
  • Nazareth Hall Chapel – 1923http://hcap.artstor.org/cgi-bin/library?a=d&d=p2232 Historic Campus Architecture Project
  • Island Chapel and Peninsula – 1925http://hcap.artstor.org/cgi-bin/library?a=d&d=p2233 Historic Campus Architecture Project

=Newton Country Day School of the Sacred Heart=

{{Main|Newton Country Day School}}

  • Chapel and four-story winghttp://www.newtoncountryday.org/RelId/606709/ISvars/default/Our_History.htm NCD History{{Cite web |url=http://www.newtoncountryday.org/Customized/Uploads/ByDate/2016/January_2016/January_21st_2016/Architecture%20layoutNCDS2-Updated06866.pdf |title=Archived copy |access-date=2016-03-26 |archive-date=2016-04-04 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160404083814/http://www.newtoncountryday.org/Customized/Uploads/ByDate/2016/January_2016/January_21st_2016/Architecture%20layoutNCDS2-Updated06866.pdf |url-status=dead }}

=Regis High School, New York City, NY=

{{Main|Regis High School (New York City)}}

Source:http://www.regis.org/2014/multimedia/religio.cfm Regis High School

=Sacred Heart School, Fall River, MA=

{{Main|Sacred Heart School (Fall River, Massachusetts)}}

Source:{{cite web |url=http://landmarkhunter.com/tag/17719-maginnis-walsh/ |title = LandmarkHunter.com {{!}} Maginnis & Walsh}}

= Saint Gregory Seminary (now Mount Saint Mary of the West - the [[Athenaeum of Ohio]]), Cincinnati, Ohio =

{{Main article|Saint Gregory Seminary}}

  • Southeast wing - 1929{{Cite news |last=Ball |first=Judy |date=4 April 1989 |title=Treasure-filled St. Greg's plans farewell 'open house' |url=https://access-newspaperarchive-com.wikipedialibrary.idm.oclc.org/us/ohio/cincinnati/cincinnati-catholic-telegraph/1980/04-04/page-16 |work=The Catholic Telegraph |pages=16}}
  • Northwest wing - 1961
  • Chapel of Saint Gregory the Great - 1961

=Saint Joseph's School, Wakefield, MA – 1924=

{{Main|Saint Joseph School (Wakefield, Massachusetts)}}

Source:{{Cite web |url=https://www.digitalcommonwealth.org/search/commonwealth-oai:m900p668k |title=St. Joseph's School at 15 Gould Street, Wakefield, Mass. - Digital Commonwealth |access-date=2016-03-26 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160406132506/https://www.digitalcommonwealth.org/search/commonwealth-oai:m900p668k |archive-date=2016-04-06 |url-status=dead }}

=Saint Joseph College, West Hartford, CT=

{{Main|University of Saint Joseph (Connecticut)}}

  • McDonough and Mercy Halls – 1935{{Cite web|url=https://library.artstor.org/|title=Artstor|website=library.artstor.org|accessdate=28 June 2023}}

=St. Mary's Seminary and University, Baltimore, MD=

{{Main|St. Mary's Seminary and University}}

  • Main Administration Building – 1929 (Beaux Arts Classical Revival Style)

=Trinity Washington University (formerly Trinity College), Washington, D.C.=

{{Main|Trinity Washington University}}

  • Notre Dame Chapel – 1924http://www.trinitydc.edu/president/2014/05/trinitys-remarkable-architectural-story/ Trinity's Remarkable Architectural Storyhttp://www.trinitydc.edu/president/files/2010/10/TRINITY_HISTORIC_REPORT_TO_ZONING_7_18_08.pdf Report to DC Zoning Commission
  • Alumnae Hall – 1929http://www.trinitydc.edu/president/2015/04/founders-and-builders/ Founders & Builders

=University of Notre Dame, South Bend, IN=

{{Main|University of Notre Dame}}

Source:{{cite web |url=http://www3.nd.edu/~univarch/buildinginventory.shtml |title=University of Notre Dame: University Architect |accessdate=2013-07-26 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120406075137/http://www.nd.edu/~univarch/buildinginventory.shtml |archivedate=2012-04-06 }}

  • Biolchini Hall of Law – 1930
  • Alumni Hall – 1931
  • Dillon Hall – 1931
  • Knights of Columbus (formerly Old Post Office) – 1934[http://archives.nd.edu/Alumnus/VOL_0013/VOL_0013_ISSUE_0001.pdf The Notre Dame Alumnus] archives.nd.edu
  • Student Health Center (now St. Liam's Hall) – 1934{{Cite web|url=http://tomandkatehickeyfamilyhistory.blogspot.com/2014/09/1936-thomas-l-hickey-inc-completed.html|title = 1936: Thomas L. Hickey, Inc. Completed Notre Dame's Student Infirmary (St Liam Hall)}}
  • Cavanaugh Hall – 1936
  • Haggar Hall (formerly Biology Building) – 1937{{cite web |url=http://tomandkatehickeyfamilyhistory.blogspot.com/2014/10/1937-thomas-l-hickey-inc-built-notre.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160315065458/http://tomandkatehickeyfamilyhistory.blogspot.com/2014/10/1937-thomas-l-hickey-inc-built-notre.html |archive-date=2016-03-15 |title=Tom and Kate Hickey Family History: 1937: Thomas L. Hickey, Inc. Completed Notre Dame's Wenniger-Kirsch Biology Hall}}
  • Zahm Hall – 1937
  • Breen-Phillips Hall – 1939{{Cite web|url=http://tomandkatehickeyfamilyhistory.blogspot.com/2014/05/75-years-ago-today-cornerstone-laying.html|title = 6 May 1939: The Cornerstone Dedication of Notre-Dame's Breen-Phillips Hall}}
  • Facilities Building (formerly Ave Maria Press)- 1940{{Cite web|url=http://tomandkatehickeyfamilyhistory.blogspot.com/2014/07/1941-thomas-l-hickey-inc-built-new-ave.html|title = January 1941: Thomas L. Hickey, Inc. Completed the New Ave Maria Press Building}}
  • Hessert Laboratory for Aerospace Research (formerly Heat and Power Laboratory) – 1941{{Cite web|url=http://tomandkatehickeyfamilyhistory.blogspot.com/2014/11/1941-thomas-l-hickey-inc-built-notre.html|title=1941: Thomas L. Hickey, Inc. Built Notre Dame's Heat and Power Laboratory (Today's Hessert Laboratory)|accessdate=28 June 2023}}
  • Farley Hall – 1947{{Cite web|url=http://tomandkatehickeyfamilyhistory.blogspot.com/2014/09/theconstruction-company-of-my.html|title = 1947: Thomas L. Hickey, Inc. Built Notre Dame's Farley Hall}}
  • Nieuwland Science Hall – 1952

Hospitals

=Boston Children's Hospital=

{{Further|Boston Children's Hospital}}

References to "Children's Hospital" are found in "[Boston] City Auditor's of the Receipts and Expenses" Reports (1912–1913, 1913–1914, 1914–1915); and the "Documents City of Boston, For The Year 1914."

Uncertain if this facility is within the "Boston Consumptives Hospital" campus or a separate facility altogether.

=Boston Consumptives Hospital (Boston Sanatorium)=

{{Further|Boston Consumptives Hospital}}

A "tuberculosis hospital," this 52-acres campus had 18 buildings{{Cite web|url=http://www.asylumprojects.org/index.php?title=Boston_Sanatorium|title=Boston Sanatorium - Asylum Projects|website=www.asylumprojects.org|accessdate=28 June 2023}}), Dorchester, MAhttp://www.dorchesteratheneum.org/page.php?id=613 Dorchester Atheneum{{cite web |url=http://www.historicboston.org/casebook/99cb/sanatorium.htm |title=(1999 Preservation Revolving Fund Casebook : Property Entries Online) |accessdate=2016-03-26 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150326040613/http://historicboston.org/casebook/99cb/sanatorium.htm |archivedate=2015-03-26 }}

  • Administration or Foley Building (1910, 1928–1930), the largest building on campus
  • Doctors' residences, Dormitories or Wards (4) (ca. 1910), currently vacant and are decaying as of 2016
  • The Power House (1903)

Outside United States

  • Ascension of Our Lord Church, Westmount, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
  • Holy Redeemer Cathedral, Corner Brook, Newfoundland, Canada
  • Our Lady of the Snows Church, Campbellton New Brunswick, Canada
  • St. Patrick Church, Mexico City, Mexico

See also

References